Boundary Waters Quetico Forum :: BWCA Food and Recipes :: Dehydrate/Rehydrate
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The Lorax |
Chicken, fully skinned and all fat removed can be dehydrated (pre-cooked first) and does come back, but it takes a long time to soak. What I've done with chicken is add water to my bag right after noon and strap it to my backpack or to my canoe pack, whichever I'm doing at the time. By dinner time it's ready for use. |
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The Lorax |
I would have rather starved than chip that many teeth. |
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pack rat |
Frozen haricot vertes C&W brand(french beans or slim green beans) dehydrate and rehydrate very well - Almost tastes fresh. Cooked pasta dries to look just like it came out of a package and rehydrates in boiling water very quickly - cook it to almost done and the rehydrating process with boiling water will finish it off. Questions: Anybody ever try to dehydrate dinty moore (canned) stew? If so how did it work out? I have heard that canned chicken can be dehydrated and comes back very tender when rehydrated. Can anybody confirm this? Thanks, Pack Rat |
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pack rat |
I guess the main point of my question is this. Does the canning process make for better rehydration of chicken and potatoes - two of the most difficult things to rehydrate? Thanks, Pack Rat |
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serenityseeker |
Make your own stew and cut as much fat out as you can and dehydrate that. I wouldn't do Dinty Moore. |
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sarbar |
The high sodium tends to get concentrated when dried. It can leave an "off" flavor when you rehydrate. The other is the meat - be sure to take it out and shred it before drying. |
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bumabu |
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sarbar |
But, the sodium in canned chicken also works nicely as a preservative. Not a bad thing. |
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Bannock |
I can't. I used to do before the foil pack chicken came out. I never had luck rehydrating the dehydrated canned chicken. It always was chewy and/or rubbery. |
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canuckcamper |
Kirk |