Boundary Waters Quetico Forum :: BWCA Food and Recipes :: Dehydrating Spagetti Question
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SunCatcher |
So split the bag in half, I rehydrate the "leather" first, and if I get to much water in there and made it to thin, then I add the McCormicks in there to get it a little thicker. Just a trick I decided to try, and it really works Peachy. SunCatcher |
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sleepnbag |
Spaghetti Sauce & Meat Dehydrated. * * * Spaghetti Sauce with Meat & Pasta dehydrated together. |
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campcook184 |
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snakecharmer |
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sleepnbag |
Thanks again! |
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neutroner |
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Bwoods |
I add dried morels, dried ground beef, dried onions, and dried bell peppers. I rehydrate everything and then mix it into my frybake oven and sit it on the fire to simmer for awhile. I prep it right away at the campsite and by the time everyone is ready to eat it's ready to go. My spaghetti in the woods is as good as what I make at home. |
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PompousPilot1 |
quote Bwoods: "I have been drying the sauce until it's leather but now I'm going to try leaving it in longer and grinding it up. That sounds really good! |
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SunCatcher |
Well the easiest way is to make the meal at home finished product and re-hydrate it. It makes life "simpler" on the trail. However, I feel that the meal is better if you boil the water and noodles at camp, rehydrate the sauce at camp, and rehydrate the burger at camp, and add it all together. TASTES BETTER, and more like a home cooked meal. Also don't forget the parmesian cheese!!! fyi, I package the Parmesian Cheese up In those little zip locks from Hobby Lobby also...they are slick little bags to have for lots of things. Darys, I let my after browning hamburger/vension I put it in a collander and rinse it, and then dehydrate 12 - 24 hours. 16 for me would be about normal. SunCatcher |
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jeroldharter |
For the spaghetti, I use thin spaghetti. I have a 12 cm aluminum cup with a lid and pot cozy I made from Reflectix. I break the thin spaghetti into thirds so that the length will fit into my cup. I measure out 5.5 oz of thin spaghetti and vacuum seal it. At camp, I put the spaghetti into my cup so the noodles are vertical. Then I pour in boiling water to near the top to cover all the noodles. Put on the lid and let sit in the pot cozy for 20 minutes. Then strain off the water and the spaghetti is done. No need to waste fuel cooing pasta. I usually boil the water in a larger pot on my LittlBug wood stove. For the sauce, I put the leather in a separate cup and add boiling water bit by bit until it is reconstituted to the proper thickness. If needed, I heat it a little on a small alcohol burner (MiniBull). I do that while the spaghetti is sitting in the pot cozy and then pour the sauce into the spaghetti cup. Add some oregano, shaved parmesan, and some red pepper flakes. this is a great meal on a foul weather day because it is so easy. Cleanup is simple also. |
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bentshaft |
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sleepnbag |
A. Dehydrate the sauce and simply cook the pasta in camp? B. Partially cook the pasta, mix it in with the sauce and dehydrate all at once? C. Cook pasta separately and dehydrate separately? D. other? Also, I've read that people pre-cook the pasta at home. Does this allow it to cook faster in camp?? EDIT.... One more Question; I know dehydrating times will vary, but "Generally" speaking, is this something that will take 8 hours? 16 hours? (If I put it in early this afternoon and let it go all night, will that be too long? or should I wait until later on tonight to start dehydrating? Thanks!~ sb |
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billconner |
Certainly cooking pasta, mixing with sauces, and dehydrating all at once will be the quickest and easiest in camp and quite satisfactory. |
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twston |
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OldFingers57 |
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NorthernWay |
Dehydrating already made sauce drives out much of the flavor. Here's how I do it. Fry 1 pound of hamburger, drain fat. Put into fine mesh sieve and run hot tap water through it to get last of the grease off. Dehydrate. Divide evenly by weight using a kitchen scale into 8 sandwich bags and twist tie closed. Dehydrate 4 cans of tomato paste to leather stage. Cut with scissors into linguini-like strips. Divide evenly by weight into 8 sandwich bags and twist tie closed. Combine all your spices, 1.5 T garlic powder, 1 T onion powder, 1.5 t oregano, 1 t basil, 3/4 t salt, 1/2 t pepper, and mix well. Divide evenly into 8 sandwich bags and twist tie closed. Place 8 portions of pasta, I like to use cheese tortellini, into 8 quart size freezer bags. Into each freezer bag add one hamburger, tomato and spice bag. In camp, put hamburger and tomato into a small pot or a large cup. Add 1.5 cups boiling water. Wrap in towel to keep in heat. Start pasta water boiling. After 5 minutes add spices to sauce and stir to combine. When pasta is done, stir sauce again until the tomato is completely re-hydrated and add to pasta. It's dehydrated, but it's made fresh! NorthernWay |
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Swampblaze10 |
http://ronzoni.newworldpasta.com/quickcook/ |
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Savage Voyageur |
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