Johnnygm7lsi
Guest
Anybody used one of these meal dehydrators for taking your home made recipes with you, I used to use the bought ready meals when backpacking and some of them were pretty tasty, but I`m getting fussy in later years
Part of the fun for us of being in the van is shopping locally and cooking, or not cooking in the case of Brittany, where we ate more oysters in 3 weeks than we'd had in the whole of the rest of our lives!
Lesley
Part of the fun for us of being in the van is shopping locally and cooking, or not cooking in the case of Brittany, where we ate more oysters in 3 weeks than we'd had in the whole of the rest of our lives!
Lesley
I've got two dehydrators which have had extensive use over the last ten years for backpacking trips. Never used them specifically for the purposes of motorhome trips, although mainly due to laziness (i.e. not finding the time, pre-trip, to cook and dehydrate some stuff). I did intend to dehydrate some meat for our trip to Norway this summer and, on reflection, should have done both that and some veg too.
Here's a blog post I wrote a few years ago on the subject of what meals we dehydrate: M&G Go For A Walk: Dehydrating.
Happy to answer any questions you may have.
True.
I bought 6 of the biggest oysters from Orlonne.
Only two of them worked.
I got a refund.
I agree but more often than not we end up in back of beyond somewhere, it's late and we have no idea where the nearest shop is and it's good to have stuff in the van that will make a meal without too much hassle. I always used to believe that you were never far from somewhere you could buy eggs and bread in this country until we got caught out once and ended up eating a tin of beans mixed with a tin a ravioli because that is all we had! It wasn't bad actually. My son cooks meat in kilner jars and takes that away with him and I have been looking at doing this especially as we don't have a fridge. Also we always keep a few sachets of these in the van:
Look What We Found! Beef bolognese with fresh Italian herbs - Waitrose
Thanks for that, interesting blog, I don`t see much seasoning, do you add that when re-hydrating then have it with rice or similar.
All of the meals have herbs, spices and/or stock in them when made, and remain flavoursome enough through the de- and re-hydration process. The only extras added when rehydrating is half a lamb stock cube to the Shepherd, because it doesn't tend to keep enough of a lamby flavour otherwise, and a bit of pepper to the stew dishes.
Because of the backpacking context, we have all of these as 'one pot' meals, so the rice*/pasta*/cous cous/smash gets mixed into the same pot, although with the luxury of better kitchen equipment than I'm prepared to carry on my back, they would work equally well with the accompaniment cooked (or rehydrated) separately, with an appropriate modification to the quantity of water used to rehydrate (*rice and pasta are also cooked and dehydrated at home and added in 10 minutes before serving). (I'm not sure that I've explained what I mean particularly well there, but it's getting late by my usual standards!)