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The Purposeful Pantry

Dehydrating Basics & Journal Spiral

Dehydrating Basics & Journal Spiral

Regular price $35.00 CAD
Regular price Sale price $35.00 CAD
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Finally! The dehydrating book you've been waiting for! Learn the art of safely dehydrating food and create a journal to track your progress and results! 

In this Dehydrating Basics & Journal book (Coil/spiral edition - print version), you'll learn:

  • The ins and outs of dehydrating
  • Safety measures to follow
  • How to store your food properly
  • How to create dehydrated powders
  • Tips for using dehydrated foods

In the Journal portion, you have a step-by-step process for over 115 fruit, herbs, vegetables, and other 'treats'. 

Keep Records

Use the journal portion to record

  • Your process
  • Yield and/or weight
  • How you prepared your food
  • Length of time it took
  • Any additional information that will be helpful for you to know the next time you dry that particular food.

Recipes

As an additional section, there are 15 recipes of our personal favorite tried and true dehydrating projects from my family to yours.

Page Count: 170 pages

Delivered as: Coil Binding Book

Print Size: 8.5x11 inch paper

Other Versions Available

Dehydrating Basics & Journal


*A note - if you are interested in creating a 3-ring binder that is expandable, I suggest the ebook version - you can print off as many pages as you'd like, including blank pages to create your own projects. 


This book is not eligible for coupon discounts.

 


 

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Shipping FAQ's

When will the book ship?

Books are print-on-demand and will ship within approximately two weeks.

Will I get tracking information?

An email is sent with a tracking code as soon as the book is shipped.

When will magnets & stickers ship?

Magnets, stickers and checklists are sent through first class mail within three business days.

When will I get my t-shirt or mug?

Clothing, kitchenware and other merch come from a third party vendor who will send you info on when the products will ship.

I ordered an e-book; how will it arrive?

Digital Products will be released through email immediately.

Customer Reviews

Based on 97 reviews
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Suzette Hopkins
Great organization

I loved that it was all alphabetized by fruit then veggies. Plus you gave me plenty of ideas that we had not considered since we bought the dehydrator to dry herbs and a few other things. However, I am eager to try the pumpkin spice (liked that you included making it with canned pumpkin) and my mom and I are going to try the tomatos as we have several growing in the garden. I am a fan of aoli and will adjust it to make maple bacon aioli which I have not found at home.

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Pamela Heidinger Customer
A great book to get started as a novice dehydrator

I have experimented with many of Darcy's vegetables and Fruits. The book has helped a lot as I can take notes on each one to say how long mine took to dehydrate or how less. I wrote down what I used in the different methods as in zucchini chips spice recipe. Love those. I could never get fruit in to my husband but he loves the apples and never passes the kitchen without scooping some out of the jar to eat. I am having fun with my Excalibur dehydrator. Oh and don't forget to try to dehydrate Marshmellows. A hit in our house. Thank you Darcy!!

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Pamela Chmielewski
I don't see all of the basics covered.

Love the journal concept and the spiral bound.
I have been dehydrating for 2 yrs, but I saw someone using your journal so I ordered it. Upon 1st glance, I love the individual food item pages.

Rehydrating is not dealt with on each page which I think is a problem.

Since I dehydrate more things than this, and you have 1 page that I can copy or download multiple times. But this would entail a binder to be used.

So perhaps you could offer your "journal" in a 3-hole punch series without the spiral bound part. Then I could just insert in a binder and add a bunch of the blank pages.

when I started dehydrating, I was encouraged to dehydrate meat. I still have a jar of ground beef I dehydrated, and it has never molded in 2 yrs.
So I have been shocked lately by the number of people who say one must freeze dehydrated meat.

The meat is frozen to begin with, so why would I want to dehydrate and refreeze? My point in dehydrating is to 1) have a much smaller product in a jar so I can have a lot of food available in a power outage/disaster or my chronic illness worsens and I don't have to pull from freezer and cook it and still remain in my home. 2) I don't have to have to worry about power outages if I can just rehydrate something and eat it with other dehydrated items. If it must be frozen, then the power outage kills that option too.
3) I knew I would can more foods beyond my jar canned goods area limit,
so I wanted to dehydrate. 4) I wanted to dehydrate for camping when I got enough things dehydrated and could combine for soups and meals.

That brings up the next comment I have. You share very few dehydrated mixes in a jar. I have dehydrated a lot of foods now, and I am eager to start putting them together to make soup mixes and meals. I would appreciate a much larger section, OR 3-hole punched journal pages for mixing dehydrated items to make meals/soups in 1 jar/mylar/whatever.

Hope this helps!

L
Lori O’Connor
Awesome

Your book is very informative and easy to follow.

A
Antonia Edmonds
Worth every penny

It’s well thought out with the information I need and plenty of tips. I am having apprehensions of marking it up with my chicken scratch notes. My only disappointment would be there isn’t a way to add pages and not blank pages for additional projects.