I just ordered Excalibur 9 tray dehydrator. I also have charcoal smoker. I want to try making some beef jerky. How do I go about it? Do I slice the beef into thin strips, marinate, smoke, and then dehydrate? Or smoke large chunk of meat and then slice, marinate, and then dehydrate? Or is there some other way?
What are some good recipes or food items to dehydrate?
Nice, I have the same one. It's a beast! I recommend picking up some Paraflexx sheets (knockoffs are available for cheaper FYI) if you plan on doing wet stuff like fruit rollups; you can use parchment paper in the meantime to experiment, however. A mandolin is also a good idea for getting even cuts, as is an
ultra-sharp knife, if you don't already have one. A vacuum sealer (like a FoodSaver) is also good if you plan on getting serious with dehydration, especially if you end up doing a lot of jerky. Anyway, some recipe ideas:
1.
Jerky (not just beef! ex.
turkey jerky)
2.
Fruit rollups (protip: add
Jello powder for texture/flavor bonus)
3.
Dried fruit (including sun-dried tomatoes! also banana chips, cinnamon apples, etc.)
4.
DIY spices (
grinders are $20; great for homemade chili powder, dried spices,
mushroom powder for gravy & secretly spicing up foods with umami flavor, etc.)
I do other random stuff with it (ex. yogurt drops, granola, crackers, nuts,
DIY dried parm, drying homemade pasta, etc.), but those are mainly what I use mine for. Jerky is a great snack, rollups & dried fruit are great, and if you like a lot of flavor in your food (I am a non-taster, so I like a lot of flavor), you can't beat homemade spices for putting an extra punch in your meals. You can do unique stuff too, like ketchup leather:
http://metro.co.uk/2015/11/20/man-c...e-burger-problem-no-one-knew-existed-5514822/
Tomatoes are actually pretty versatile in the dehydrator. Tomato bombs are pretty interesting:
http://www.wellpreserved.ca/the-tomato-bomb-intense-tomato-treat-for-1000/
Or if you don't mind a slightly labor-intensive recipe, homemade Lay's baked potato chips:
http://www.joyfulabode.com/homemade-baked-lays-potato-chipsbut-better/
If you're into hiking/camping/backpacking, you can dehydrate a lot of stuff for DIY meals & snacks. Frozen veggies are popular to dehydrate, as are things like soups & sauces. For example, here's an A to Z video of dehydrated meat sauce with pasta:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bgsQZzgkF1Y
As far as jerky goes, just start experimenting...everyone has a vastly different palette & most people I know develop their own personal recipe after a bunch of experimentation. You can slice (or shred) up steak or do ground beef jerky (by hand or with a jerky gun, I've done both ways). You can do beef, fish (
for reals), chicken, and turkey jerky (or even stuff like lamb, like they do with Epic bars). Tons of flavors available, even if you're only doing beef. You can also do left-field stuff like candied bacon jerky:
http://www.wellpreserved.ca/how-to-make-candied-bacon-jerky-recipe/
Here's a basic workflow to give you an idea of the process of doing beef jerky: (just remember, fat is bad because it goes rancid, cut it off!)
http://www.dehydratorbook.com/jerky-recipes-dehydrator.html
There is an active beef jerky review blog called Best Beef Jerky; you can look on the manufacturer's sites to steal recipe ideas from:
http://www.bestbeefjerky.org/
Here is a good starter recipe:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FlZwTnbXqTg
Dehydrators are nice because they are like using an Instant Pot...dump stuff in, press a button, and let it work its magic. I like the Excalibur a lot because it not only has a temperature adjustment dial, but also a timer, so you don't have to be around to turn it off, plus a side-mounted fan, which does a better job than the bottom or top-mounted fan models do. Since I use mine a lot & am slightly paranoid, I have a cheap wireless webcam with an Internet-connected fire alarm to monitor it. Although, I typically don't run it awhile I'm away from home, usually just after work or overnight or on weekends, since I don't like leaving appliances running when I'm not home, should anything go haywire. Never had an issue with it, but that's just me. Probably should have just sprung for a steel dehydrator, but eh.
Pinterest & Youtube both have a ton of ideas for what to make. There are a few good books on Amazon as well. Some good articles here:
http://www.wellpreserved.ca/category/preserving-food/how-to-preserve-food/how-to-dehydrate-food/
A bunch of good recipes on that site as well:
http://www.wellpreserved.ca/category/preserving-food/preserving-recipes/recipes-dehydrating/
Anyway, dehydrators are pretty nice because they make great snacks, and you can use it all the time because you can basically just throw whatever extra crap you have leftover into it to make something yummy...meat that is going to go bad, fruit that is going to spoil, that bag of peas that has been in the back of your freezer for a year, etc. lol.