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-   -   Anyone oven dry tomatoes before? (https://www.neurotalk.org/the-stumble-inn/52791-oven-dry-tomatoes.html)

Gazelle 08-24-2008 12:13 PM

Anyone oven dry tomatoes before?
 
I'm oven drying garden tomatoes for the first time. Has anyone ever done this before?

If you have, do you have to flip them over during the drying process. They're moist underneath and I was thinking that flipping them might work.

Bearygood 08-24-2008 12:39 PM

I've done it -- maybe it's not the exact right way but I didn't flip them over and used a baking sheet and they turned out fine. (I do know the recommended way to do this though is on a rack.)

AfterMyNap 08-24-2008 12:53 PM

Many times! It's super easy and I always find them when I clean out the crisper drawer in my fridge.:o

watsonsh 08-24-2008 12:55 PM

:Thats-Funneh:^^^^^:Good-Post:^^^^^

Gazelle 08-24-2008 01:07 PM

The recipe's I looked at didn't say anything about flipping them or using a rack. :confused:

This year, I've been eating as much local produce as possible and thought that I'd try drying tomatoes too as I love sun dried tomatoes in things but they're so expensive.

Anyone read Barbara Kingsolver's book Animal, Vegetable, Miracle? It was pretty interesting. I'd been eating local stuff a lot before I read the book, but it's firmed my resolve to do more of that.

Cindy, did you ever flip them or did you use a dehydrator?

Bearygood 08-24-2008 01:12 PM

I saw the rack recommended in several places when I first did this but well, I didn't listen, and they still came out okay. :D If you think about it, it does make sense though because the air can circulate on all sides.

Gazelle 08-24-2008 01:17 PM

Thanks, Beary.

It does. I've had them in the oven on about 200 F since early afternoon yesterday and they're still moist--especially underneath.

Guess I'll just flip 'em and check them in a couple of hours.

Should probably get a dehydrator if I'm going to keep doing this. The oven makes your house HOT!!!

Bearygood 08-24-2008 01:23 PM

LOL. I just looked it up and got MANY hits. Here's one: http://www.ehow.com/how_2058773_pres...hydration.html

I too set the oven at 200 when I've done this and did NOT leave the oven door open so I guess I did it wrong and am lucky they didn't get mold, LOL. (This is actually mentioned in several of the other links too!) Maybe it's because they were never around long enough to contract anything, LOL. Didn't do any of the other things like boil them, either. They were still delish!

I was actually spurred to do this when I bought a convection/toaster oven and saw in the instructions that one of the things you could do via the convection setting is dehydrate just about anything. That said, I have never used that appliance to dehydrate anything! :rolleyes:

tovaxin_lab_rat 08-24-2008 01:37 PM

I just sent you some recipes. One from my Wolfgang Puck cookbook.

I have some in my fridge just like AMN!!!

I am not a fan of sun dried tomatoes...they taste yucky.

I just freeze them and use them in winter soups, stews, and chili!

Bearygood 08-24-2008 01:45 PM

Ooh, what recipes, Cheryl? I have one I can contribute that I love for pasta (always a treat for me since I try to avoid eating too much pasta).

I have some in my fridge now too but they're from the store. When I've done it at home mine never last that long to think about this but for those of you with big batches, do you put them in olive oil (if you're not freezing them)?

Gazelle 08-24-2008 01:45 PM

Yucky, huh? :confused:

Good! More for me. And NO, you cannot stick them in my freezer!

tovaxin_lab_rat 08-24-2008 02:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gazelle (Post 353601)
Yucky, huh? :confused:

Good! More for me. And NO, you cannot stick them in my freezer!

That's cuz there ISN'T ANY ROOM!!!

where's that falling down laughing guy when you need him....

Gazelle 08-24-2008 02:08 PM

Right. A full freezer is more efficient than one that's NOT full. Stuff it, flappy gal.:p

tovaxin_lab_rat 08-24-2008 02:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gazelle (Post 353626)
Right. A full freezer is more efficient than one that's NOT full. Stuff it, flappy gal.:p

Yeah, but YOURS is dangerous to open! Things come flying out .... maybe that's why you call me flappy gal!

Goose goose DUCK! She's opening the freezer door!

:eek:

You know I love you dearly! :hug:

Gazelle 08-24-2008 02:19 PM

Why you opening my freezer door ANYWAY? HUH???

Geez...... ask a simple question about drying tomatoes and it turns into an exposition on my freezer.

Yeah, you :circlelove: me ok. :rolleyes:;)

Beary, I understand you CAN put them in olive oil and they'll keep 3-4 months. (see..... back to the OP's original TOPIC!)

AfterMyNap 08-24-2008 02:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gazelle (Post 353566)

Cindy, did you ever flip them or did you use a dehydrator?

I flip them right into the trash. My dehydrator weighs about 300lbs. empty.

Gazelle 08-24-2008 02:22 PM

Sounds like a weird way to process them, AMN. Maybe you should try putting them on the dashboard of your car instead. Better tonnage.

tovaxin_lab_rat 08-24-2008 02:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AfterMyNap (Post 353647)
I flip them right into the trash. My dehydrator weighs about 300lbs. empty.

You could get one of your neighbor kids to flip the dehydrator but it probably wouldn't work very well afterwards. I'd stick to flipping the dead tomatoes in the trash.

AfterMyNap 08-24-2008 04:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gazelle (Post 353657)
Sounds like a weird way to process them, AMN. Maybe you should try putting them on the dashboard of your car instead. Better tonnage.

No, no, no! That's for warming leftover pizza!

tovaxin_lab_rat 08-24-2008 04:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AfterMyNap (Post 353795)
No, no, no! That's for warming leftover pizza!

And keeping gas station coffee warm! :p


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