Seeing how I have strawberry, blackberry and raspberry bushes/plants in the garden, a banana plant upstairs, plus a couple of cherry trees in the yard and hope to add apricot, peach and apple trees this fall/next spring, I figure I need to experiment with dehydrating fruit. Ohio has some weird regs - I can sell dehydrated pepper spices, blended together and bottled, without needing a certified kitchen. I can sell dehydrated fruit without a CK. I can concoct a package of dehydrated fruit with apples, bananas, cherries, etc. and sell it - as long as they are not mixed together. The logic, or lack of thereof, escapes me.
Most Farmer's Markets also have strict rules, such as one cannot sell anything they didn't grow. Not a bad policy - it keeps wholesale companies from intruding. But it can also hamper someone like me who would like to sell a fruit trail mix. That's one reason I'm skipping the FM route and instead plan on doing "road side stands," albeit it in very urban areas where several thousand vehicles drive slowly by.
I want to get his dehydrating down pat. That way, whatever fruits I cannot sell when completely ripe I can dehydrate and sell later. Plus, if a store has bananas on sale for 29¢/lb. I can buy several bunches, dehydrate them and sell the mix when they are out of season and go for 59¢/lb. Same thing with other fruit.
I'm finding it is easier to go around abstacles rather than trying to fight or climb them!
The dehydrator has blackberries, raspberries, strawberries, bananas and apples in it now. Trying to see how slicing thin, slicing thick and not slicing much at all works. The guide seems to be 135 degrees for 6-10 hours, though I suspect the thick apple and banana slices will take every bit of the ten hours.
Mike
Most Farmer's Markets also have strict rules, such as one cannot sell anything they didn't grow. Not a bad policy - it keeps wholesale companies from intruding. But it can also hamper someone like me who would like to sell a fruit trail mix. That's one reason I'm skipping the FM route and instead plan on doing "road side stands," albeit it in very urban areas where several thousand vehicles drive slowly by.
I want to get his dehydrating down pat. That way, whatever fruits I cannot sell when completely ripe I can dehydrate and sell later. Plus, if a store has bananas on sale for 29¢/lb. I can buy several bunches, dehydrate them and sell the mix when they are out of season and go for 59¢/lb. Same thing with other fruit.
I'm finding it is easier to go around abstacles rather than trying to fight or climb them!
The dehydrator has blackberries, raspberries, strawberries, bananas and apples in it now. Trying to see how slicing thin, slicing thick and not slicing much at all works. The guide seems to be 135 degrees for 6-10 hours, though I suspect the thick apple and banana slices will take every bit of the ten hours.
Mike