The only thing I can think of is heat distribution/movement? If pods in the same area are always problematic that's a possible answer. If one time it's low & in the back middle but another is high and left and a third is dead center this theory obviously off the mark.Bicycle808 said:Only gripe is, it tends to let the temperature drift a little bit, in practice, it hasn't been a problem. I'm mystified by the factors that make some chiles dry up rapidly, and others stay smushy for longer. Sure, thicker walls, total size, freshness all come into play... But I've had chiles from the same plant, same size, picked same day where some dry right up, and others take forever.
I developed the same theory, late in the game, and my observations on the last few batches were inconclusive, but i suspect that if "dead spots" were a factor, then the hydrator has several dead spots...The_NorthEast_ChileMan said:The only thing I can think of is heat distribution/movement? If pods in the same area are always problematic that's a possible answer. If one time it's low & in the back middle but another is high and left and a third is dead center this theory obviously off the mark.