Author Topic: Deydration and drying foods  (Read 18830 times)

Offline RONSERESURPLUS

  • Senior Prepper
  • ****
  • Posts: 332
  • Karma: +0/-0
Deydration and drying foods
« on: August 29, 2011, 08:04:52 PM »
Dehydration and drying Unit # 5

Food Dehydration Options
Food Dehydration Options
Value-Added Technical Note
By Katherine L. Adam
NCAT Agriculture Specialist
August 2004
ATTRA Publication #IP147 The printable PDF version of the entire document is available at:
http://www.attra.org/attra-pub/PDF/dehydrate.pdf
10 pages ? 442
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Abstract
Dehydrating foods reduces the moisture in them to levels that inhibit the microbial growth that causes them to rot. Pre-treating some foods before drying preserves their flavor, color, and nutrients; prevents microbial contamination; and prolongs their shelf life. Dehydration reduces weight?an important consideration when shipping?and eliminates the need for refrigeration, making it easier to pre-mix retail products. This publication focuses on commercial-scale food dehydration and equipment. It also outlines solar dehydration, a low-cost method for some small-scale operations.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Types of Dehydration
Drying as an On-Farm Added-Value Strategy
Product Development and Marketing
Regulations
References
Resources
Introduction
Dehydration is an intermediate step in turning raw agricultural products into retail products. Dehydration makes the conventional food and pharmaceutical industries possible?and profitable. Since large food processors either have their own drying facilities or (more likely) hire specialty dehydration firms, there is little opportunity to market bulk dehydrated farm products (except for grains) through conventional channels. Floral products, including herbal wreaths, are air dried or dried in silica gel.(1) (Some are freeze dried.) Meat products?hard sausages, jerky, and pemmican?may be dried, but they are strictly regulated.

Back to top

Types of Dehydration
Industrial dehydration uses particalized or liquid "feed" to produce a powder that can become one ingredient in an end product.



Fig. 1: Food Dehydrator using ? inch plywood, 2x2 and 2x4 frame and ? inch drywall.
Allen Dong. 1998. Reproduced by permission.
http://agronomy.ucdavis.edu/LTRAS/itech/dehydrator.htm


Batch dryers are an older technology used in small production runs or for their flexibility. A commercial-scale batch dryer may take from 55 sq. ft. of floor space (forced convection, through-flow) to 245 sq. ft. (forced convection, cross-airflow). These have been replaced by fluidized-bed batch dryers, especially for pharmaceutical products. A fluidized-bed dryer keeps the material from sticking throughout the cooling and bagging operation. Aggregation of the particles is often used to produce "instant" powders.

Continuous dryers are good for drying liquids or liquid suspensions. A common type is the drum or "double drum" dryer, heated by steam. Although continuous drying of temperature-sensitive material in a partial vacuum is an option, spray drying offers the same advantages at less cost.

Back to top

Spray drying
Spray drying, especially "rapid flash evaporation," is the current state of the art in the food industry, because it offers an excellent solution to many drying problems. According to Frederick J. Francis, of Amherst University (2):

Fundamentally, the spray-drying process is a simple one. However, the design of an efficient spray-drying plant requires considerable expertise along with access to large-scale test facilities, particularly where particle size and bulk density requirements in the dried product are critical. (p. 545)

There are three basic feed devices:

1. single-fluid nozzles (pressure type)
2. two-fluid nozzles (pneumatic type)
3. centrifugal feeds (spinning disks)

The flat-bottomed spray dryer with a tempered "air broom" is currently the dryer of choice for fruit and vegetable pulps and juices, as well as meat extracts. Its advantage is reduced sticking. It is also used for drying egg products, ice cream powder, and toppings. The correct balance of dryer inlet and outlet temperatures can reduce energy use. This three-stage dryer is ideal for "non-dusty, hygroscopic, and high-fat-content products."(2) It costs about $306,000, with operating costs of $36/hr. (labor figured at $15/hr.). At this rate, the cost per pound of powder is about $.042.

The even newer "spin-flash" dryer is about one-third cheaper to build and operate, using much less energy. However, it is not suitable "when a free-flowing spherical particle of a particular size range is required, or when agglomeration is needed."(2) Cost per pound of powder is about $.03.

Freeze-drying
Freeze-drying (also known as "lyphilization") is:

the drying of material in the frozen state. It is usually carried out under vacuum, at absolute pressures that readily permit ice to . . . change directly from solid to vapor.(2)

Products most often freeze-dried include:

Instant coffee
Vegetables for dried soup mixes
Mushrooms
Herbs
Spices
Cheese starter cultures
Shrimp
Fruits for ready-to-eat breakfast cereals
End products include military and space rations and camping foods, especially those containing vegetables, meats, fish, and fruit. Freeze-drying has technical advantages and disadvantages.

Advantages
Little thermal damage
Good retention of volatile flavors
Good vitamin retention
Rapid product rehydration
Little product shrinkage
Long product storage life?if suitably packed
Good retention of biological activity (with use of cryoprotectants)
Disadvantages
High drying cost
Damage to certain products by initial freezing
Rapid deterioration unless products are packed and maintained at low humidity
Product friability (crumbles easily)
Pre-treatment sometimes necessary (e.g., with carrots) to avoid color loss
Note: Current freeze-drying technologies are uniformly protected by patent.



Dairy products
Fluid milk has been dried since the 1960s, principally through roller (drum) drying. Recently, spray drying has replaced this form of processing. First, an evaporator or vacuum pan condenses the milk to 40% solids. An "agglomerating process" makes instant dry milk from non-instant. It is used in prepared dry mixes, the confectionery and bakery industries, and animal feed (e.g., calf starter). Industrial uses, including dried buttermilk, accounted for 89% of domestic sales in 1998. U.S. production of dried milk for all uses has been falling or stationary since 1960. Dried cheese powders are manufactured by other methods.

Solar drying
Solar drying is an industrial process in many countries where outdoor temperatures reach 115?F or higher. In East Asia, spice crops and other exported plant materials are routinely solar dried. Solar drying is different from "sun drying." Solar drying uses equipment to collect the sun's rays in a unit designed to ventilate moisture. The temperature in the unit is usually 20 to 30 degrees higher than in open sunlight.

In much of the continental U.S., weather conditions do not allow sun drying or solar drying. There are too few consecutive days of high temperatures (above 85?) and low humidity (below 60%) to assure that the food will not spoil before dehydration is complete. Low temperature or high humidity encourages microbial growth. If the temperature is too high at first, a hard shell may develop on the food, trapping moisture inside. This is called "case hardening." If temperatures are too high at the end of the drying period, food may scorch. Temperatures of 120?F to 140?F are best for drying fruits and vegetables. Temperatures may go up to 150?F at the beginning, but must be lowered as food begins to dry. For at least the last hour of the drying period, temperatures should not exceed 130?F.(3)

Reports from Bill Blake, University of California ? Davis, about the situation in California, where solar drying of fruits and vegetables is commercially feasible, suggest possible legal issues for small-scale start-up operations.

I looked into the legalities of sun-drying a couple of months ago [1996], and discovered that small-scale farmers would have a difficult time complying with the laws. First, after talking with people at several county and state agencies as well as producers and an industry group, I couldn't get a straight-forward answer about what a producer would need to do to be in full legal compliance. Second, the answers I got from health commissioners and the like indicated that producers would need a concrete-floored drying yard (no dust) with a fence (no animals), methods for insect exclusion (no bugs, eggs, etc.), and a certified kitchen for cutting fruits and vegetables for drying.(4)

Blake could not determine how California producers can legally sun-dry in the open or why no one in the health department has "picked up on it yet." A possible explanation is that existing businesses are sometimes "grandfathered in" when new, tighter restrictions are published. Or perhaps health officials realize that the conditions in the San Joaquin Valley for drying grapes into raisins (ideal temperatures, low humidity, a constant breeze, and no need to cut the fruits) are uniquely hard to replicate with other crops in other climates.

A University of Georgia publication warns against drying vegetables (with the exception of vine-dried bean seeds) and meats outdoors. "The high sugar and acid content of fruits make them safe to dry out-of-doors when conditions are favorable." However, if rain falls while the crop is drying, a whole year's work can be lost. Cut fruits require access to a commercial kitchen. Since cool night air condenses and can add moisture back to the food, fruits dried out-of-doors must be covered or brought under shelter at night.(5)

Back to top

Drying as an On-Farm Added-Value Strategy
While dehydrated products don't play to the main strengths of small-farm marketing (luscious, succulent, farm-fresh, local), there are certainly market niches for such products. For example, while it may be difficult to sell many pounds of dried fruits such as apples to retail customers, dried fruits can provide a handsome return as ingredients in, say, "Good Morning Farm's gourmet pancake mix." Grains (especially organic or specialty grains) can be profitable when sold in one- or two-pound bags, milled into flour, turned into pasta, or marketed as part of a pilaf mix. Dehydrated vegetables and herbs can be added to gourmet soup mixes, as well as dry mixes for toppings, sauces, rubs, and seasonings?even pet treats. Niches already exist for dried chile peppers of many types, exotic fruits and nuts, seasoning mixes, baking mixes, mushrooms, teas, and similar items.

Related ATTRA publications

Adding Value to Farm Products: An Overview
Keys to Success in Value-Added Agriculture
Grain Processing: Adding Value to Farm Products
Alternative Beef Marketing
Green Markets for Farm Products


Most information on simple, small-scale drying methods and building batch dryers is about their use as an energy-efficient way to preserve a harvest for a single household. Books such as Rodale's Stocking Up (6) and Extension publications on food preservation are intended for families who grow their own food. Some of these resources are listed below. However, commercial standards for taste and appearance can be different and hard to meet in a sustainable way. Some commercial dehydration methods may not meet the new USDA organic standards.

Rosalind Creasy (7) offers the following comments on drying apricots, apples, nectarines, peaches, and pears.

[fruits] turn brown when exposed to the air. If the discoloration doesn't bother you, it is a simple matter to dry the fruits after sectioning, pitting, or coring. However, if you prefer orange apricots, nectarines, and peaches and white apples and pears, methods exist for maintaining fresh-fruit color:

Blanching fruits for 3 minutes in boiling water;
Soaking fruit in a sodium metabisulfite solution for 1 minute;
Sulfuring the fruit with sulfur smoke.
The last two methods preserve more of the color and more of the vitamins than the first. They also kill any insects that might still be on the fruit. . . . I find that fruits treated with sulfur taste and look better than blanched or untreated. [bullets added]


Back to top

Product Development and Marketing
For the producer interested in selling value-added farm products, the 2002 catalog of the National Association for the Specialty Food Trade, Inc., lists an interesting array of new products. Trade publications such as Natural Foods Merchandiser regularly publish "new product" editions. Anyone seriously interested in adding value on the farm should study this information, as it is predictive of trends in consumer preferences for taste and convenience. The gourmet gift item is always popular. The typical retail item using a dehydrated ingredient also uses other ingredients (which may have to be purchased off-farm), distinctive packaging/containers, printing, and intangibles such as a popular theme (Cajun, holiday, Southwest, international, health food, etc.). The item may claim a secret recipe or processing steps. Certain ingredients are popular in special seasonings or sauce mixes; not all can be grown in North America. Dried tomatoes, carrots, garlic, onions, hot peppers, celery leaf/seed, mustard seed, horseradish, and herbs are common ingredients in such mixes. Other seed spices that can be grown in North America include caraway, coriander, cumin, and ajwain.


Offline RONSERESURPLUS

  • Senior Prepper
  • ****
  • Posts: 332
  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Deydration and drying foods
« Reply #1 on: August 29, 2011, 08:05:34 PM »
pt # 2

Some new specialty food products

Soups
Described as "carefully crafted mixes, with no salt, MSG, preservatives, or dehydrated bouillons, naturally low in sodium, fat, sugar and high in protein." [contain beans, grains, and seasonings].
22 different ones. 12-oz. packages sell for $6.00 - $7.00 each.

Cottage Cheese Pancake Mix
Contains dried cottage cheese, dried apples, whole oats, and cinnamon.

Gourmet Gifts

Baking mixes
Drink mixes
Seasonings
Herb blends
International Specialty Item
Bread dipping set?four [Ital.] regional seasonings
Set includes 6 oz. mixed dried herbs, 4 dipping saucers, porcelain cruet, colorful box. (Purchaser or gift recipient supplies own olive oil, loaf of crusty bread, and a glass of wine.)

Spiced Nuts
Described as "forbiddingly complicated," this snack product has been "painstakingly hand-crafted every step of the way." [Peppered walnuts include 3 types of ground pepper.]

Health Snack Food
"Just Veggies"?freeze-dried corn, peas, carrots, tomatoes, bell peppers?"eat like popcorn."
"Fruit Munchies"?freeze-dried apples, bananas, blackberries, blueberries, cherries, cranberries, mango.
Single veg/fruit packs in colorful plastic containers, including dried tomatoes, garlic.
"Just Cranberries"?Freeze-dried cranberries that hold their shape.

Creative Condiments
Spice, rice, and bean mixes in a box. Based on Tucson restaurant recipes.

Additive-free Seasoning Blends

(kosher approval)
Pure ground dried chiles (8 kinds)
Pepper Sauce
15 other seasoning blends
Pet Treats
Organic vegetarian dog treats?including "Vegetable Crisp" and "Apple Crisp"


Fortunately for many alternative farmers, the gourmet foods and organic foods categories are converging. Many of the products described above can be considered "natural gourmet." "Specialty organics" are "products that have a unique quality, possibly trend driven, which makes them more valuable and allows an added price point."(8) During the past 40 years, gourmet food manufacturers have been paying more attention to healthful ingredients, and organic foods have become more tasty. Busy adults readily accept dried mixes for their convenience. Paul's Grains (9), of Laurel, Iowa, sells organic flours, corn meals, and rice from grain grown and milled on the farm?at a farm store and also at trade shows, fairs, and festivals. The products come in handy one- to five-pound amounts. Additional examples of on-farm businesses marketing dried products are in the ATTRA publication Keys to Success in Value-Added Agriculture.

Many universities provide assistance in new product development through "business incubators." Universities also have information about market assessment resources and marketing techniques?as well as advice on regulations that pertain to processing, packaging, labeling, and selling food. A marketing plan is necessary before investing in specialized equipment. More information on sources of assistance is in the ATTRA publication Adding Value to Farm Products: An Overview. Examples of new product planning, such as the Mississippi State University Extension document (see Resources below), are available on the Internet.

The information on equipment suppliers listed below is from a massive new food industry directory compiled by Grey House Publishers (10) from two industry databases. The new Thomas Food & Beverage Market Place contains more than 6000 pages of services available to the food industry. Volume 2, Equipment, Supplies and Services, lists product categories, company profiles, transportation firms, warehouse companies, and wholesalers/distributors.

The 2000 edition (2nd ed.) of the Wiley Encyclopedia of Food Science (2), compiled and edited by Frederick J. Francis of Amherst University, has more particulars on the types of industrial food dehydration I have summarized above. A farmer with a product concept and raw materials should carefully consider contracting out specialized dehydration, rather than buying expensive equipment and building an on-farm factory that meets all government regulations for this type of processing.

More than 73 corporations perform custom drying services nationwide, according to the Thomas Food & Beverage Marketplace?six of them specializing in custom freeze drying and eleven in spray drying.

Back to top

Regulations
To produce processed food products on the farm, the processor has to meet local, state, and federal requirements. In the experience of those now selling such products, the regulations may be expensive and time-consuming, but they are not unreasonable. Access to a commercial kitchen may be required. A Southern region survey found regulators quite willing to work with producers to help them meet the requirements.(11) The federal Food and Drug Administration administers the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. The Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1993 governs vitamins, herbal supplements, and nutraceuticals. Handling and labeling requirements for products are quite specific.

The USDA National Organic Program (NOP) recognizes food dehydration as a handling or processing operation, making it subject to the national organic standards. Handlers who annually sell, label, or represent more than $5,000 worth of a processed agricultural product or products as "organic" or "organically produced" must have their operations certified by an accredited certifying agent. Handlers selling less than $5,000 worth of such commodities annually must follow the regulations, but are not required to be certified. In general, mechanical and biological processes that do not involve material inputs are deemed natural and allowable under the NOP standards. The standards prohibit the use of certain materials, specifically sulfites, for food preservation. For more complete information, visit the homepage of the NOP, or contact an accredited certifying agent.

Back to top

References
1) Ralph L. Cramer. 1992. Herbs and everlastings: Harvesting, drying and shipping. The Herbal Connection. Vol. 4, No. 2. p. 6.
Cramer operates Cramers' Posie Patch, Lancaster County , PA , wholesaling 39 acres of herbs and everlastings annually.

2) Francis, Frederick J. (editor/compiler). 2000. Wiley Encyclopedia of Food Science and Technology. 2 nd edition. 4 vols. John Wiley & Sons, NY. Vol. 1: p. 480-498; 540-578.

3) Hughes, Karla Vollmar, and Barbara J. Willenberg. 1994. Quality for Keeps?Drying Foods. University of Missouri Extension, Columbia. Pub. GH1562. 6 p. http://muextension.missouri.edu/explore ... gh1562.htm.

4) Blake, Bill. 1996. Sun Drying in CA. June 3. www.sare.org/sanet-mg/archives/html-hom ... /0498.html. 1 p.

5) Reynolds, Susan. 1993. Drying Foods Out-of-Doors. University of Georgia Cooperative Extension Service. Ext. Bull. 989. p. 1-3.

6) Stoner, Carol (ed.). 1977. Stocking Up: How to preserve the foods you grow, naturally. Rodale Press, Emmaus, PA. 532 p.

7) Creasy, Rosalind. 1993. Drying apricots, apples, nectarines, peaches, and pears. The Southwest Organic News [originally published in Organic Gardener's Edible Plants]. July. p.

8) May, Thomas Garvey. 2001. Gourmet, organics merging into one. The Natural Foods Merchandiser. July. p. 16.

9) Paul's Grains. 2475-B 340th Street, Laurel, IA 50141, 541-476-3373

10) Staff (ed./compilers). 2001. Thomas Food and Beverage Market Place. 3 vols. Grey House Publishing, Millerton, NY. 6000+ p.

11) Born, Holly. 2001. Keys to Success in Value-Added Agriculture. NCAT/ATTRA, Fayetteville, AR, and Southern Sustainable Agriculture Working Group. p. 1-2.

Back to top

Resources
On-line Extension bulletins:
Drying vegetables and fruits at home.
www.ext.colostate.edu/pubs/foodnut/pubfood.html#pres

How to dry foods at home.
http://muextension.missouri.edu/explore ... gh1562.htm

Drying fruits.
http://msucares.com/pubs

Drying foods:
Out of doors (FCS 8493)
http://www.agen.ufl.edu/~foodsaf/pdfs/he52000.pdf
Indoors (FCS 8494)
http://www.agen.ufl.edu/~foodsaf/pdfs/he52100.pdf

Note: FCS 8493 is the 1993 University of Georgia CES 989 publication (see footnote 5).

Drying food (Circular 1227)
http://web.aces.uiuc.edu/vista/pdf_pubs/DRYING.PDF

Drying foods at home (CFS-146)
www.ces.purdue.edu/extmedia/CFS/CFS-146-W.pdf

Drying foods. (Guide E-322)
www.cahe.nmsu.edu/pubs/_e/e-322.html

Post-harvest handling of dehydrated chiles.
www.g6csy.net/chile/index.html

Commercial processing/product development
University of Arkansas
Institute of Food Science/Engineering. 2001. Starting a Food Processing Business. UA Cooperative Extension, Little Rock, AR. 162 p.
Covers product development, principles of preservation and processing, labeling, operation management, HACCP, regulations [pertaining to Arkansas ], marketing strategies, and basic business considerations. Related publications are available; ask for brochure. $40.00. Send check or money order to Cooperative Extension Service, Business Office, Publication Sales, P.O. Box 391, Little Rock, AR 72203.

University of Massachusetts
http://www.umass.edu/
Fifty-nine publications on aspects of commercial processing. Read on-line or download.

Mississippi State University Extension
Staff. 2000. Exploring the potential for new food products. http://msucares.com/pubs/publications/p2170.html. 40 p.
This publication is intended to help individuals and companies develop a more sharply focused product concept.

Deis, Ronald C. (ed.). 1997. Food Product Design [library]: Spray-drying, Innovative use of an old process. www.foodproductdesign.com/archive/1997/0597DE.html. Weeks Publishing Co., Northbrook, IL. 7 p.

Nichols, P.F. et al. 1925. Commercial Dehydration of Fruits and Vegetables. USDA Bulletin No. 1335. 40 p.

Note: Many older U.S. government documents contain information especially useful for sustainable practices. The best place to start if you need to search for a specific document or topic relating to agriculture is your state's land-grant university library. A complete collection of government documents may be found in each state's depository, usually at the university nearest to the state capital. Try requesting copies through InterLibrary loan.

Russell, G.A. 1921. Drying crude drugs [herbal medicines]. U.S.D.A. Farmers' Bulletin 1231. 16 p.

Resources for building a dryer
Dong, Allen. 1998. I-Tech Farm-Scale Food Dehydrator. Veneta, OR .
See figure, p. [7] above; see plans for dehydrator on UC-Davis Web site.

Lavallee, Thomas. 1993. The fruit/herb dryer. The Growing Edge. Spring. p. 46-47, 49-51, 53.

Vivian, John. 1993. How to build a food dryer. Mother Earth News. February-March. p. 54-60.

Consultant:
David Stone
Commercial Dehydrator Systems, Inc.
256 Bethel Drive
Eugene, OR 97402
800-369-4283 (toll-free)
541-688-5281
541-688-5989 FAX
Charges by the day for consulting; can build any kind of dehydrator. Will provide a realistic price quotation upon request.

Sources of dehydration equipment (all types)
Brothers Metal Products, Anaheim, CA. 714-630-1051.
Vegetable dryers.

Brown Int'l Corporation, Covina, CA. 626-966-8361.
Fruit and vegetable de-waterers.

P&F Metals, Turlock, CA. 209-667-2515.
Custom-engineered food processing equipment.

Excalibur Food Dehydrators, Sacramento, CA. 916-381-4274.
USDA-approved stainless steel home and commercial food dehydrators, grain mills, jerky-making supplies.

Joneca Corp., Anaheim, CA. 714-993-5997. joneca@aol.com.
Dehydrators.

Wittemann Co., Palm Coast, FL. 904-445-4205. http://www.wittemann.com/.
Freeze-drying equipment.

Low Humidity Systems, Covington, GA. 770-385-8690. http://www.dehumidifiers.com/.
Desiccant dehumidifiers.

Fluid Air, Aurora, IL. 630-851-1200. http://www.fluidairinc.com/.
Manufactures dryers/equipment for "drying, agglomerating, coating foods and flavors."

BNW Industries, Mentone, IN. 219-353-7855. http://www.belt-o-matic.com/. North Liberty , IN. 219-656-3956.
Drum dryers and flakers.

Littleford Day, Florence, KY. 859-525-7600.
Vacuum dryers.

C.E. Rogers Co., Mora, MN. 320-679-2172. http://www.cerogers.com/.
Spray dryers and equipment.

CTB Grain Systems, Kansas City, MO. 816-968-6101.
Grain drying equipment.

Goodnature Products, Buffalo, NY. 716-855-3325. http://www.goodnature.com/.
Dewatering equipment.

Aeroglide Corp., Cary, NC. 919-851-2000. http://www.aeroglide.com/.
Customized dryers and coolers; belt and rotary dryers.

Lanly Co. , Cleveland, OH. 216-731-6115. http://www.lanly.com/.
Ovens and dryers for snack foods.

United McGill Corp., Westerville, OH. 614-882-5455.
Vacuum drying equipment.

Commercial Dehydrator Systems, Eugene, OR. 800-369-4283. http://www.dryer.com/.
Continuous belt, bin, and tray dryers.

Andritz, Muncy, PA. 570-546-8211.
Wide variety of dehydration equipment.

Fluid Energy Aljet, Telford, PA. 215-766-0300. http://www.fluidenergype.com/.
Flash drying equipment. Toll processing services.

SG Technologies/Hull Corp., Hatboro, PA. 215-672-7800. Freeze dryers.

National Drying Machinery Co., Philadelphia, PA. 215-464-6070. http://www.nationaldrying.com/.
Thermal processing equipment, including dehydrators and dryers.

Davron Technologies, Chattanooga, TN. 877-683-5498. http://www.davrontech.com/.
Custom processing equipment, including spray drying equipment.

Automation Products, Houston, TX. 713-869-0361.
Dehydrators.

Evaporator Dryer Technologies, Hammond, WI. 715-796-2313. http://www.evapdryertech.com/.
Spray dryers, nozzles.

Sources for freeze-drying equipment
SG Technologies/Hull Corporation, Hatboro, PA. 215-672-7800.

Apollo Sheet Metal, Kennewick, WA . 509-586-1104. http://www.apollosm.com/.

United McGill Corp., Westerville, OH. 614-882-5455.
Vacuum drying equipment.

Wittemann Co., Palm Coast, FL. 904-445-4205. http://www.wittemann.com/.
Freeze-drying equipment.

Littleford Day, Florence, KY. 859-525-7600.
Vacuum dryers.

Sources for spray-drying equipment
Evaporator Dryer Technologies, Hammond, WI. 715-796-2313. http://www.evapdryertech.com/.
Spray dryers, nozzles.

Davron Technologies, Chattanooga, TN. 877-683-5498. http://www.davrontech.com/.
Custom processing equipment, including spray drying equipment.

C.E. Rogers Co., Mora, MN. 320-679-2172. http://www.cerogers.com/.
Spray dryers and equipment.

Spraying Systems Company, Wheaton, IL. 630-665-5000. http://www.spray.com/.
Nozzles, spray guns, portable spray systems, spray nozzle accessories.

Spray Drying Systems, Randallstown, MD. 410-922-5900. http://www.spraydrysys.com/.

Niro, Hudson, WI. 715-796-2313. 715-386-9371. http://www.niroinc.com/.
Food and dairy dryers.

Paget Equipment Co., Marshfield, WI. 800-234-3158.

Sources of used and rebuilt dehydration equipment
Aeroglide Corporation, Cary, NC. 919-851-2000.
Market Place lists 28 other companies that sell used/rebuilt food processing equipment.



By Katherine L. Adam
NCAT Agriculture Specialist
July 2004
?NCAT 2004
Edited by Paul Williams
Formatted by Jenn Vieth
IP147
SLOT#137
Version 082404



Back to top

ATTRA - National Sustainable Agriculture Information Service is managed by the National Center for Appropriate Technology (NCAT) and is funded under a grant from the United States Department of Agriculture's Rural Business-Cooperative Service. Visit the NCAT Web site for more information on our sustainable agriculture projects.

Offline mountainredneck2051

  • Hardcore Prepper
  • ******
  • Posts: 1491
  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Deydration and drying foods
« Reply #2 on: February 27, 2012, 12:30:55 AM »
ok yall so i'm going o quit using my friends dehydrator because i am getting an awesome one for mt birthday  [url=http://www.freesmileys.or

so i been wondering if people out there have dehydrated foods they would want to buy from me if i were to make a side gig out of it

also any cool ideas yall got would be awesome
Bursting bubbles since 2013

Offline thatGirl

  • Senior Prepper
  • ****
  • Posts: 434
  • Karma: +4/-0
  • Extinction is the rule. Survival is the exception.
Re: Deydration and drying foods
« Reply #3 on: April 20, 2013, 07:18:01 PM »
We haven't tried it, but the following link has a some cool ideas for building your own solar food dehydrator.  Passive solar is an interesting technique applicable to many things beyond food dehydration.

http://www.greenoptions.com/a/how-to-make-your-own-solar-food-dehydrator
All the great things are simple, and many can be expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope.
Winston Churchill

You have freedom when you're easy in your harness.
Robert Frost

Tomorrow hopes we have learned something from yesterday.
John Wayne