I have no dehydrator but i am dehydrating on top of my wood stove using parchment paper on metal racks. It takes a little longer and you need to adjust the height of the racks but its working. I have dehydrated onions for onion powder, mushrooms, zuchinni, eggs and carrots. I truley enjoy this type of food preservation and it takes up less space and jars than other canning and preserving methods.
@@normahepburn1643 I am glad you made this comment . You don't even need to buy a dehydrator if you know the principles you can make your own . My grandmother used to dry apples by laying them out on the roof of a wellhouse . Later she got a tip about using her car and switched to that . I am not wild about cars because of the plastic fumes but the principle of glass still applies . Temperature control for the heat and airflow is the biggest reason people buy expensive dehydrators . If you can manage those two things on your own you can make a dehydrator out of sheet metal with passive circulation or add a fan to move the air that will swamp the output of a 400 dollar dehydrator 👍
I say this to everyone doing chicken coops. Check out how to use geothermal heat to heat your coop. You dig down to the frost level, you insulate it, and you'll get lukewarm temperature for your coop, passively. It's not WARM like, inside a house, but for the chickens, is much nicer than it being -30. Less stressful, and with a bit of light insulation in the building it can keep it quite cozy. You can use this same thing to keep water dishes from freezing too. Even when it's very cold. I also didn't know this was an option for storage. This will help in a cold winter. The eggs I get are generally fine for 2.5 or 3 months with cold refrigeration. It takes up so much space though.
I put 18 dehydrated eggs in a pint Mason jar, leaving 1 inch headspace and vacuum seal the lid, labeling & dating, although in the vacuum, their shelf life is basically forever. I reconstitute 1:1 and put up 18 eggs twice a week, year round. I keep 12 hens.
Great hack 👍🏼 I guess with the abundance of sunshine Nigeria, I can sundry them, right? Or preferably during the harmattan? Also, can I separate the yolks from the whites?
Great, concise video, thanks! But FYI, once the egg mixture comes up to the 140F/60C temp you set, they are fully pasteurized in only 12 MINUTES. Pasteurization is as much about time as temp. So I'm not sure freezing the powder is necessary for bacterial concerns (unless I *totally* misunderstood why you freeze 'em).
The problem is that there is no guarantee that the eggs have actually reached 140f/60C. The air temp in the dehydrator is that temperature, but the eggs aren’t. Similar to cooking a slab of meat. You might cook it at a temperature of 400F/205C - but your slab of meat will never reach that temp. Or at least let’s hope it doesn’t. We store in the freezer to ensure our final product doesn’t spoil. So that means bacteria, rot, etc. Plenty of folks just leave this stuff in a jar on the shelf. Which is fine for them I suppose but we value every single gram of food we produce too much to take risks that can be easily avoided.
Aren’t they cooked at this high temp. Other videos say set dehydrator to 115F. They take a long time but they are supposedly raw since the heat isn’t high
Great video. We have so many eggs stored in the fridge right now, so it is time to give this a try. Loved that you tried it in the same video, which is very helpful. Hope you guys are well 😀
Give waterglassing a try. Slate lime or building lime. Take your unwashed eggs. Knock the dirt off obviously but don't wash. Will need Fresh water (well or rain is best) Slate(slaked?)/building/pickling lime Big jar or many big jars Then add 1 ounce slate lime, builders lime, pickling lime etc. Per 1 quart of water. Regardless of how many eggs. As big a jar as you can get. Fill with eggs then pour in the water lime mixture. Keep in a cool dark location in your house. Will keep for 8-12 months. And tastes fresh :)
Thank you so much for your video. I’ve learned a lot. I didn’t know I could do this and I have a lot of eggs. I’ve been water glassing, but I’m gonna try this. I think I’d like this much better.
What a cool process! Yep, the cookies wouldn't last long our way too..HA! My daughter is waiting for the "How you Make Bread" episode. Every time we pass the wilderstead I hear "best bread ever"! Hope summer is rocking!
I just found your channel.Thank you. Do you have any suggestions when shopping fora dehydrator? I see your model is a Cabelas. Have you used others? Thank you.
We use that cabelas one and also an Excalibur 10 tray dehydrator. Both of them have worked very well for us. The cabelas unit has been used and abused for over 5 years and still runs as good as it did when it was new. The excalibur we purchased used, it's quite old, but it also runs like new. If it's in your budget, I would suggest looking at those two dehydrators, or sticking with other well known dehydrator brands as opposed to some of the knockoffs out there. We had a sunglife dehydrator that was nice to use but only lasted us about a year.
I've been dh eggs for a couple years now. I vacuum seal them in jars and keep them in cool, dark boxes in a dark room. I get 3 dz per qt jar after powdering (using my Nutribullet). Stored correctly, they are shelf stable and keep well.
I've vacuumed sealed them in jars for a few years now. They stay shelf stable when kept in a cool, dark area. I use boxes, then store the boxes on curtained shelves.
Awesome, very detailed video! Found you by accident. I'm subscribed now! Have you ever canned the dry, dehydrated egg powder to make it shelf stable? Or can it be stored in air tight Mason jars in a cabinet after being dehydrated? Is that possible? I have water glassed before. Just curious in case power was lost for long periods of time. Im trying to can stuff in my freezer. Blessings and I look forward to watching other videos! 😊
Some people just store the egg powder in an airtight container, ideally below room temperature, sometimes with oxygen absorbers added, and have no issues.
I've vacuumed sealed them in jars for a few years now. They stay shelf stable when kept in a cool, dark area. I use boxes, then store the boxes on curtained shelves. No issues.
Worst grinder to use. Buy the best. I use a Vitamix and then sift the powder and then grind the unsifted again and then what ever doesn't powder I use a mortar and pestle. I then vacuum seal with Oxydizer and Silica gel packs. Then put in closed bins in the bunker. I have tested them and they taste wonderful but I do not eat my prepper foods. I did 1300 eggs and the weight is 40 lbs. This system WORKS!!
Please answer: if power goes out will they mold coming out of freezer if put on shelf? I have a simple dehydrator and would have to buy liners. Mine is round
@@Wilderstead it’s been the best investment we have ever made, great for herbs and all the rest of the vegetables you do not loose any nutritional value where you loose some dehydrating.
interesting, dehydrating vs freeze drying... think i still prefer the latter,yes they are expensive, but if you can afford the initial monthly payment of a few hundred, then you really have no excuse, because you can easily upsell fd products especially candy,fruit,and survival food,ergo you can quickly pay off a freeze dryer by selling stuff you fd. just do it if you can, it's worth it, easy to pay it off if you're smart and sell fd products either online, in person or whatever.
The only thing I would add if they have bought the eggs.. and they don't know how old they are.. I wouldn't crack them straight into the blender incase there is a rotten one ...cracking them into a cup prior to the blender will reduce the risk of you having to throwing out a whole heap as you cracked a rotten one into them.. which can happen buying eggs..!! 😀
For us, about 5 cents an hour to run the dehydrator. Might be different for you. You'd have to calculate your electricity rate and your dehydrators wattage and figure it out. Pretty simple to do.
" Aortic atherosclerosis, however, was found to be more severe in a group of birds fed fresh egg yolks than in those fed powdered egg or the cholesterol-free diet." NIH.
Think about it. Do you eat raw eggs? You cook them first, which kills any bacteria/salmonella. You don't cook them first then add to your baking recipe, right? You just add the raw egg to the recipe. Same with dehydrated eggs.
Nice to see someone using a dehydrator instead of a damn freeze drier!
Those things are pricey!
I have no dehydrator but i am dehydrating on top of my wood stove using parchment paper on metal racks. It takes a little longer and you need to adjust the height of the racks but its working. I have dehydrated onions for onion powder, mushrooms, zuchinni, eggs and carrots. I truley enjoy this type of food preservation and it takes up less space and jars than other canning and preserving methods.
@@normahepburn1643 I am glad you made this comment . You don't even need to buy a dehydrator if you know the principles you can make your own .
My grandmother used to dry apples by laying them out on the roof of a wellhouse . Later she got a tip about using her car and switched to that . I am not wild about cars because of the plastic fumes but the principle of glass still applies .
Temperature control for the heat and airflow is the biggest reason people buy expensive dehydrators . If you can manage those two things on your own you can make a dehydrator out of sheet metal with passive circulation or add a fan to move the air that will swamp the output of a 400 dollar dehydrator 👍
@@normahepburn1643 brilliant!
The hand reaching in for the cookie 🤣
😂 they are hard to resist!
😂
Great job, Amanda! This is one of the most detailed and comprehensive, dehydrated egg videos I've seen. Thanks :)
Thanks!
I say this to everyone doing chicken coops. Check out how to use geothermal heat to heat your coop. You dig down to the frost level, you insulate it, and you'll get lukewarm temperature for your coop, passively. It's not WARM like, inside a house, but for the chickens, is much nicer than it being -30. Less stressful, and with a bit of light insulation in the building it can keep it quite cozy. You can use this same thing to keep water dishes from freezing too. Even when it's very cold.
I also didn't know this was an option for storage. This will help in a cold winter. The eggs I get are generally fine for 2.5 or 3 months with cold refrigeration. It takes up so much space though.
It was also nice to see someone that understands that a metric cup is 250ml 👍🏼 🌠🎇🎆😃👏🏼
It's so cool how fast her heart beats!
Thanks Amanda I saved this video so I can rewatch when my girls start to lay 😊
This would be great for backpacking!!!
Canoe trips (Algonquian park)
Yes it would!
I put 18 dehydrated eggs in a pint Mason jar, leaving 1 inch headspace and vacuum seal the lid, labeling & dating, although in the vacuum, their shelf life is basically forever. I reconstitute 1:1 and put up 18 eggs twice a week, year round. I keep 12 hens.
Enjoyed your video -Amanda and Dave.
Great hack 👍🏼
I guess with the abundance of sunshine Nigeria, I can sundry them, right? Or preferably during the harmattan?
Also, can I separate the yolks from the whites?
Great advise, take care and stay safe
Thanks, you too!
thanks for teaching me how to store eggs
next time I see them on sale Ill stock up or stop at the market
Thanks for sharing this! I will definitely be using this trick!
You're so welcome!
Thanks, I like to store them in the freezer also. I was wondering if others did also.
Thanks for the demonstration.
You are welcome!
Great, concise video, thanks! But FYI, once the egg mixture comes up to the 140F/60C temp you set, they are fully pasteurized in only 12 MINUTES. Pasteurization is as much about time as temp. So I'm not sure freezing the powder is necessary for bacterial concerns (unless I *totally* misunderstood why you freeze 'em).
The problem is that there is no guarantee that the eggs have actually reached 140f/60C. The air temp in the dehydrator is that temperature, but the eggs aren’t. Similar to cooking a slab of meat. You might cook it at a temperature of 400F/205C - but your slab of meat will never reach that temp. Or at least let’s hope it doesn’t.
We store in the freezer to ensure our final product doesn’t spoil. So that means bacteria, rot, etc.
Plenty of folks just leave this stuff in a jar on the shelf. Which is fine for them I suppose but we value every single gram of food we produce too much to take risks that can be easily avoided.
Aren’t they cooked at this high temp. Other videos say set dehydrator to 115F. They take a long time but they are supposedly raw since the heat isn’t high
I have 8-10 dozen eggs on the counter, so very good timing. this is a great idea, thanks for the walk-through. Hoping you two are doing well!
Thanks! You too!
Thanks for the good information, I’ll take a dozen cookies please.
I may have to try that! Thank you so much for sharing!
Great video. We have so many eggs stored in the fridge right now, so it is time to give this a try. Loved that you tried it in the same video, which is very helpful. Hope you guys are well 😀
It definitely cuts down immensely on storage space. Let us know what you think once you’ve tried it!
Give waterglassing a try.
Slate lime or building lime.
Take your unwashed eggs. Knock the dirt off obviously but don't wash.
Will need Fresh water (well or rain is best)
Slate(slaked?)/building/pickling lime
Big jar or many big jars
Then add 1 ounce slate lime, builders lime, pickling lime etc. Per 1 quart of water. Regardless of how many eggs. As big a jar as you can get. Fill with eggs then pour in the water lime mixture.
Keep in a cool dark location in your house. Will keep for 8-12 months. And tastes fresh :)
Thank you so much for your video. I’ve learned a lot. I didn’t know I could do this and I have a lot of eggs. I’ve been water glassing, but I’m gonna try this. I think I’d like this much better.
Glad it was helpful!
I'm a novice cook, what time and temp for the peanut butter cookies? Great job on the video production - your a natural for that.
Love this and you are a breath of fresh air! ❤
What a cool process! Yep, the cookies wouldn't last long our way too..HA! My daughter is waiting for the "How you Make Bread" episode. Every time we pass the wilderstead I hear "best bread ever"! Hope summer is rocking!
Awesome to hear! There is a recipe on the website for bread 🥖 😉
@@Wilderstead sweet!!!
What was the temperature of the water? Was it cold or lukewarm? The finer the egg powder the easier it is to rehydrate?
Great video!! I gotta try all of this!
This is great info! Now if I only had chickens. 😢.
Great job. Very educational. Can you do the whites and yolks separately? I use a lot of eggwhite powder in my baking and it is costly.
Follow the same process for just yolks or just whites.
Sure
What exactly do you use for bedding for your chickens nest?
great video, very interesting process and intriguing to see your tools/methods... love the accent also 😁
Glad you enjoyed it!
When you take the eggs out of the freeze do they become wet after thawing?
Such a good channel!
Great video. Thank you🙏🏾
Great job and video. ❤
I just found your channel.Thank you. Do you have any suggestions when shopping fora dehydrator? I see your model is a Cabelas. Have you used others? Thank you.
We use that cabelas one and also an Excalibur 10 tray dehydrator. Both of them have worked very well for us. The cabelas unit has been used and abused for over 5 years and still runs as good as it did when it was new. The excalibur we purchased used, it's quite old, but it also runs like new. If it's in your budget, I would suggest looking at those two dehydrators, or sticking with other well known dehydrator brands as opposed to some of the knockoffs out there. We had a sunglife dehydrator that was nice to use but only lasted us about a year.
Have you tried seperating the yolks and whites and then drying them seperately?
We’ve done it before, yes. Same process.
If they are in the freezer and power goes out, will they mold? What about seal a meal?
Are they shelf stable in a cool, dry environment or do they have to go right into the fridge/freezer…? Thx
I've been dh eggs for a couple years now. I vacuum seal them in jars and keep them in cool, dark boxes in a dark room. I get 3 dz per qt jar after powdering (using my Nutribullet). Stored correctly, they are shelf stable and keep well.
love your videos so much 🥰🙌🏿🇰🇪
Can you vacuum seal the powdered eggs? Does vacuum sealing provide the same effect as putting them in the freezer once they are dried? Thank you
Some people do that and store on the shelf. We prefer to freeze it as it is still raw product that could spoil.
I've vacuumed sealed them in jars for a few years now. They stay shelf stable when kept in a cool, dark area. I use boxes, then store the boxes on curtained shelves.
Awesome, very detailed video! Found you by accident. I'm subscribed now!
Have you ever canned the dry, dehydrated egg powder to make it shelf stable? Or can it be stored in air tight Mason jars in a cabinet after being dehydrated? Is that possible? I have water glassed before. Just curious in case power was lost for long periods of time. Im trying to can stuff in my freezer.
Blessings and I look forward to watching other videos! 😊
Some people just store the egg powder in an airtight container, ideally below room temperature, sometimes with oxygen absorbers added, and have no issues.
I've vacuumed sealed them in jars for a few years now. They stay shelf stable when kept in a cool, dark area. I use boxes, then store the boxes on curtained shelves. No issues.
i dont see any information or link on the coffee grinder you are using! mine is so tiny, i am interested in yours?
Nice work
I guess sunny and runny is out for winter eggs lol I am sure they taste great the cookie monster gets his in the cookie.
Haha! For sure, and yes quite the Cookie 👿
The few fresh ones we get in the winter are saved for the glorious fried egg sandwiches 😆
I may have missed it..can I do this with raw eggs I have dehydrated-no cooking required?
We dehydrate the eggs when they are raw, then we cook them before using.
I dont like to dehydrate eggs. The reason is that the top always looks wet and its kinda scary with eggs. How do you handle that?
Worst grinder to use. Buy the best. I use a Vitamix and then sift the powder and then grind the unsifted again and then what ever doesn't powder I use a mortar and pestle. I then vacuum seal with Oxydizer and Silica gel packs. Then put in closed bins in the bunker. I have tested them and they taste wonderful but I do not eat my prepper foods. I did 1300 eggs and the weight is 40 lbs. This system WORKS!!
Please answer: if power goes out will they mold coming out of freezer if put on shelf? I have a simple dehydrator and would have to buy liners. Mine is round
Not sure. They might last quite a while on the shelf. We haven’t had to find out yet.
If you vacuum seal the egg powder in jars, they are shelf stable for at least a few years. That's what I've done.
omg...lmao....I almost died when you said "chicken butt to my mouth" Love it
lol
dry storage is the minimum required energy and the best overall
maybe put a desiccant bag alongside the pouch, SiO2 or such
yep powder/pieces dried anything
k.i.s.s. so you dont have to go to store for anything, including the equipment
a trip to store is too much for self-sustained life style, off-grid
can you stand up without the city/town store, by yourself
Nooice! 😎 STOC
We freeze dry them
Fancy pants.
Definitely an option if you have a freeze dryer 🙂
@@Wilderstead it’s been the best investment we have ever made, great for herbs and all the rest of the vegetables you do not loose any nutritional value where you loose some dehydrating.
any way to do it with out those kinds of dehydrators i can’t even afford the one she has 😢
You can do it in your oven, same temperature, with the door slightly open to let moisture out
interesting, dehydrating vs freeze drying... think i still prefer the latter,yes they are expensive, but if you can afford the initial monthly payment of a few hundred, then you really have no excuse, because you can easily upsell fd products especially candy,fruit,and survival food,ergo you can quickly pay off a freeze dryer by selling stuff you fd.
just do it if you can, it's worth it,
easy to pay it off if you're smart and sell fd products either online, in person or whatever.
eggs just by themselves and with butter arn't the same...love the demonstration though
140 degrees is the heat mark for the food safe zone. At 140 degrees bacteria die.
And when it’s no longer in that safe zone, bacteria can again, grow.
14:30 If the husband is going back for thirds.. ... It's gotta be good
The only thing I would add if they have bought the eggs.. and they don't know how old they are.. I wouldn't crack them straight into the blender incase there is a rotten one ...cracking them into a cup prior to the blender will reduce the risk of you having to throwing out a whole heap as you cracked a rotten one into them.. which can happen buying eggs..!! 😀
👏👏👏👏👏❤
Allowing hands to stop laying in the winter tends to extend their productive life, according to what I’ve read. Do you find this to be true?
There are a lot of factors that come into play.
Curiosity....whats electricity cost for 8 hours.?
For us, about 5 cents an hour to run the dehydrator. Might be different for you. You'd have to calculate your electricity rate and your dehydrators wattage and figure it out. Pretty simple to do.
The problem with dehydrated eggs is that the cholesterol gets oxidized, which isn't healthy. Maybe freeze the yolks and dehydrate the egg whites?
What happens when you cook eggs?
" Aortic atherosclerosis, however, was found to be more severe in a group of birds fed fresh egg yolks than in those fed powdered egg or the cholesterol-free diet."
NIH.
Shelf-life on those cookies are only a few hours. ;)
no Bacteria/Salmonella on the Dehydrating Eggs ??
Think about it. Do you eat raw eggs? You cook them first, which kills any bacteria/salmonella. You don't cook them first then add to your baking recipe, right? You just add the raw egg to the recipe. Same with dehydrated eggs.
“Chicken’s butt to my mouth”
Yup. True story. First you’ve heard it?
this is so hot