[pct-l] Dehydrated chicken breast - rehydrating with hot water

JPL jplynch at crosslink.net
Sun Mar 31 00:51:05 CDT 2013


where'd you get the hot water without a stove?  campfire?

-----Original Message----- 
From: Ann Marie
Sent: Sunday, March 31, 2013 1:38 AM
To: pct-l at backcountry.net
Subject: [pct-l] Dehydrated chicken breast - rehydrating with hot water

"I went stoveless this weekend on a little trip. It worked out so well
I can't see ever using a stove on a hike when the weather is not cold
ever again. I dehydrated my own food for this trip so we're not
talking "easy" rehydrating stuff like mashed potatoes. I made
concoctions of dehydrated sweet potatoes, carrots, kale, green and
kalamata olives, pork tenderloin or chicken breast, golden beets. Put
it in a peanut butter jar, added water and real Japanese miso paste,
waited a few hours, poured a ton of olive oil in there and yum yum
best food ever. Especially the pork. That stuff dehydrates and
rehydrates really well and tastes great. The meats, beets and sweet
potatoes were all cooked before dehydrating.
"

How did you dehydrate the chicken breast?
I slow-baked the chicken, then diced it (while still juicy) and put it on
trays to dehydrate. In camp, I added enough hot water to cover the meat 
plus.
Then put the zip lock bag in a cozy.
It was steaming still 10 minutes later, but the chicken was like rocks.
We waited more minutes, still the chicken was uncomfortably chewy.

I checked the leftovers in the morning, still the chicken was way too chewy.
I added more water and by lunch time the dices were chewy enough but I
would have liked them softer.

So, what did I do wrong with the white chicken breast? Does it have to be
shredded and not diced before dehydrating it?

By the way, spaghetti squash and (frozen) chopped spinach rehydrate really 
well.
So do turkey meatballs (dice them before dehydrating) from Trader Joe's.
And a big can of crushed tomatoes from Costco.
And Costco sells a bag of shelf-stable shredded beef that dehydrates
and rehydrates really well.
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