Love your work. I have a hint on the eggs. I watched "Phil at 4800 feet" and he discussed the problem of raw scrambled eggs having an inconsistent or lumpy texture after being reconstituted from freeze drying---you mentioned this similar thing when you reconstituted yours. He said that a food science professional taught him a trick to prevent that problem. Add 1 ts. of salt to every one cup of raw scrambled eggs (4 eggs is typically 1 cup) and your reconstituted eggs will retain a smooth texture after being freeze dried and reconstituted. He tested it out on the video and it proved to be true. Perhaps some viewers will appreciate that hint.
@@kerrylawson7515 Good question. I don't know for sure except that "Phil at 4800 feet" is about as scientific, detailed and methodical as I've viewed and he did taste test it afterward against non-salted and didn't mention anything about too much salt. Maybe there's something about the freeze drying that impacts the saltiness? IDK.
@@thefreezedryingcommunity Phil at 4800 feet also stated at the end of his vid to omit the salt if you use this mixture in a recipe that called for salt. Someone in his comment section stated the ratio of salt to egg was too much salt and another viewer stated 1/2 tsp. salt to 1 cup of egg is not as salty.
Also you could rehydrate separately. If the white isn't stealing the moisture from the yolk, it may absorb more moisture. Then recombine and cook. I'd love to see a silicone poaching cup, with the pot lid on, to see if would steam it better.
Would you happen to have any instructions about how you do this? How do the yolks and whites work for baking purposes? I’d like to try this for duck eggs but can’t find to much about freeze drying yolks and whites separately
Hello everyone! These dividers are AWESOME for eggs. I’ve been putting 4 cups of raw blended eggs in each tray. This came out to be around twenty eggs(your mileage may vary-I used varying sized eggs from my chickens). The divers made really nice squares. No sticking at all. Doing the math, 20 eggs per tray, 40 squares means 2 squares will be 1 egg. Easy to calculate for recipes.
Have you ever tried to rehydrate anyting in a vacuum sealed container? Put one or two of the eggs with the required amount of water into a pint jar and vacuum seal them. The vacuum may help draw the water deep into whatever it is you're trying to hydrate.
Another idea is to take a small metal pin and make a series of holes in the freeze dried yolk before you try to rehydrate it. It will allow the water to seep in a bit better.
I found your channel earlier tonight. Happy for the time change so I can get an add'l hour of sleep; I'm not sure if I'll be able to pry myself away before dawn lol I really love how you're just "experimenting" in every video. So many creators feel the need to come off as experts in their video's, it makes people afraid to deviate from it. Thank you so much for the time you're putting into these for us.
Nice to see this working for egg salad. I use a box grater to prepare my eggs, so I will give this a try. Egg yolks react the same way with regular freezing. The composition of the yolk changes. Haven't figure a work around...I don't think that there is one... Great tips though!!
I'm wondering if you could do deviled eggs? Either completely prepared or egg white and yolk mixture separately frozen? Then can we also do already cooked scrambled eggs made with milk and cheese. Thank you.
The chopped hard boiled eggs is new to me! I do scrambled raw all the time but I don't blend them up. I just kind of chop them up with a bread scraper before bagging them. They seem to do fine. I wonder if the whole egg yolk ends up getting partially cooked? That's what it looks like to me.
The freeze dried eggs sure come in handy, especially when you run outta money for whatever reason, just open a package throw in blender.... or mortar and pestle, and boom.... eggs, add the water, keep on cooking and baking.
I’m planning on doing breakfast pouches with some vegetables, meat and then add eggs. It’s hard to cook for just two and I think a FD gives so many possibilities!
I would be thinking of sealing the powdered eggs in the bottom of a mylar bag then seal the omelet fixings then seal the top, that way they are all together and not wasting mylar bags on tiny amounts of dry goods.
Learned you can blend raw eggs, put in quart size ziplock to freeze. Make sure its level and the right height. You can get significantly more on the trays and no spills.
Your facebook group is awesome! I've learned tons of things there and it has kept me from making some real messes in my machine. I highly recommend that group to learn so many various ways to use and care for the freeze dryer.
We have 170 eggs and hubby going to get another 12 dozen from farm. I am going to begin with just raw beaten eggs using up a fork, hoping I don’t incorporate much air. After that I was thinking about raw scrambled eggs. If I wanted some of the garden tomatoes, jalapeños green peppers added in, should I steam the the peppers first so they are already cooked a bit before adding them to the raw eggs?
We have 10 dozen, raw, scrambled eggs in our FD right now! We've always water glassed our eggs starting at the end of every Spring so we'd have them during the winter in case our hens don't provide enough. Water glassing is so messy and if you bump the containers you can crack eggs inside and it gets really gross. We had 2 five gallon buckets full, we're excited to get them all freeze dried! Another advantage of FD over water glassing is that the eggs will last so much longer, I never keep our WG eggs longer than about 9 months, whatever we have left come the next summer we give to the pigs and chickens. Sorry pigs & chickens, no eggs this summer!
Have you tried making meringue with freeze dried whites? I don't know if the heat would prevent them from whipping up. But I might be able to turn the heat down. I was thinking about separating eggs and drying them for different recipes that use only the white or the yolk but usually when I do eggs I just scramble them for the ease of it.
I would love for you to carry stainless steal divider trays. Great videos, you give great ideas. Just bought the largest harvest right. I plan on using your products in the future, for you being so giving with your information. Thank you so much.
The cost to make a thick gauge stainless divider would not be cost effective. There are thin steel ones out there (i have owned them) and they are flimsy, they fall apart and rust. All reasons I went with FDA approved plastics
@@thefreezedryingcommunity Try adding spices when whipping. Pour on tray & sprinkle with cheese before freezing. FD ham chunks separately & add together after powdering eggs & cheese. I like mine with fresh diced garden toms & chopped green onion 👊😉
I wonder if after freezing the whole egg you poked a hole through the yolk if that might help it rehydrate better. By poking a hole in it water can easily get inside to rehydrate. By waiting until after it's frozen you should be able to maintain the whole yolk.
is the membrane that encloses the yolk the reason why it doesn't rehydrate as easily? if it is damaged in the freeze drying process could it be that water finds it difficult to cross it? would puncturing it before freezing (similar to when microwaving) make a difference? when you consider its function it is a remarkably strong structure for its seeming delicacy.
Oh no the yokes!!! Scrambling is always good for me. I'm so excited to get moved and use the Harvest Right! I'm going to have chickens so I want a method to preserve the eggs.
This is a question... not a comment.. u said about the trays lean back because of water expelling.. is is possible to put shims,bocks what ever you want to call it,, under the back side of the trays to keep the tray level for wet food
With respect to freezing before going into the freeze dryer, would blast freezing the product instead of freezing in a regular freezer help with the freeze drying process. Also, it is well known that blast freezing meats and other products retains the cell structure and hence the texture and quality over regular freezing. So the big question, do you think that blast freezing product before freeze drying would be advantageous???
Hmm - wonder if you could fry your egg first and poach it first so they are cooked prior to freeze drying then all you have to do is rehydrate and warm up. Not sure if that will work or not may have to try that myself on an experimental day.
Got my new Harvest right. TBH the oil free pump is actually really loud!!! Should post a simple cleaning vid !!! I feel like I am doing something wrong
Haven't read below, but I imagine pre-poaching/cooking the eggs instead of trying raw. Less chance of someone getting sick (because they forgot to label the bag), and typically folks will add eggs into prepared foods anyway. Just a thought
I"m going to try chopped hard boiled eggs. What I would like to see is a video where the whipped yolks and writes are done separately. Yolks for puddings and what not. Whites to see if they will whip up into a meringue for pies or angel food cake
I just found your channel. Thanks for all the useful and easy to understand information! Regarding the egg yolks....I have frozen whole eggs in my freezer and tried to thaw them and use those in recipes; cookies, banana bread and such. The yolks are never quite right. In fact they look exactly like yours do and they are hard to mix in to whatever I am making. Have you ever tried freeze drying eggs without freezing them first? I know freeze dried freezes them, but maybe it would make a difference and then maybe not!!
Depends on what you plan to use it for - as an ingredient in recipes you plan to cook raw makes sense. These can be powered to be more space efficient. For use camping or for emergency preparedness I prefer to scramble and cook first in a large iron skillet, and then freeze dry. That way they are ready to eat right out of the pouch or can be rehydrated. Even better with sausage and potatoes, etc. seasoned as you like as a ready to eat breakfast casserole. If doing both ways be sure to label your raw eggs RAW.
I have a question, can you freeze dry meat that you have previously canned? I have quite a bit and wonder if this is a way to get it to last longer than it will in the jars.
Can you store your freeze-dried egg in homemade cake and brownie mixes? I have several jars ready to use but they are missing eggs, vanilla and water. I would like to add powder eggs to my dry mix. Any suggestions?
Just watched your hard boiled egg video and you said what ruined the egg whites was the freezing step. What happened when you don't freeze them before freeze drying?
Do you freeze everything before putting it in the freeze dryer? Does it change the consistency at all? Does it speed up the freeze drying process? Do you have to change any settings?
How many eggs will fit a Harvest Right medium tray? I am a newbie at FD. I received my products from your store today. Tray dividers, tray corners, & your FD cookbook. TIA
i wonder if you put one of the whole eggs in a container and covered it with lots of water and let it sit for quite a while and then tried to poor the excess water out if it would do what you want even if you had a little extra water it would boil out while frying it
I did frezzedried scambledeggs.they turned out good. Put them in food processor turn them to powder. The only problem. Was egg was all over inside of freezedrryer
I love watching you freeze dry, did you add any dashes of salt to the eggs or mixtures and also a home tip when making fresh egg salad, use the cheese grater to shred the egg a bit more evenly.
Oh and according to another food site I read the yolks will always harden because of the proteins when freezing. so they recommended that storing eggs frozen should have salt or sugar added to the yolk mixture to prevent the proteins from binding in the cold. a form of coagulation. SO if you took all the yolks scrambled them separately and added a little salt, then put a tablespoon of yolk in the egg white compartment, you might get a facsimile of an egg. just thinking.
Could you do a collab with Guga Foods / Sous Vide Everything? He recently did a homemade msg video. He dehydrated the ingredients. I'm curious how different the flavor concentration would be if it was freeze dried instead
Awesome video! Can't wait to try this. What food scale do you use? How soon after freeze drying eggs do we have to get them into jars or mylar bags with oxygen absorbers. Can we wait a few hours or the following day when we have free time?
Just experimenting with egg whites.....in the FD as I type. My son wants to try to use them in angel food cakes. So far this summer I put away 10 quarts of scrambled eggs. These would have been given away or fed to animals. Chickens produce a feast or famine in the North...even with extra lights on. So, we now won't have to buy as many eggs during the winter!👍
Can you please tell me how much weight chicken with sauce can be loaded on each tray for large machines. I used your dividers for 10 portions per tray. Tray with food weight is 7.34 lbs each. Heavy for me to carry to freezer. So i used your corners and only carried two. Afraid to put them in freeze dryer till i find out. Thank you so much for your help. I did sign up on mewe but really have not learned how to use yet. Never been on facebook twitter etc. Thanks again!
Good video, and excellent information. We've FD'd raw scrambled eggs with great success, too. One thing I **haven't** been able to find is a video freeze drying *cooked* scrambled eggs and then reconstituting them. {pleading puppy eyes} Do you think you could do a video including that sometime?
I realize it has been a year...but I am just starting with the freeze dryer..if you haven't found a video showing freeze drying cooked eggs, look up Rose Red Homestead. She did one.
Your Video"s are great... I have a question for you. .soooo Would the yolk & white seperate if you tried to flip the yolk while rehydrating the whole egg? If not I think it could help. In watching the video it "looked" like the problem was because of the thickness of the yolk. Keep up the videos.....they are great!!! Kathy
Fairly new to home freeze drying here and considering making a purchase. Sorry if I missed the answer to this somewhere but what is the advantage to pre-freezing? Or is it just to store things you have prepped before you have room in your freeze dryer?
When you pre freeze, it takes less time to FD as it is already cold. I have never had room to pre freeze. I cleaned my freezer and now I have a little room for the 4 trays. Enjoy all the fun of freeze drying!! I love mine. i have had it about 2 1/2 months.
I do all this much simpler just put all raw eggs in food processor. When done freeze drying, I powder them now I can use that powder for everything except a whole fried egg which isn't going to be the way Ifry an egg anywaybecausei want a yoke i can dip my toast in. But can steam and make egg salad, Scrambled Eggs, use for french toast, mix in recipes. And all this with no problem whatsoever rehydrating.
I do something similar. I put a tray's worth of eggs in a large bowl and use an immersion blender to whip them really well and then I pour them in to the tray. Once freeze dried I put the eggs into my food processor to turn into powder and then seal in a Mylar bag or jar with an O2 absorber. Have never had an issue with the eggs being lumpy or the texture being weird.
Good summary....I will stick with scrambled. When weighing would you not be better weighing the empty tray+liner+divider, then when full, then after FD. Then you csn calculate the weight of your product before and after FD? You get your water to add and your calorie counts a more accurate.
The freeze Dried Eggs Worked amazing! Make sure you grab your #traydividers at www.freezedryingsupplies.com
COOL, Love eggs.. So Scramble Eggs for the WIN
is there any botulism risk with freeze dried eggs or cooked or raw meat? just wondering
@@fionmor4893 store in BOTH an oxygen absorbers AND vacuum sealed.
Love your work. I have a hint on the eggs. I watched "Phil at 4800 feet" and he discussed the problem of raw scrambled eggs having an inconsistent or lumpy texture after being reconstituted from freeze drying---you mentioned this similar thing when you reconstituted yours. He said that a food science professional taught him a trick to prevent that problem. Add 1 ts. of salt to every one cup of raw scrambled eggs (4 eggs is typically 1 cup) and your reconstituted eggs will retain a smooth texture after being freeze dried and reconstituted. He tested it out on the video and it proved to be true. Perhaps some viewers will appreciate that hint.
that's a great tip thanks
That seems like a lot of salt for 4 eggs. Am I just an under-seasoner?
@@kerrylawson7515 Good question. I don't know for sure except that "Phil at 4800 feet" is about as scientific, detailed and methodical as I've viewed and he did taste test it afterward against non-salted and didn't mention anything about too much salt. Maybe there's something about the freeze drying that impacts the saltiness? IDK.
@@thefreezedryingcommunity Phil at 4800 feet also stated at the end of his vid to omit the salt if you use this mixture in a recipe that called for salt. Someone in his comment section stated the ratio of salt to egg was too much salt and another viewer stated 1/2 tsp. salt to 1 cup of egg is not as salty.
@@kerrylawson7515 Someone stated in the comments stated to use 1/2 tsp per cup of egg.
Here's a thought Brian , separate yolks and whites. I keep a mason jar of each in case the wife is baking and needs just the white or the yolk. .
Also you could rehydrate separately. If the white isn't stealing the moisture from the yolk, it may absorb more moisture. Then recombine and cook. I'd love to see a silicone poaching cup, with the pot lid on, to see if would steam it better.
Would you happen to have any instructions about how you do this? How do the yolks and whites work for baking purposes? I’d like to try this for duck eggs but can’t find to much about freeze drying yolks and whites separately
I ordered a set of the dividers from their store. They were delivered in 4 days. Outstanding service.
I still haven't gotten mine.
Hello everyone! These dividers are AWESOME for eggs. I’ve been putting 4 cups of raw blended eggs in each tray. This came out to be around twenty eggs(your mileage may vary-I used varying sized eggs from my chickens). The divers made really nice squares. No sticking at all. Doing the math, 20 eggs per tray, 40 squares means 2 squares will be 1 egg. Easy to calculate for recipes.
thank you! I appreciate your taking time to demonstrate and teach us. These videos are very helpful!
Have you ever tried to rehydrate anyting in a vacuum sealed container? Put one or two of the eggs with the required amount of water into a pint jar and vacuum seal them. The vacuum may help draw the water deep into whatever it is you're trying to hydrate.
Great idea! 👍
Another idea is to take a small metal pin and make a series of holes in the freeze dried yolk before you try to rehydrate it. It will allow the water to seep in a bit better.
Great video! Just ordered the dividers and stacking thingies. Thanks for developing these!
I found your channel earlier tonight. Happy for the time change so I can get an add'l hour of sleep; I'm not sure if I'll be able to pry myself away before dawn lol I really love how you're just "experimenting" in every video. So many creators feel the need to come off as experts in their video's, it makes people afraid to deviate from it. Thank you so much for the time you're putting into these for us.
Nice to see this working for egg salad. I use a box grater to prepare my eggs, so I will give this a try.
Egg yolks react the same way with regular freezing. The composition of the yolk changes. Haven't figure a work around...I don't think that there is one...
Great tips though!!
I'm wondering if you could do deviled eggs? Either completely prepared or egg white and yolk mixture separately frozen?
Then can we also do already cooked scrambled eggs made with milk and cheese.
Thank you.
I FD a dozen scrambled eggs per tray and divide results into four pkgs and add FD bacon bits. Awesome breakfast for camping! No overload.
Good stuff!
Perfect timing. I had an abundance of eggs and planned to use the dividers today
Perfect!
The chopped hard boiled eggs is new to me! I do scrambled raw all the time but I don't blend them up. I just kind of chop them up with a bread scraper before bagging them. They seem to do fine. I wonder if the whole egg yolk ends up getting partially cooked? That's what it looks like to me.
Or like Tray suggested power white powder yolk rehydrate separately then power white and into middle pour the yolk to look like a normal egg?
The freeze dried eggs sure come in handy, especially when you run outta money for whatever reason, just open a package throw in blender.... or mortar and pestle, and boom.... eggs, add the water, keep on cooking and baking.
I’m planning on doing breakfast pouches with some vegetables, meat and then add eggs. It’s hard to cook for just two and I think a FD gives so many possibilities!
I would be thinking of sealing the powdered eggs in the bottom of a mylar bag then seal the omelet fixings then seal the top, that way they are all together and not wasting mylar bags on tiny amounts of dry goods.
Learned you can blend raw eggs, put in quart size ziplock to freeze. Make sure its level and the right height. You can get significantly more on the trays and no spills.
So once the egg mixture is frozen in the zip lock, do you cut away the bag and then freeze dry?
Your facebook group is awesome! I've learned tons of things there and it has kept me from making some real messes in my machine. I highly recommend that group to learn so many various ways to use and care for the freeze dryer.
Good to hear!
Awesome video on freeze drying eggs. Thank you for making this.
My pleasure 😊
Thinking the yoke won’t soak up water due to the sack not being broken that surrounds it. 🤷🏻♀️
Yolk
We have 170 eggs and hubby going to get another 12 dozen from farm. I am going to begin with just raw beaten eggs using up a fork, hoping I don’t incorporate much air. After that I was thinking about raw scrambled eggs. If I wanted some of the garden tomatoes, jalapeños green peppers added in, should I steam the the peppers first so they are already cooked a bit before adding them to the raw eggs?
We have 10 dozen, raw, scrambled eggs in our FD right now! We've always water glassed our eggs starting at the end of every Spring so we'd have them during the winter in case our hens don't provide enough. Water glassing is so messy and if you bump the containers you can crack eggs inside and it gets really gross. We had 2 five gallon buckets full, we're excited to get them all freeze dried! Another advantage of FD over water glassing is that the eggs will last so much longer, I never keep our WG eggs longer than about 9 months, whatever we have left come the next summer we give to the pigs and chickens. Sorry pigs & chickens, no eggs this summer!
Have you tried making meringue with freeze dried whites? I don't know if the heat would prevent them from whipping up. But I might be able to turn the heat down. I was thinking about separating eggs and drying them for different recipes that use only the white or the yolk but usually when I do eggs I just scramble them for the ease of it.
I would love for you to carry stainless steal divider trays. Great videos, you give great ideas. Just bought the largest harvest right. I plan on using your products in the future, for you being so giving with your information. Thank you so much.
The cost to make a thick gauge stainless divider would not be cost effective. There are thin steel ones out there (i have owned them) and they are flimsy, they fall apart and rust. All reasons I went with FDA approved plastics
@@thefreezedryingcommunity
Try adding spices when whipping.
Pour on tray & sprinkle with cheese before freezing.
FD ham chunks separately & add together after powdering eggs & cheese.
I like mine with fresh diced garden toms & chopped green onion
👊😉
What container would be best to store FD whole eggs? Mason jars or Mylar bags? I want to keep the eggs whole if possible for frying.
I wonder if after freezing the whole egg you poked a hole through the yolk if that might help it rehydrate better. By poking a hole in it water can easily get inside to rehydrate. By waiting until after it's frozen you should be able to maintain the whole yolk.
Really enjoy all your videos on the freeze dyer as we are in yin purchasing one soon
Thanks so much, hope you find them helpful
is the membrane that encloses the yolk the reason why it doesn't rehydrate as easily? if it is damaged in the freeze drying process could it be that water finds it difficult to cross it? would puncturing it before freezing (similar to when microwaving) make a difference? when you consider its function it is a remarkably strong structure for its seeming delicacy.
I was wondering when you were gonna do this with the dividers!
Oh no the yokes!!! Scrambling is always good for me. I'm so excited to get moved and use the Harvest Right! I'm going to have chickens so I want a method to preserve the eggs.
I wonder if you rehydrate the scrambled eggs with milk if they would be fluffier
This is a question... not a comment.. u said about the trays lean back because of water expelling.. is is possible to put shims,bocks what ever you want to call it,, under the back side of the trays to keep the tray level for wet food
With respect to freezing before going into the freeze dryer, would blast freezing the product instead of freezing in a regular freezer help with the freeze drying process. Also, it is well known that blast freezing meats and other products retains the cell structure and hence the texture and quality over regular freezing. So the big question, do you think that blast freezing product before freeze drying would be advantageous???
I have spoken to HR before about blast freezing and they mentioned that they did not notice a difference when testing with it
Hmm - wonder if you could fry your egg first and poach it first so they are cooked prior to freeze drying then all you have to do is rehydrate and warm up. Not sure if that will work or not may have to try that myself on an experimental day.
I have found that works, If doing both ways be sure to clearly label your raw eggs RAW.
Got my new Harvest right. TBH the oil free pump is actually really loud!!! Should post a simple cleaning vid !!! I feel like I am doing something wrong
Isopropyl rinse researched on another channel
Haven't read below, but I imagine pre-poaching/cooking the eggs instead of trying raw. Less chance of someone getting sick (because they forgot to label the bag), and typically folks will add eggs into prepared foods anyway. Just a thought
I know whites are easy to work with, but have you ever separated the eggs, then whisked up just the yolks, then freeze dried and powdered them?
Great info! Im making the hard boiled eggs TODAY!!
is there any botulism risk with freeze dried eggs or cooked or raw meat?
What great video- but how do you know if they are done? Are they supposed to be greasy/oily on top - thanks
The machine is pretty accurate at guessing. I also use an infrared thermometer to locate cold spots
I"m going to try chopped hard boiled eggs. What I would like to see is a video where the whipped yolks and writes are done separately. Yolks for puddings and what not. Whites to see if they will whip up into a meringue for pies or angel food cake
I have not tried to whip whites, but I have no doubt they would work. They were 100% in everything I did and have done in the past.
I just found your channel. Thanks for all the useful and easy to understand information! Regarding the egg yolks....I have frozen whole eggs in my freezer and tried to thaw them and use those in recipes; cookies, banana bread and such. The yolks are never quite right. In fact they look exactly like yours do and they are hard to mix in to whatever I am making. Have you ever tried freeze drying eggs without freezing them first? I know freeze dried freezes them, but maybe it would make a difference and then maybe not!!
So is it a better idea to scramble eggs and freeze dry them raw to cook later? Or cook and scramble and then freeze dry the cooked ones?
Depends on what you plan to use it for - as an ingredient in recipes you plan to cook raw makes sense. These can be powered to be more space efficient.
For use camping or for emergency preparedness I prefer to scramble and cook first in a large iron skillet, and then freeze dry. That way they are ready to eat right out of the pouch or can be rehydrated. Even better with sausage and potatoes, etc. seasoned as you like as a ready to eat breakfast casserole. If doing both ways be sure to label your raw eggs RAW.
I would like to recommend trying chicken stock to rehydrate many things. It works great for many types of cooking. This is just a thought.
Thanks for the tip! Stock and broth works very well and infuses lots of extra flavor
I have a question, can you freeze dry meat that you have previously canned? I have quite a bit and wonder if this is a way to get it to last longer than it will in the jars.
I am guessing you can as you can FD raw or cooked meat. I have some canned hamburger that I might try! Thanks for the idea!
Can you store your freeze-dried egg in homemade cake and brownie mixes? I have several jars ready to use but they are missing eggs, vanilla and water. I would like to add powder eggs to my dry mix. Any suggestions?
Is it safe to put the chopped eggs that are cooked into the freeze dryer with the raw eggs?
The yokes are like that when I've put them in the freezer and then later thawed them. I wonder if they could go straight to the freeze dryer?
Can you go ahead and cook the scrambled eggs , then FD?
Im a newbie. What do you recommend to use to disinfect the machine after fd the eggs?
For your egg salad, did you use just the condiments as your rehydrating “liquid”?
Just watched your hard boiled egg video and you said what ruined the egg whites was the freezing step. What happened when you don't freeze them before freeze drying?
Have you tried putting a whole egg and water in a vacuum chamber to reconstitute the yolk?
Do you freeze everything before putting it in the freeze dryer? Does it change the consistency at all? Does it speed up the freeze drying process? Do you have to change any settings?
What if you pierced the yoke on the whole egg? I wonder if it would allow the moisture to escape and rehydrate better?
Maybe🤔
I’ve heard when doing scrambled freeze dried eggs to add around a teaspoon of salt/4 eggs so they are not so lumpy.
Yep or sugar. I have an updated egg video coming shortly.
@@thefreezedryingcommunity awesome.
How many eggs will fit a Harvest Right medium tray? I am a newbie at FD. I received my products from your store today. Tray dividers, tray corners, & your FD cookbook. TIA
The amount will depend on the size freeze dryer tray you have.
@@thefreezedryingcommunity It's a medium size.
i wonder if you put one of the whole eggs in a container and covered it with lots of water and let it sit for quite a while and then tried to poor the excess water out if it would do what you want even if you had a little extra water it would boil out while frying it
Can the powdered eggs be used in cakes and other recipes requiring eggs? Two tablespoons of egg, 2 tablespoons of water for one egg, right? Thanks!
Yes they can be used for baking and equal parts powder and water
Can I use frozen almond milk from the freezer and then dry it in my food dryer if I do not have the freeze dryer machine?
Where can I get a moisture meter at reasonable price for FOOD?
The water I think needs to be above the yoke so maybe in a smaller container?
How many chopped up boiled eggs did you add to each medium tray?
When you are doing milk what is the reconstituting formula for a half cup or a whole cup of milk is it 1:1?
Where did u Get the blue funnel and stand that u used to put powdered eggs in jar with? Great tool!
www.freezedryingsupplies.com
I did frezzedried scambledeggs.they turned out good. Put them in food processor turn them to powder. The only problem. Was egg was all over inside of freezedrryer
I love watching you freeze dry, did you add any dashes of salt to the eggs or mixtures and also a home tip when making fresh egg salad, use the cheese grater to shred the egg a bit more evenly.
Oh and according to another food site I read the yolks will always harden because of the proteins when freezing. so they recommended that storing eggs frozen should have salt or sugar added to the yolk mixture to prevent the proteins from binding in the cold. a form of coagulation. SO if you took all the yolks scrambled them separately and added a little salt, then put a tablespoon of yolk in the egg white compartment, you might get a facsimile of an egg. just thinking.
Did you add milk to the scrambled eggs?
I think that if cubed eggs soaks in hot water gives best result may be
Thanks so much for the video! Was wondering where you got your funnel and stand?
Www.freezedryingsupplies.com
What's the weight without the trays?
What size eggs do you use?
Thanks for showing the failures along with successes. I wonder if those yolks even cooked! Might not be safe eating.
Could you do a collab with Guga Foods / Sous Vide Everything? He recently did a homemade msg video. He dehydrated the ingredients. I'm curious how different the flavor concentration would be if it was freeze dried instead
The egg yolk comes out rubbery to me when I freeze them. I think egg yolks in general just don’t come back to life once frozen or FD.
Can I do the same thing with my frozen vegetables and dry them in my food dryer>
Awesome video! Can't wait to try this. What food scale do you use? How soon after freeze drying eggs do we have to get them into jars or mylar bags with oxygen absorbers. Can we wait a few hours or the following day when we have free time?
Thanks for this egg video......been waiting for this😉😉
Just experimenting with egg whites.....in the FD as I type. My son wants to try to use them in angel food cakes. So far this summer I put away 10 quarts of scrambled eggs. These would have been given away or fed to animals. Chickens produce a feast or famine in the North...even with extra lights on. So, we now won't have to buy as many eggs during the winter!👍
Also ordering your dividers today😉
When you rehydrate do you use hot water or cold water
For me it depends on food and situation. Short answer is either will work
Always an interesting Sunday morning 👍🤔
Where do u get the large tray dividers ??? They r not on ur website????
we have all sizes available and will soon also have the XL size
can I cut the dividers to fit a Small FD
what if you fried the eggs then FD them?
What scale can i get that measures like yours
Can you freeze dry eggbeaters?
Can you use one tray at a time
I'm not sure. I think the idea is that you are wasting a lot of electricity for 1 tray. Freeze up food until you have enough for all the trays.
Can you please tell me how much weight chicken with sauce can be loaded on each tray for large machines. I used your dividers for 10 portions per tray. Tray with food weight is 7.34 lbs each. Heavy for me to carry to freezer. So i used your corners and only carried two. Afraid to put them in freeze dryer till i find out. Thank you so much for your help. I did sign up on mewe but really have not learned how to use yet. Never been on facebook twitter etc. Thanks again!
3.2 lbs food --add 2 lbs tray weight
perhaps try a pressure cooker for eggs maybe not sure the outcome but in thought it should like a bean fully rehydrate
Where did you get the round stand for the blue funnel?
We sell an upgraded version at www.freezedryingsupplies.com
@@thefreezedryingcommunity I already have the blue funnel
@@lindashimek5043 I see. We no longer sell the stand for the blue funnel. We developed the improved funnel changed the stand.
Good video, and excellent information. We've FD'd raw scrambled eggs with great success, too.
One thing I **haven't** been able to find is a video freeze drying *cooked* scrambled eggs and then reconstituting them. {pleading puppy eyes} Do you think you could do a video including that sometime?
Yes this is what I want to know too!!!
Every packaged breakfast from Mountain House, etc., has the eggs cooked and then freeze dried. Just add hot water to the bag and off you go.
I realize it has been a year...but I am just starting with the freeze dryer..if you haven't found a video showing freeze drying cooked eggs, look up Rose Red Homestead. She did one.
Has prefreezing the foods sped up the freeze drying time?
Yes. Usually shaves 4-5 hours off the total time
Your Video"s are great... I have a question for you. .soooo Would the yolk & white seperate if you tried to flip the yolk while rehydrating the whole egg? If not I think it could help. In watching the video it "looked" like the problem was because of the thickness of the yolk. Keep up the videos.....they are great!!! Kathy
I thought the same thing Kathy!
Fairly new to home freeze drying here and considering making a purchase. Sorry if I missed the answer to this somewhere but what is the advantage to pre-freezing? Or is it just to store things you have prepped before you have room in your freeze dryer?
25 year shelf life. retains 95% of vitamins and nutrients. no refrigeration needed
When you pre freeze, it takes less time to FD as it is already cold. I have never had room to pre freeze. I cleaned my freezer and now I have a little room for the 4 trays. Enjoy all the fun of freeze drying!! I love mine. i have had it about 2 1/2 months.
@@lynnesward3154 one idea gleaned from groups...place excess frozen food in cooler while you pre-freeze!
Do all of these foods going into the freeze drier need to be frozen first?
No, but it is recommended.
I do all this much simpler just put all raw eggs in food processor. When done freeze drying, I powder them now I can use that powder for everything except a whole fried egg which isn't going to be the way Ifry an egg anywaybecausei want a yoke i can dip my toast in. But can steam and make egg salad, Scrambled Eggs, use for french toast, mix in recipes. And all this with no problem whatsoever rehydrating.
I do something similar. I put a tray's worth of eggs in a large bowl and use an immersion blender to whip them really well and then I pour them in to the tray. Once freeze dried I put the eggs into my food processor to turn into powder and then seal in a Mylar bag or jar with an O2 absorber. Have never had an issue with the eggs being lumpy or the texture being weird.
Good summary....I will stick with scrambled. When weighing would you not be better weighing the empty tray+liner+divider, then when full, then after FD. Then you csn calculate the weight of your product before and after FD? You get your water to add and your calorie counts a more accurate.
All the variables have a pretty consistent weight (trays, liners, dividers) so I usually take the weight out after. Either way works
What if you just break the yolk but leave it in the white? I've had frozen fried eggs where this concept has worked with no weirdness in the yolk.