soup question

Food, Nutrition and Agriculture
junmist
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soup question

Post by junmist »

I have been making soup the last couple of weeks taste so much better than the stuff you buy but I am running out of freezer space and as I will be getting a food dehydrator for Christmas my question is can you dehydrate soup
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unsure
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Re: soup question

Post by unsure »

i`d imagine with the nature of soup being watery , you would struggle .
i think you`d be better dehydrating the ingredients then its just a case of adding water and cook .
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Plymtom
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Re: soup question

Post by Plymtom »

What you can do is condense it like the thicker canned stuff, uses power/gas but simmer it down till it's half the volume/ or whatever thickness is still workable, but when you think about it from there all you have to do is keep going, I've heard it done with chilli/curry etc thicken it till it will just spread thin on the dehydrator sheet then crumble it up.
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ForgeCorvus
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Re: soup question

Post by ForgeCorvus »

Basically yes
I've never done it myself but I found this for you (my google-fu is strong tonight)
http://www.mademan.com/mm/how-dehydrate-soup.html

Let us know how it works for you
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scruffypaul
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Re: soup question

Post by scruffypaul »

I've had a couple of Batchelor's Cup-A-Soups in my time, so dehydrated soup is possible/does exist. Homemade soup is lovely, but would it still be better than tinned if dehydrated and stored for months/years?
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DundeePrepper
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Re: soup question

Post by DundeePrepper »

I've seen people use a combination of the above..

Say you've made a vegetable broth.. reduce it until its almost a paste (adding a tiny amount of flour will help without harming the flavour) then a you can place it in the freezer in ice cube trays :?: or simmilar and you have small portions of soup you can boil in small amount of water and hey presto.. Soup.

I'm not entirely convinced a domestic dehydrator will work with soup.. I think you will end up with dried veg/meat swimming around in a half broth, half paste type mess. :? As there will be at least a little amount of fat/oil in the soup which wont dehydrate as far as I'm aware.

Thinking on it though.. maybe a simple soup like carrot, pea or lentil soup will work, Like Cup-a-Soups... If there was a way of doing it well I would imagine they would sell it in stores as a high end alternative with chunky veg and real meat.

I can't recall seeing any soups in the Mountain House / Wayfarer ready to eat ranges either.
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steviesun
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Re: soup question

Post by steviesun »

I would make the base say a chicken stock and condense it down before freezing. Any veg can be added later.

I also came across this link the other day:
http://www.urbanoutdoorskills.com/bouillon-cubes.html
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Re: soup question

Post by Vespa »

I know someone who has 40Kg of dried peas, that's a lot of dehydrated pea soup. :D :D