Hubby Dear pruned back the oregano in my herb garden this morning and brought in a large pile for me to process.
Mama mia! That's a lot of oregano! |
Yes, my laundry room is the color of Pepto-Bismol. Want to make something of it? |
It works well and doesn't use electricity. I just had to try out my new dehydrator, though, so that's what I opted to do this time.
Here's the Excalibur 9 tray dehydrator. It's not a small appliance.
I've owned microwave ovens that were smaller than this. |
It's not something I would want to leave out on my counter every day. I'm not sure where I'm going to store it, though, so I'd better work on figuring something out!
The door on the front of the dehydrator comes off, revealing 9 trays that slide in and out.
I started out removing the leaves one by one from the stems and placing them on the tray, but I soon got tired of that. After I finished one tray like that I started loading in entire stems.
The dehydrator was easy to figure out how to run, even for a technophobe like me.
I plugged it in, turned the dial, and the dehydrator took care of the rest. The instruction manual said herbs should take 2-4 hours at 95 degrees to dry. That may be true for some herbs, but not oregano on the stem! In total, it took 6-8 hours for everything to get completely dry.
I ran my fingers down the stems and was able to easily pull the dried leaves off. I placed the dry oregano in canning jars and vaccuum sealed them with my FoodSaver
Last year's harvest gave me 1-1/2 pints of dried oregano leaves and I've still got a bit leftover. By the time I'm through with that pile on my table, I'll have more than 2 quarts of it. Anybody need some oregano? ;)
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Last year's oregano harvest. Multiply this by 3 for this year. |
In the future, I think I'll stick to air-drying with oregano. The Excalibur
Sounds like a part two for this review is in order!