Author

Kenny Nyhus Fadil

Freeze Drying Eggs at Home: The Safe Method
Dairy, Eggs and Baked Goods

Freeze Drying Eggs at Home: The Safe Method

Freeze drying eggs at home means beating whole eggs, drying the liquid into a fine powder, and rehydrating it later into genuinely good scrambled eggs. In my batch log a Medium-class machine runs beaten egg in about 26 to 34 hours. It is the single most useful dairy-aisle item a home operator can bank — […]

Read 8 min read
How to Rehydrate Freeze Dried Vegetables
Rehydrating and Cooking

How to Rehydrate Freeze Dried Vegetables

To rehydrate freeze dried vegetables, cover them in warm water and wait 8 to 15 minutes, then drain the excess. Peas, corn, and diced carrots come back well; leafy greens rehydrate in under five minutes; and most of the time the smartest move is to skip the bowl entirely and rehydrate them right in whatever […]

Read 6 min read
Freeze Dryer Runs But Won’t Start the Cycle: What to Check
Troubleshooting and Repair

Freeze Dryer Runs But Won’t Start the Cycle: What to Check

A freeze dryer that powers on but won’t start its cycle is the most frustrating fault precisely because the machine is clearly alive — display lit, fans audible — yet it refuses to begin freezing or drying. In my batch log, a no-start has been an actual hardware failure maybe once in dozens of stalled […]

Read 7 min read
Freeze Drying Raw vs Cooked Meat: Which Wins?
First Batches

Freeze Drying Raw vs Cooked Meat: Which Wins?

Freeze drying meat cooked is the right default for almost every home operator: the kill step is already done, rehydration takes minutes instead of a careful simmer, and the food comes back closer to a finished meal. Raw freeze drying preserves the option to cook from “fresh” later, but it stays raw the entire time […]

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Freeze Drying Yogurt at Home: The Easy Win
Dairy, Eggs and Baked Goods

Freeze Drying Yogurt at Home: The Easy Win

Freeze drying yogurt is the easiest, most forgiving load in the entire dairy category, and the one I hand to every new owner first. Spread thin and pre-frozen, it runs about 24 to 30 hours on my Medium-class machine and comes out as tart, crisp shards my kids eat straight off the tray. It rehydrates […]

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Freeze Dryer Cycle Taking Too Long: Why and What to Do
Troubleshooting and Repair

Freeze Dryer Cycle Taking Too Long: Why and What to Do

A freeze dryer cycle taking too long is the most over-reported “fault” in the hobby, and in my batch log it is almost never the machine. Cycle length is driven by load weight, tray density, and pre-freeze quality. The same strawberries that finish in roughly 30 hours at a sensible load will push past 45 […]

Read 8 min read
How to Rehydrate Freeze Dried Food: A Complete Guide
Rehydrating and Cooking

How to Rehydrate Freeze Dried Food: A Complete Guide

To rehydrate freeze dried food, add back the water sublimation pulled out — submerge or mist the food in clean water, give it time, and don’t rush heat into proteins. Most fruit and small vegetables come back in 5 to 15 minutes; dense meats and beans can need 20 to 40 minutes plus a hot […]

Read 12 min read
Freeze Drying Milk at Home: The Operator Method
Dairy, Eggs and Baked Goods

Freeze Drying Milk at Home: The Operator Method

Freeze drying milk at home turns it into a sweet, shelf-stable powder that whisks back into a usable glass with about a cup of water per cup of milk you started with. In my batch log a Medium-class machine runs milk in roughly 28 to 36 hours, and the single biggest variable in your result […]

Read 8 min read
Food Still Wet After Freeze Drying: Why and How to Fix It
Troubleshooting and Repair

Food Still Wet After Freeze Drying: Why and How to Fix It

Food that comes out of a freeze dryer wet, cold, or bendy did not finish drying — and that is a process outcome, not usually a broken machine. In my batch log, the moisture almost always hides in the same three places: the center of a dense piece, the thickest part of the load, and […]

Read 7 min read
Freeze Drying Dairy, Eggs and Baked Goods: The Operator Guide
Dairy, Eggs and Baked Goods

Freeze Drying Dairy, Eggs and Baked Goods: The Operator Guide

Freeze drying dairy, eggs, and baked goods works, but it is the hardest food category most home operators ever load. Fat resists sublimation, liquids climb tray walls, and none of it gets a safety pass from the machine — freeze drying lowers water activity, it does not pasteurize. In my batch log, this group runs […]

Read 15 min read