Easy-to-Make Drying Trays

drying trays

Looking for a new way to enjoy the benefits of your garden all year long? Follow this easy tutorial for making drying trays to expand the lifespan of fruits, vegetables, and herbs.

The following is an excerpt from Preserving Food Without Freezing or Canning by The Gardeners & Farmers of Terre Vivante. It has been adapted for the web.


Making Drying Trays for Food

Food is usually dried on a flat surface, such as a tray or screen, using a natural or artificial heat source. Solar drying is obviously the preferred method because it consumes only the sun’s energy and that energy is free. Trays should be placed in a dry, well-ventilated spot, generally out of the direct sun, or in specially designed solar dryers.

In lieu of natural sunshine, we can take advantage of the heat generated by a radiator, kitchen range, wood stove, or oven. If all these are lacking, we can settle for a low-wattage electric food dehydrator. Several models are available for home use.

Variation 1: Screened Drying Trays (60” x 20”)

Materials

  • Square battens (cross section 1.25″ x 1.25″)
  • Flat battens (cross section 1⁄8″ x 1.25″)
  • 20″-wide roll of galvanized metal or rigid plastic screen with fine mesh (25–50 mm or 1–2 sq. in.)
  • Nails (2″ and 1″ long)

Procedure

  1. First assemble the square battens to form a frame sixty inches long by twenty inches wide. To make the frame more rigid, add one or two square battens across the middle. Hammer the frame together with 2-inch nails.
  2. Unroll the screening and flatten it against the frame using the flat battens to hold it in place.
  3. Fasten with 1-inch nails. This creates the bottom of the tray.
  4. The tray is now ready to use. Note that the trays can be stacked to save space.

Henry Rouy, Cournon-D’Auvergne

drying trays - applesVariation 2: Small Multipurpose Dryer (for those with limited space)

Materials

  • Two 24″ x 2.5″ boards
  • Two 14″ x 2.5″ boards
  • Small wooden laths (strips)
  • Small nails

Procedure

This is a basket that can be hung from a beam or a nail, in the cellar or kitchen. It is very simple to make.

  1. Make the sides of the basket with the four boards. Then nail the small wooden laths three-quarters of an inch apart to make the bottom.
  2. To make the handle, add two small boards of the same length as the basket to each side. Connect them with a round stick.
  3. You can dry cheese, mushrooms, prunes, and herbs for infusions, for example, by placing some netting over the bottom of the basket.

This small dryer is easy to move and clean.

Nicole Mansard, St. Julien-Chapteuil


Recommended Reads

Three Recipes for Dried Tomatoes

Dried Apples: Two Ways to Enjoy All Year Long

 

Read The Book

Preserving Food without Freezing or Canning

Traditional Techniques Using Salt, Oil, Sugar, Alcohol, Vinegar, Drying, Cold Storage, and Lactic Fermentation

$16.25

Enter your email to sign up for our newsletter and save 25% on your next order

Recent Articles

acorn harvesting

Move Over Squirrels, It’s Acorn Harvesting Time!

These small fruits are a delicious source of nutrients that you can find almost anywhere. Get started on acorn harvesting with help from these simple tips!

Read More
crab apples

The Surprisingly Sweet Secret of Crab Apples

Crab Apples are easy to find, simple to store, and incredibly flavorful. Keep reading to learn more about the unsung heroes of the apple family. 

Read More
squash

What’s In A Name? The Story of Squash

Squash varieties are delicious vegetables that play a vital role in some of our favorite dishes. It has come a long way, with a rich history and an admirable journey toward becoming the successful meal staple it is today.

Read More
Cooking as a Radical Act: Food As Medicine

Cooking as a Radical Act: Food As Medicine

Eating nutritious, real food is the most important step toward a long and healthy life. Embrace your food as medicine without sacrificing flavor for bone health or plant-based diets!

Read More
persimmon vinegar

The Promising Persimmon: How to Make Persimmon Vinegar

This bright, yet delicate flavor profile is both sweet and sour – a unique taste that you’ll keep coming back to. This recipe is intended for long, slow fermentation starting at persimmon harvest time in the autumn and continuing into winter.

Read More