Ariana Dagan

Introduction to Fruit Leather Dehydration

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If you have a toddler you understand the picky eater woes. How a child can become obsessed with a food one day, and absolutely hate it the next. My daughter has always loved blueberries, in fact even when she first began eating solids, blueberry was her first fruit love and she gobbled them down like there was no tomorrow.

Introduction to Fruit Leather by Ariana DaganSo imagine my surprise when I recently stocked up on 2lbs of fresh blueberries when they were on sale, only for her to decide that blueberries are gross and should be fed to the dog instead. I contemplated the usual recipes – everything from muffins to ice cream to smoothies and everything in between.

I decided to do fruit leathers. Why? Because everyone likes fruit roll-ups and my daughter eats applesauce at her second snack every day, which is messy to carry around when we GO places or DO things! A fruit leather would be the perfect substitute.

There are five things I LOVE about dehydrating foods.

  1. You control what goes in it!
  2. It freezes well so you can keep fruit leather in particular for up to a year! (Not that you’d be able to resist eating it long before then)
  3. While it takes forever to make, if you’re working from home/stay home/sleeping, you can set it in 5 minutes and forget about it.
  4. HELLO saving money!
  5. Fruit getting mushy or bruised or dry? Where these may not work well for preserving or baking, they work perfectly for dehydrating! No more waste!

You can get SO creative with fruit leathers: fancy fruit combinations, add in spices, even veggies!

Introduction to Dehydrated Fruit Leathers:

Flavors:

So many amazing things to add to your fruit leather, experiment with fruit combinations, and other additions for a unique flavor, here a few ideas:

When your mixture is ready, add your puree to a parchment lined dehydrator tray, or baking sheet about 1/4″ thick.

*Note: Temperatures over 140 begin to deteriorate the nutrients in the fruit. They are still tasty (and way healthier than anything you buy in the store!) but something to keep in mind if you decide to start making it often, it may be worth investing in a dehydrator to save nutrients and be able to make it in bulk! 

When your fruit leather is done, cut into strips, with the parchment paper still attached. The fruit leather will last in a container on your counter for at least a week, in the fridge for closer to a month, and the freezer for up to a year!

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Enjoy, and drop your favorite combination in the comments!

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