Dehydrating Tomatoes and How to Use Them

Have you ever thought of dehydrating tomatoes to preserve your tomato crop? Or maybe you found a bunch of tomatoes on sale somewhere and couldn’t pass it up.

Dehydrating tomatoes is a great way to preserve them. They’re much lighter (I’m thinking pantry shelves and a lot of canned goods) and they take up a lot less space.

I actually ran across this by accident but have discovered it works out really great for me.

Dehydrated tomatoes and tomatoes on the counter
Dehydrated tomatoes

Not enough to can but too much to lose.

I first looked into dehydrated tomatoes because I just didn’t have enough to justify using the canner, but I just couldn’t let them sit on the counter and spoil and we couldn’t eat them fast enough.

A mix of too much and not enough all at the same time. A bit strange, hu?

Learning to dehydrate tomatoes.

And I’m glad I did.

I tend to pick my tomatoes just a little early. Before they split and before any critters can get to them.

Then I wait until they are good and ripe since that’s when they have the best flavor.

Sliced tomatoes
Sliced tomatoes.

Try to slice them pretty thin, but I don’t work too hard at it. Just don’t slice them thick, like you might for a tomato sandwich.

I just recently discovered tomato sandwiches. Oh my, if you haven’t yet, you have to try them!! They are sooooooo good!

Then I lay them out in a single layer on the dehydrating sheets. The trays on my big dehydrator aren’t solid, so I line them with wax or parchment paper.

A dehydrator tray of tomatoes.
A dehydrator tray full of tomatoes.

Some dehydrators allow for a temperature setting, some don’t. If you have that option, set it at about 125 deg. F.

I have a smaller dehydrator that has an “on” and “off” switch, with no temp setting or timer. I still use it all the time too. You just have to check it often and regularly.

The time it takes to dehydrate will depend on the thickness of your slices and the liquid content of your tomatoes.

A dehydrator full of tomatoes

I’ve dried them anywhere from 4-12 hours, depending on the humidity in the house, whether the AC is on in the house and the tomato type and thickness.

Then I’ll let them set until the next day. Only do this if you have AC going, otherwise the humidity will make them soft again. This way I can tell if they need anymore drying.

Once they’re cooled, they should be brittle and break when you bend them in half. If they bend and don’t break with a snap you’ll need to dehydrate them a little longer

Any moisture can possibly allow mold to grow when you store them.

A few ways to store dehydrated tomatoes.

Dehydrated tomatoes in a mortar pestel

After they’re dehydrated to a nice crisp you can powder them. When I first started doing this I always powdered them.

You can use a food processor and probably a blender too, although I haven’t tried that yet.

Dehydrated tomatoes in a coffee grinder

Most of the time I’ll start in a mortar pestal and finish in food processor or an herb/coffee grinder. Most people find that a bit much, but I find it relaxing.

I’m sure there are several ways of powdering tomatoes, so just find what works best for you.

I’ve also just stuffed them in a jar and squished them down to get as many in a jar as I can.

If you have a food saver you can then put a canning lid on it and suck the air out of the jar. This will seal the jar so your tomatoes will last a little longer. Just remember this isn’t really preserving them like canning would.

But since you’ve dehydrated them to get the moisture out, they should last a good long time anyway.

How to make tomato paste.

I’ve found using dehydrated tomatoes is a great way to make tomato paste.

I hate buying tomato paste because I never use a whole can or tube and end up wasting a lot of it.

So instead I use the dehydrated tomatoes for tomato paste. It’s as simple as mixing a one to one mixture of dehydrated tomatoes to water. Real easy and no waste. Just make what you need.

See making your own catsup here for more ideas.

Cooking tomatoes and sausage
Tomatoes and sausage.

How to make tomato sauce

Making more of a sauce is a two to one mixture. Two parts water and one part tomato powder.

This mixture can be added to any kind of taco meat, chili or any other recipe you might use a sauce in.

Other uses for dehydrated tomatoes

Another use for powered tomatoes is as a thickener. It’s like adding tomato paste except you can just add whatever powder you need to soak up any extra liquid you may have in your skillet.

You can add a ton of tomato flavor to any dish doing this.

Making stew-like tomatoes

If you didn’t powder your tomatoes and just dehydrated them and put them in a jar to add to soups or stews, just make sure there is enough liquid in your dish to allow for rehydration as it simmers.

If you’re not making a soup or stew, you can rehydrate your tomatoes on the stove by adding the dehydrated tomatoes to a sauce pan and adding enough water to thoroughy cover the tomatoes. Bring them to a boil and then remove them from the heat. Then let it set until they are rehydrated.

Something to Remember

One thing to remember when you are dehydrating tomatoes is that unless you want to remove the skins before you dehydrate them, they will have skins.

When you powder them, that really doesn’t make any difference. The skins powder like the rest of the tomato.

But if you are just stuffing them in a jar, when you rehydrate them there will still be skins.

Whether that is something that bothers you, is a personal preference.

I really hope you find this helpful as I did. I sure have enjoyed having another option for putting up my tomatoes. And I use them often to thicken a tomato dish with a huge punch of tomato flavor.

Tell me if you’ve tried this. I’m excited to hear what you think.

Until next time~

Health, Wealth & Blessings ~ Tracey

Homemade Tortillas

Cooked tortillas

Have you ever made homemade tortillas?

Cooked homemade tortillas
Homemade tortillas

I use tortillas in place of bread most of the time. I use them for everything from peanut butter and jelly sandwiches to mini pizzas.

My husband is still a bread kind of guy and that’s okay. But that’s sorta what pushed me to try making my own homemade tortillas.

I’ve got to confess that I’ve tried making these several times in the past and never could get it figured out. So I’d go back to buying them.

But the packages are so big, it’d take a month of Sundays to eat them all.

So I decided to try again. I looked over several recipes, tried a few and finally put together a simple recipe that works for me.

These homemade tortillas are not only easy to make, but you can change them up a little. It’s real easy to add any herbs or spices to make them taste exactly how you want them to.

Balls of tortilla dough
I call these “Tortilla seeds”

You could add rosemary, basil, garlic powder, or onion powder (Onion powder is really good). Or you might want to add dried spinach, kale or nettle for just a little extra nutritional value. Experiment a little and add whatever might strike your fancy.

This recipe makes 8 at a time which will get me through about a week or two.

There’s only 4 ingredients so these homemade tortillas are really easy to make.

And they stay soft, which is I found amazing after trying to make them before. It’s not the same soft as the store bought, but they’ll roll for a burrito.

Homemade Tortilla Recipe

Tortilla Ingredients

  • 2 Cups of flour
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 3 TBL shortening
  • 3/4 cup of hot water (about 100 deg F.)
  • 1 tsp of your preferred herb or spice (optional)

Mixing Instructions

  1. Mix flour and salt until well blended. If you’re going to add any herbs or spices, now is the time to do it and combine it well.
  2. Next add the shortening and cut it into the flour mixture until it is completely mixed together. I use a pastry cutter but you could use a fork or a couple of butter knives to cut in the shortening.
  3. Then add the hot water and mix completely. Use your hand and just keep mixing to incorporate all the flour until you have a soft dough. If the dough is sticky, sprinkle it with flour and knead it until it becomes soft. It should come off your fingers easily when it’s ready.
  4. Now separate into 8 even balls. I’ll cut the whole thing into 2 pieces and keep dividing each piece into 2 more pieces until I have 8. Then roll them between your palms to make balls.
  5. Press your dough balls out flat, one at a time. You can use a rolling pin to roll them out, a pie pan to squish them or a tortilla press. For more on that, see below.
  6. Heat a skillet to med/low heat. Once the skillet is heated add your flat tortilla shell and let it cook for 30 seconds. Then flip and cook the other side for 30 seconds. Then flip one more time and cook for another 30 seconds. During this last 30 seconds your shell should blow up like a balloon.
  7. Once I remove it from the frying pan, I lay them out on a cooling rack to cool. If you’re going to use them right away, you may want to wrap them in a tea towel to keep them warm.

Pressing your homemade tortillas.

My cast iron tortilla press. Be sure to use something between the dough and the press, or you’ll have a mess.

I bought a cast iron tortilla press with a Christmas gift certificate about 10 years ago and until this year I had never used it. It always sounded liked a great idea, but I just never got around to it.

Now I love it and it’s a regular in my kitchen.

I found out that you need to use something to press your dough between or it sticks. Yep, I did that.

I found out that a gallon sized baggie with the zipper and the sides cut off works great. The raw tortilla comes off the plastic easily and all in one piece.

Or you can use a rolling pin. Flour your rolling surface and your rolling pin and you should be good to go.

Or you can use a pie pan and just squish it flat. I haven’t tried that yet, but I’ve read about people using this method. I’d probably use the baggie on this one too. Save a mess.

They don’t have to be perfectly round to still taste good.

Frying your homemade tortilla shells.

The term “fry” is a little misleading. I use a cast iron skillet to fry up my shells but I don’t use any oil. My guess would be you wouldn’t need oil in a non-stick skillet either, but I’ve never used one of those.

You’ll want to let the skillet get to temperature before you start otherwise that 30 second count won’t work right. Then try to lay the tortilla as flat on the pan as you can. Somehow I always have a wrinkle in it, but that’s okay.

Tortilla in a skillet
The first 30 seconds.

Then let it cook for 30 seconds. After this first 30 seconds it won’t look like it’s cooked enough, but that’s okay, turn it anyway.

Cooking tortilla
The second 30 seconds.

Cook it for another 30 seconds. Now it’ll start looking like what you’d expect a homemade tortilla to look like.

Cooking tortilla
The last 30 seconds.

Then turn it and cook it for the last 30 seconds. During this last 30 seconds it should start to puff up. It’ll look like a blown up balloon. It’s my opinion that that’s what helps make them more soft.

After I cook them I lay them out on a cooling rack to allow them to cool so they won’t condensate in the fridge. I store them in a baggie in the fridge with a paper towel, to soak up any moisture that might be in there. This keeps them from getting soggy.

Cooked homemade tortillas
Homemade tortillas cooling before I put them in the fridge for the week.

But if you wanted to use them right away, you’d probably want to wrap them in a tea towel to help keep them warm.

So there you have it, homemade tortillas anyone can make.

Do you have a homemade tortilla recipe you love and would like to share? I’d really love to hear it.

And if you give this recipe a try, let me know how it turns out. I’d love to know what extras you may have added and how you liked it.

Until next time.

Health, Wealth & Blessings ~ Tracey

What If I Don’t Have Time to Make it From Scratch?

Rose moss

I love making all that I can from scratch to avoid all the weird stuff in the store bought stuff these days. But sometimes I don’t have time to make it from scratch.

I used to beat myself up a lot because I worked really hard to make it all from scratch. I’d learn something new and I thought, “Now I never have to buy it again”.

Veggies sauteing in a cast iron skillet.
Starting supper

But then life would get in the way. Between a full-time job, the drive time to and from work every day and just keeping house, doing laundry and cooking as many meals as I can, there just aren’t enough hours.

It would really bother me when I needed something and I had to buy it because there wasn’t time to make it.

Do you ever feel like that?

I had to work hard at letting that go.

I can’t imagine trying to do all the things I do now if I had kids at home. I’m so in awe of those mothers with one or more kids at home that work a job, take care of a house and still make anything from scratch.

Those moms (and probably some dads too) need some major kudos. If this is you, please share a few tips on how you keep your head above water. I’m sure someone else can use them too.

City view
My view all day long.

It took time to convince myself, it’s okay to not be able to do it all. Although it still frustrates me.

I didn’t want to work frantically to get it all done and then be frazzled from working so hard. What I really wanted, is to get a fair amount done and then sit outside and enjoy our farm.

Evening on the patio
Evening on the patio.

I work in an office all day. At 8:30 am I get to work and I don’t leave the building until 5:30 pm. I truly have no desire to be inside any more than absolutely necessary when it’s decent outside. Living in Kansas, for the biggest part of the year you can be outside, even if you have to wear a coat.

I like sitting on our patio looking at my garden and the yard and enjoying the feeling that this is ours, watching the dogs run and play and just listening to the birds.

But the guilt I got from spending that time outside enjoying the place, kind of countered my enjoyment of it.

It took some time, but I finally got there.

I read story after story of other people who did homesteading. Constantly making their own stuff and cooking from scratch, growing a garden and tending to animals.

Not all, but a big portion of those people that I read about, were full-time homesteaders and didn’t work an off the farm job. They work, and they work hard, but for the most part they work on their farm.

Rose moss
One of my patio flowers.

The people who do have jobs, aren’t always able to do everything from scratch, just like me. But I didn’t seem to notice that so much.

I ‘d love to be one of those on the farm, full-time homesteaders one day. And that’s my goal …. some day.

But, until then, I’ll do what I can from scratch and when I don’t have the time or the gumption, I’ll just have to buy the best quality I can buy. I’ll enjoy my flowers, watch the dogs play and just enjoy being home.

I’m learning to live seasonally.

That’s not an easy thing to do. I was raised in a grocery store. Mom and dad had a garden and as much as dad didn’t like store bought, mom really didn’t mind it so much.

She cooked from scratch and grew the garden and we ate from the garden most of the time, but when mom wanted something out of season she had no problem going to the store to buy it. I don’t think dad even thought about that too much.

When you’re used to having anything you want and any time of the year you want it, you never actually think about if it’s in season or not.

As I decided I wanted to be more seasonal, working towards growing our own food and being more sustainable, I realized we didn’t eat that way at all. I also realized that took a lot more cooking. The kind of cooking I didn’t know much about.

So I continue to learn, I continue to do what I can and when I can’t get it all done, I get over it.

Some day I hope to be that full-time homesteader, that completely sustainable, able to enjoy the outside during the working hours homesteader, so I can get things done on my schedule.

But until then, I’ll do the best I can and relax and just enjoy the process.

Until later –

Health, Wealth & Blessing ~ Tracey