I'm refering to veggie (leaf scraps) from the garden beds- as a supplement to there regular diet.
Are there any types of plants that I should stay away from- for one reason or another? Any help would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks, Growzay
Tags:
David, do you have something like a food saver vacuum sealer? If it is one of the ones with the tube attachment, here is an idea that might help you understand it better.
If you have one of those vacuum marinading containers that works with the sealer tube attachment then if that container were a freezer and you put racks of sliced food in it and then vacuumed the pressure low wile the food was also being frozen. That is what is being described. By lowering the pressure while it is cold the moisture tends to come to the surface and hopefully evaporate into the air before it can condense and form crystals on/in the food.
Now I don't know how powerful a vacuum pump you need in order to work with a freezer instead of just a marinade container. Nor best how to plumb through the freezer and hook it all up.
I suppose one might be able to modify the seal around the rim (not sure how) of a freezer with a tube that could be connected to a vacuum pump that you sit next to the freezer for when you are doing the freeze drying operations?
Oh oh oh..... Wait, do you have a freezer that has a drain plug in it??????? I bet you could use that for the suction port!!!!!
I have a Foodsaver vac bag machine and it has an attachment to vac seal a Mason jar with a stock jar lid. I've never tried to vac-freeze dry. I think I'll try it with some fresh veg leaves and see what happens.
It's fun to put a few marshmallow in the jar and vac it, they expand crazy.
I sawmill/kiln dry and make flooring to fine furniture. This yr I used the kiln to dry 15gl of Roma tomatoes then vac bag and freeze them. 15gl of tomatoes dries to about 1gl of dried slices, then when vacuum packed they get even smaller.
For making feed I guess I'd dehydrate the items, grind then pelletize (some how). I wonder if one could dehydrate,grind then add just enough water to the mix to shape into a thin layer and dehydrate again then crack/break it into small pieces (dust goes back to the next batch)
jim
David, do you have something like a food saver vacuum sealer? If it is one of the ones with the tube attachment, here is an idea that might help you understand it better.
If you have one of those vacuum marinading containers that works with the sealer tube attachment then if that container were a freezer and you put racks of sliced food in it and then vacuumed the pressure low wile the food was also being frozen. That is what is being described. By lowering the pressure while it is cold the moisture tends to come to the surface and hopefully evaporate into the air before it can condense and form crystals on/in the food.
Now I don't know how powerful a vacuum pump you need in order to work with a freezer instead of just a marinade container. Nor best how to plumb through the freezer and hook it all up.
I suppose one might be able to modify the seal around the rim (not sure how) of a freezer with a tube that could be connected to a vacuum pump that you sit next to the freezer for when you are doing the freeze drying operations?
Oh oh oh..... Wait, do you have a freezer that has a drain plug in it??????? I bet you could use that for the suction port!!!!!
When we dry foods, they need to be dried as fast as possible to avoid many types of stuff growing on it.
For a substantial qty. of feed , one should set up a climate controlled dryer and get very consistent results.
Putting a hole in a fridge/freezer is easy just use a drill and drill a spot where there is only shell and insulation I've drilled my beer fridge for homemade beers in 5gl Cornelius kegs + CO2,, all grain recipes. It's health food, starch, live yeast, water, hopps ).
Did I forget one ingredient?
jim
Just throwing out brainstorming ideas on the topic until Carey can get back to us with more details.
Uh, I think our freezer is sub 0. Now I have to go check on that.
@ Dave: First off; can you please just do what I do and direct your comment at me or whoever, instead of clicking that idiotic reply button. I think we can follow and would save some linier space for more replies. I wonder why this site doesn’t have threads?…Hmmm
Anywayz, I appreciate your honesty and position. I always seem to be able to read out of context and apologize if I seem snooty at times. I am over worked and under paid yet I come here after a crappy day at work for relaxation?
As a teacher, I never like to spoon-feed my students because they simply don't learn. In fact I like to poke them in different directions so they can investigate, understand then apply. When people ask me for specific plans or solve problems, I call them clients and expect to be paid for it. Sometimes, those that pay don’t like to show others what they have/ know/ paid for, (even if it seems like “no big deal” to others). That plus crippling losses of personal pics has very much rendered me proofless, but I will try my best within my abilities to give opinions to help. I hope that is enough and thank you for your respect and understanding. After all, you can’t expect a Lawyer to give out his “how to get out of Jail free” techniques for his upcoming trial.
There are several ways to commercially freeze dry products and would behoove whoever wants to get serious into feed production to invest in a freeze-dry machine.
Now as for specifics and the process of a Gerry-rig thing, again it depends on what you have and how much you are willing to spend. But unless you are running a successful commercial operation, giving you specifics is just cute reading. I’ doubt you want to write as detailed a description of your AP system simply to back a comment (especially if you haven’t worked out the kinks).Again, sorry I don’t have pics of my old contraption and am working with a feed mill now so it doesn’t apply.
I thought I was pretty clear about the basic concept. An ordinary freezer would work just fine. And yes, basically you are making a whole bunch of freezer burned stuff. It’ll probably only take a week to ten days, maybe more to dry it out completely without vacuum. There has to be air space between layers so that the ice can evaporate onto a condenser plate or the walls of the icebox (no you don’t want to run it through your vacuum pump, that’s what valves are for). Once the vacuum has been turned on to desired level or capacity, you close the valve. All ice is still in the freezer compartment. There is no need for super cold temps nor high vacuum as long as you have time.
You want to spread it thin, as much surface area as possible so ice forms through the cell but outside of the cells. Slow cooling forms large crystals, while cooling it quickly forms smaller crystals. Cookie sheets work well too. Remove any ice formed. Those large crystals you knock-off by brushing, tumbling it through an old t-shirt or toss separated like chafe depending on size. After that, the rest can be tossed back in, to continue to dry until you have a dry mass that easily crumbles. Pulverize it quickly and return to the freezer. After it has refrozen and dried the final time pack it in a jar and vacuum seal it until ready to use. Store any leftovers in the freezer or reseal with vacuum. Space is never wasted because new batches are constantly being processed as the former batch takes up less and less room.
@ Jon P: I think you get the jist of it, but it doesn’t have to that scientific when we are making small batches for testing. That graph only shows the optimum range but the process does slow down beyond those parameters but doesn’t stop. Yes it becomes very concentrated. Tough I haven’t tried it, I think you may be onto something there with the vac drying to produce airspace/ cavities; however that process might “boil out” or destroy the nutrients we are trying to preserve thus needing the cold temps? Keep reading and commenting. I hope we can learn together.
@ David: I’m sorry to hear your freezer does not reach sub zero temperatures. Maybe you can convert it to a smoke box…hehe.
Cheers all.
@ Dave: First off; can you please just do what I do and direct your comment at me or whoever, instead of clicking that idiotic reply button. I think we can follow and would save some linier space for more replies. I wonder why this site doesn’t have threads?…Hmmm
Anywayz, I appreciate your honesty and position. I always seem to be able to read out of context and apologize if I seem snooty at times. I am over worked and under paid yet I come here after a crappy day at work for relaxation?
As a teacher, I never like to spoon-feed my students because they simply don't learn. In fact I like to poke them in different directions so they can investigate, understand then apply. When people ask me for specific plans or solve problems, I call them clients and expect to be paid for it. Sometimes, those that pay don’t like to show others what they have/ know/ paid for, (even if it seems like “no big deal” to others). That plus crippling losses of personal pics has very much rendered me proofless, but I will try my best within my abilities to give opinions to help. I hope that is enough and thank you for your respect and understanding. After all, you can’t expect a Lawyer to give out his “how to get out of Jail free” techniques for his upcoming trial.
There are several ways to commercially freeze dry products and would behoove whoever wants to get serious into feed production to invest in a freeze-dry machine.
Now as for specifics and the process of a Gerry-rig thing, again it depends on what you have and how much you are willing to spend. But unless you are running a successful commercial operation, giving you specifics is just cute reading. I’ doubt you want to write as detailed a description of your AP system simply to back a comment (especially if you haven’t worked out the kinks).Again, sorry I don’t have pics of my old contraption and am working with a feed mill now so it doesn’t apply.
I thought I was pretty clear about the basic concept. An ordinary freezer would work just fine. And yes, basically you are making a whole bunch of freezer burned stuff. It’ll probably only take a week to ten days, maybe more to dry it out completely without vacuum. There has to be air space between layers so that the ice can evaporate onto a condenser plate or the walls of the icebox (no you don’t want to run it through your vacuum pump, that’s what valves are for). Once the vacuum has been turned on to desired level or capacity, you close the valve. All ice is still in the freezer compartment. There is no need for super cold temps nor high vacuum as long as you have time.
You want to spread it thin, as much surface area as possible so ice forms through the cell but outside of the cells. Slow cooling forms large crystals, while cooling it quickly forms smaller crystals. Cookie sheets work well too. Remove any ice formed. Those large crystals you knock-off by brushing, tumbling it through an old t-shirt or toss separated like chafe depending on size. After that, the rest can be tossed back in, to continue to dry until you have a dry mass that easily crumbles. Pulverize it quickly and return to the freezer. After it has refrozen and dried the final time pack it in a jar and vacuum seal it until ready to use. Store any leftovers in the freezer or reseal with vacuum. Space is never wasted because new batches are constantly being processed as the former batch takes up less and less room.
@ Jon P: I think you get the jist of it, but it doesn’t have to that scientific when we are making small batches for testing. That graph only shows the optimum range but the process does slow down beyond those parameters but doesn’t stop. Yes it becomes very concentrated. Tough I haven’t tried it, I think you may be onto something there with the vac drying to produce airspace/ cavities; however that process might “boil out” or destroy the nutrients we are trying to preserve thus needing the cold temps? Keep reading and commenting. I hope we can learn together.
@ David: I’m sorry to hear your freezer does not reach sub zero temperatures. Maybe you can convert it to a smoke box…hehe.
Cheers all.
I am going to take your advice Carey. As a researcher know I should weigh the fish but it is too stressful on them. I once had a little screw die in my hands just because I picked him up, I used to do research on the parasites of small mammals. Stress is very easy to bring about and would throw your results off. I have to design an experiment to put equal amounts of fry of the same size in 3 tanks. 1. feed measured amounts or all they will eat of duckweed and azola, 2. feed them regular amount of commercial feed and all the duckweed and azola they want, 3. feed them just commercial freed. I will weigh them at 2 months and 4 months 6 months and 8 months providing I do not seem to stress them. Maybe weigh them at 8 months only. Compare females to females in each case and males to males. It has taken me about 8 months to get to 1 lb for the males on commercial feed. I will record what I observe every day.
Tonight I put 1 oz of duckweed in the fry netting. I bet by tomorrow it will be gone. I also put 3oz of duckweed, 3 oz of azola in one of my IBC tanks plus I fed them regular food. In less than 1/2 hour they had consumed it all.
I have been thinking about how fish feed and I don't think they eat 2 times a day in the wild. I believe they forage for their food. So I will leave the duckweed ion until they consume it I will note how long it takes them to eat it,
I will keep you all informed what happens.
My Koi & Tilapia seem to love eggplant leaves, arugula and oak leave lettuce - you're right, they do get used to a variety of food but start young (fingerling stage) and they need alittle time to get used to it
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