Every Step in Canning eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 223 pages of information about Every Step in Canning.

Every Step in Canning eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 223 pages of information about Every Step in Canning.

Sun drying has much to recommend it.  There is no expense for fuel, no thermometer is needed, and there is no danger of overheating the fruits or vegetables.

For sun drying of fruits and vegetables, the simplest way is to spread the slices or pieces on sheets of plain paper or lengths of muslin and expose them to the sun.  Muslin is to be preferred if there is danger of sticking.  Trays may be used instead of paper or muslin.  Sun drying requires bright, hot days and a breeze.  Once or twice a day the product should be turned or stirred and the dry pieces taken out.  The drying product should be covered with cheesecloth tacked to a frame for protection from dust and flying insects.  If trays are rested on supports placed in pans of water, the products will be protected from crawling insects.  Care must be taken to provide protection from rain, dew and moths.  During rains and just before sunset the products should be taken indoors.

To make a cheap tray for use in sun drying, take strips of wood three-quarters of an inch thick and two inches wide for the sides and ends.  To form the bottom, laths should be nailed to these strips, with spaces of one-eighth of an inch between the laths to permit air circulation.  A length of four feet, corresponding to the standard lengths of laths, is economical.  Instead of the laths galvanized-wire screen with openings of one-eighth or one-quarter of an inch, may be used.  In using wire the size of the tray should be regulated by the width of wire screen obtainable.  The trays should be of uniform size, so that they may be stacked together for convenience in handling.

A small homemade sun dryer, easily constructed, is made of light strips of wood, a sheet of glass, a small amount of galvanized-wire screen and some cheesecloth.  A convenient size for the glass top is eighteen by twenty-four inches.  To hold the glass make a light wooden frame of strips of wood a half inch thick and one inch wide.  This frame should have legs of material one by one and a half inches, with a length of twelve inches for the front legs and eighteen inches for those in the rear.  This will cause the top to slope, which aids in circulation of air and gives direct exposure to the rays of the sun.  As a tray support nail a strip of wood to the legs on each of the four sides, about four inches below the top framework and sloping parallel with the top.  The tray is made of thin strips of wood about two inches wide and has a galvanized-wire screen bottom.  There will be a space of about two inches between the top edges of the tray and the glass top of the dryer, to allow for circulation of air.

Protect both sides, the bottom and the front of the dryer with cheesecloth, tacked on securely and snugly, to exclude insects and dust without interfering with circulation.  At the rear place a cheesecloth curtain, tacked at the top but swinging free below, to allow the tray to be moved in and out.  Brace the bottom of this curtain with a thin strip of wood, as is done in window shades.  This curtain is to be fastened to the legs by buttons when the tray is in place.  If you have a sunny, breezy attic you can hang your drying trays there.

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Every Step in Canning from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.