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After months of diagnosing by email and phone and trying new parts, it looks like we bought a lemon. I would be OK with that if the company would replace the freeze dryer. It looked like we had an agreement to get a new one but when the replacement arrived it was a very old, used, dirty unit.
So in October, I discovered that there was a freeze dryer available for home use. Until then, freeze dryers cost in the $20,000 range and up. I did a bunch of research and ordered it. The freeze dryer holds up to 10 pounds of food at a time, and completes a batch in usually 24 hours. A few very wet batches have taken as long as 30 hours.
Here is what I have experienced : I bought a harvest right freeze dryer and Paid $3190.00. I received it on 7/20/22. I was not able to use it for about 2 weeks after I received it due to needing a family member to come over and put it up for me. I used it 6 times and on the 7th time using it it did not work correctly.
I bought a used Kenmore washer dryer combo 12 years ago for $180 that don't have electronic touch pads. The seller was moving into a new house and his wife wanted new appliances to go with the new house. I think the timer is mechanical. I have replaced the belt in the dryer and the connection between the motor and transition in the washer.
Hi All--Quick question for you. I obtained a celery plant from a 50% off sale at the hardware store this summer. It has been happily growing in my garden since then. However, a freeze is imminent and I am not sure what to do w/ it. I am in zone 4 and we do get a couple of weeks of -20F or so weather over the winter.
To operate the sealer, I used vacuum cleaners with rubber plugs from a big box that fit the end of the hose by drilling a hole in it and installing clear plastic hose in it. It worked. Later, I found a nebulizer at a garage sale for two bucks. I pulled the cover and swapped the hose so it became a vacuum, rather than a noisy air compressor.
And I was told (and it works well) to freeze the milk in gallon freezer bags laid on their sides so the milk is thinnish when frozen. Drop on a hard surface to break into chunks (or use a hammer). ps the bag will be destroyed. Put in bowl and put the lye over the top, stirring/folding until the milk is melted and the solution is all one.
I also agree with Terry, if you fill and bake them ahead of time, they're going to thaw out into a goopy, soggy mess. You can make tart shells and freeze them well ahead of time though, if need be. Just wrap them well and place them where they won't be bumped or jostled around (frozen pastry shells will crack like ice, ask me how I know, lol).
Canadian production wheel for sale on Ravelry Jump to Latest 13K views 25 replies 9 participants last post by susanne Jun 17, 2011
The freight on mine was about $22.00 five years ago. A James wieghs very little even with the wringer. Do a Google (or whatever) search for a James Washer. You''ll wade throuh tons of junk but could luck on an obscure posting somewhere for a used one for sale. It's how I got mine. It did take searching for a few months, though. Good luck!