Pioneer Woman at Heart

One Flourishing, Frugal and Fun Family!

One family learning to live off the land, cut back on expenses, and to live a simpler and a more self-sufficient lifestyle.

Adopted Motto

"Eat it up,
Wear it out,
Make it do,
Or go without."
~A Pioneer Sampler, by Barbara Greenwood~

Thursday, April 25, 2024

Best Way to Dehydrate Chives ~ Homemade Dry Ranch Dressing/Dip Mix




Spring herbs are here!

Store bought chives are expensive. The cost for the above bottle of dried chives was $4.58!  I freeze my chives, but for the dry Ranch mix recipe, I need dehydrated/dried chives.  The bottle above is .12 oz and when ground makes 7 1/2 teaspoons.   It is horribly expensive, and I have managed to kill the indoor chive plant I brought inside.

So....on a mission I went...

 I dehydrated chives many years ago, but did not do my research before hand.  I had snipped them, and placed them on parchment paper in the dehydrator, and they the fan blew them all over the inside.


Here is what I have researched.  

-if you wash your chives, be sure to let they dry or dry them with a towel, or use a vegetable drying pad to let them dry off any water from washing them.  Otherwise, your dehydrator time will be a lot longer.

-do not snip them, keep the the chives whole, and place in the dehydrator.

-do not use a heat higher than 95°F, and dry them for 12-16 hours (mine took closer to the 16 hour mark, and this can vary).  Check your dehydrator for the temperture setting.  My chives are very long and thick, so I used every tray in my dehydrator to avoid cutting them at all.  Also, rotate your trays during they drying time.

Keeping the chives whole, prevents them from moving around too much, and the temperature keeps the flavor retained.



I stored mine in a canning jar, and use a vaccuum seal to remove any extra air.  I also kept them as long as I could, and will grind them only when I need them, to retain flavor.


(the first time making this recipe, I did not have dehydrated chives, so I ground up a teaspoon of dehydrated shallots, and it was very good).

Dry Ranch Dressing Mix 

1/2 cup Cultured Buttermilk Powder

1 Tbsp. homemade garlic powder

1 Tbsp. homemade onion powder

1 tsp.  parsley* (see note below for this and next two ingredients)

1 tsp. dill* 

1 tsp. chives *

1/2 tsp. salt

1/4 tsp. black pepper

Store in the refrigerator, or if you prefer to store it on a shelf, replace the buttermilk powder with powdered milk.  If stored dry with buttermilk in the fridge, you'll want to use it up in about 2 months.

It will fit in a half pint jar.  I used my canning funnel to fill the jar with ingredients.

*parsley, dill and chives are all dehydrated from the herb garden.


I first used this on chicken for a chicken, wild rice and broccoli casserole.  Years ago, I would just put the bone in chicken in the pan, but this time I cooked the chicken on the stove top, cubed with this ranch dry mix.  It turned out wonderful.

We also used it for a dressing (add what you like), and it's pretty good, and uses less ingredients to make.  It makes a very good dip recipe for vegetables.  We like to blend cottage cheese (vs. sour cream) and add the dry Ranch mix.  So good!


On a side note, I freeze chives as well, for other dishes .  I simply snip, store in freezer bags (flat), or fill freezer containers.  I just take it out, use what I need and put it back into the freezer.  We can enjoy chives in the colder months of winter.  I also freeze some of our green onions with the same process.


Best Way to Dehydrate Chives ~ Homemade Dry Ranch Dressing/Dip Mix© Apr 2024 by Kristina at Pioneer Woman at Heart


8 comments:

Betsy said...

Hello! Thanks for visiting my blog. I've subscribed to yours too so it should show up on my home page. Thank you for the delicious recipes.

The blanket pattern you asked about is free on Ravelry. It is called the "Baby Diamonds Blanket" and is put out by The Crochet Crowd and designed by Jeanne Steinhilber.

Please let me know if there is anything else I can help you with and I hope you enjoy the pattern as much as I do. I've made at least 6-7 of these blankets and always have fun with it.

Blessings and hugs,
Betsy

Pioneer Woman at Heart said...

Betsy, thank you so much. I will get that pattern printed out. Thanks for coming over to my blog as well. If you look at older posts you will see my handiwork I am currently making, or items I finished too.

Jackie said...

Thanks so much for the drying instructions. I snipped, and they blew all over the place.

God bless.

Debi said...

Thanks for sharing this. I received a dehydrator for Christmas and have a ton of chives growing in the garden. Now I can preserve them for future use!

Muis said...

Love the idea of preserving foods!

Pioneer Woman at Heart said...

Debi, you are welcome, there are so many things you can use your dehydrator for.

Pioneer Woman at Heart said...

Muis, it is a lot less expensive and healhier in my opinion.

Pioneer Woman at Heart said...

Jackie, I did the same thing the first time. I finally found a way to do it, and have dehydrated chives as well as frozen. Herbs are very expensive in the stores (what isn't?).