You can make fruit leather out of almost any kind of fruit, and different fruit combinations. Some fruits require that you cook them a bit first, but most can be dried fresh. If you choose to dry your fruits fresh, be sure to pick in-season, ripe fruit. You can always add sugar to taste. This is a great recipe for home or on the trail - school lunch or summit adventure. I have added coconut and macadamia nuts for added calories (needed in the backcountry). If you are eating at home, consider skipping these for a lighter snack.
Pineapple-Banana Fruit Leather - Serves 4
4 cups bananas
2 cups pineapple, diced
1 Tbsp fresh lemon juice
2 Tbsp Macadamia nuts, toasted and chopped
2 Tbsp shredded coconut, toasted
At home:
Peal bananas and break apart into chunks and add to food processor
Add diced pineapple and lemon juice.
Blend until you have a smooth paste.
Spread paste out onto dehydrator plastic trays.
Make sure the paste is spread evenly.
Sprinkle each tray with 1 Tbsp of the shredded coconut.
Place trays in food dehydrator and dehydrate at 135 degrees (or fruit setting) for about 8-10 hours. Set a timer to check the trays every hour or so after the 6th hour to make sure your leather is not over-dried.
When the leather begins to become sticky, sprinkle each tray with 1 Tbsp macadamia nuts.
Remove leather from trays and wrap tightly in plastic wrap, or tear in to small pieces and seal in Ziploc bags.
Your leather should keep for about a week.
Eat as a snack, or tear small pieces up and add to plain oatmeal or grits for breakfast.
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This was delicious when I made it. Unfortunately, I didn't have enough time before heading out for it to become leathery in places. So, I had a bit of a fruit slide in my pack.
ReplyDeleteAnother issue I had was that I tried to force too much at once due to time constraints. Pieces of celery and carrots mingled in with my fruit slide. (though a little bit of celery on a dehydrated apple was actually refreshing)