Inspired for an Adventure? Check out Beef Stroganoff - Pouch and Beef Stew - Pouch
Free Ground Shipping On All Orders
Over 2,100 Reviews
Add description, images, menus and links to your mega menu
A column with no settings can be used as a spacer
Link to your collections, sales and even external links
Add up to five columns
Add description, images, menus and links to your mega menu
A column with no settings can be used as a spacer
Link to your collections, sales and even external links
Add up to five columns
Delve into the world of preparing food for outdoor pursuits or disaster preparedness, and at some point you’re likely to confront the issue of dehydrated vs. freeze-dried food. Many outdoorspeople and preppers are rightly confused by the distinction between the terms—and, of course, it’s worth pointing out here at the start that freeze-drying is a form of dehydration, and thus freeze-dried food is a kind of dehydrated food. But freeze-drying is a specific process, and in everyday usage a freeze-dried meal (such as we offer here at Mountain House) means something different than a dehydrated ingredient.
In this post, we’ll compare dehydrated vs freeze dried food and weigh the pros and cons of each from the standpoint of outdoor recreation.
Image by Shutterbug75 from Pixabay
Dehydration is a downright ancient method of preserving food: people have been drying sustenance in the sun to make it longer-lasting, more storable and packable for thousands of years. As the name suggests, dehydrating food means removing as much moisture from it as possible, which lengthens the time it’ll withstand microbial breakdown and other decay.
Freeze-drying is essentially a newborn compared to the age-old techniques of basic dehydration: it’s only been around since the early 1900s and didn’t step onto the international stage until World War II. The method is a more technologically involved process than basic dehydration, as it subjects foods to freezing and a moisture-vaporizing vacuum. During the war, the use of freeze-dried blood plasma and penicillin for medical treatment in the field (where refrigeration wasn’t an option) demonstrated the technology’s huge potential.
Basic dehydration and freeze-drying both involve removing moisture from food to make it more shelf-stable - a method of food preservation that also makes the food lighter and more compact in order to maximize storage and shipping resources.
Standard dehydrated food generally has about 80-95% of its moisture removed, depending on the specific process and other factors. By comparison, freeze-dried food removes some 98-99% of the product’s moisture.
Why are these foods perfect for the outdoors?
For outdoors people, the appeal of these processes is obvious: you get to bring ingredients and ready-to-go meals out into the wilds without breaking your back or requiring a whole packstring to do so, and can enjoy more varied flavors out where you don’t exactly have access to cold storage.
Image by CSU-Extension from Pixabay
Freeze-dried food beats out its dehydrated counterpart. Why, you ask?
Here’s its major advantages:
That said, if you’re hoping to embark on a do-it-yourself endeavor at home, the dehydration method is likely the best way to go, whether you’re purchasing a food dehydrator or setting up some other kind of air or sun-drying system. Freeze-drying is a more complex undertaking that requires expensive, specialized equipment.
Image by Tafilah Yusof from Pixabay
It wasn’t long after freeze-drying proved its worth during the Second World War that Mountain House’s parent company (originally Oregon Freeze Dry), got its start in 1963, producing freeze-dried fruits for breakfast cereals. The company quickly began supplying freeze-dried meals to the U.S. military as well as astronauts, and by the end of the decade the Mountain House brand was born to serve (quite literally) the booming outdoor industry’s appetite (learn more about their backstory here).
The freeze-drying process we use here at Mountain House involves cooking our meals, freezing them on specialized trays, then placing these trays of frozen goodness in a vacuum chamber to subject them to an air pressure about equivalent to that 46 miles above the surface of the Earth.
The frozen-food trays in the vacuum are also gently heated - the combination of that heat and the vacuum environment causes the moisture in the foodstuffs to sublimate directly into water vapor, which is removed so as not to re-enter the food.
Then all that’s left is our proprietary packaging process!
Image by StockSnap from Pixabay
As our historical snapshot earlier in this article suggests, we’ve been doing the freeze-dried thing a very long time here at Mountain House. It’s been our absolute honor to serve multiple generations of hikers, backpackers, river runners, mountain climbers, hunters, anglers, and many other sorts of customers, and we look forward to doing the same for generations to come!
We invite you to taste for yourself just how fabulous freeze-dried food can be out there in the wilds (and, heck, in the home kitchen, too, whenever you need something quick, easy, and delish). From breakfast items such as our Biscuits & Gravy, our Granola with Milk and Blueberries, and our Scrambled Eggs With Bacon to our Creamy Macaroni and Cheese, Fettuccine Alfredo with Chicken, Chicken Fajita Bowl, and other entrees, we’ve got you covered in the culinary department whenever you’re out adventuring!
Inspired for an Adventure? Check out Beef Stroganoff - Pouch and Beef Stew - Pouch
Sign Up for Delicious Outdoor Meals & Exclusive Offers!
©2024 Mountain House — All Rights Reserved.
$0.00
EXPRESS PAYMENT METHODS AVAILABLE IN CHECKOUT
Taxes and Shipping Calculated at Checkout