I had the same experience when I lived in the Northeastern US but now that I live in a desert where the humidity never goes over 30% it works great. I think if you are in a humid place you really need a dehydrator or some kind of fan blowing on them
I’m in the PNW. which most people assume is rainy/wet. But really it’s bipolar: cold/wet in winter, hot/dry in summer. We’re entering fall, so I guess the humidity was too high this time. I also did the drying in my greenhouse which gets very hot (120F in daytime) but I also think the humidity spikes at night. So next time I’ll try with a fan blowing on them.
I had the same experience when I lived in the Northeastern US but now that I live in a desert where the humidity never goes over 30% it works great. I think if you are in a humid place you really need a dehydrator or some kind of fan blowing on them
I’m in the PNW. which most people assume is rainy/wet. But really it’s bipolar: cold/wet in winter, hot/dry in summer. We’re entering fall, so I guess the humidity was too high this time. I also did the drying in my greenhouse which gets very hot (120F in daytime) but I also think the humidity spikes at night. So next time I’ll try with a fan blowing on them.