Dry Roses with Your Microwave
by Valerie Garner
Description: Easy tips for drying roses in your
microwave.
Drying roses with this method is fairly easy, and
they turn out beautiful. Mine usually are mistaken for being freeze dried
roses. First you'll need a microwave safe bowl, one big enough that the
entire rose will fit completely into. Next you'll need silica gel, which can
be purchased at a craft store. Silica gel is a granule-based substance,
similar to the texture of sugar, which pulls moisture out of objects. It
usually has blue "indicator" crystals in the gel showing you how much water
has been absorbed.
Cut the rose about 1/4 inch or so from the actual
rose flower. This is perfect length for use in a wreath. If you need a
longer stem for an arrangement, you'll need to use floral tape and wrap a
floral wire to it to create a stem. It is best to cut the rose late morning
after all the dew is totally dry. Harvest the rose as it is in the early
stage of full bloom. You don't want it at the point that is has fully opened
wide.
Put about 1/2 inch or so of silica gel into the
bottom of the bowl. Set the short stem of the rose into the gel. Begin
slowly with a spoon to fill the bowl totally around the outside of the rose.
Then gently sprinkle the gel onto the top of the rose. The gel will begin to
work its way into some of the layers of the petals. Finally take the silica
gel and completely cover the rose. At this point the rose should be fully
buried in the silica gel.
Microwaves vary on their power, but as a starting
point put the bowl in, and set the microwave on the lowest setting and
microwave for 2 minutes. This is the part that you'll need to tweak with by
experimenting with your particular microwave.
Let the rose sit in the silica gel for about 3
hours or so. After that time gently dump the silica and the rose into
another container to get the rose out. Take a soft artists' paintbrush and
gently brush off the silica gel that you can. Take a clothespin and clip the
bottom of the rose stem, with a wire to the clothespin, and hang the rose
upside down for a few days in a darkened room preferably. This will finish
drying the rose completely. Take the soft paintbrush again and brush off any
remaining crystals. Your rose is now ready for use.
Roses will change color some from fresh to this
dried state. Some of the discolorations will be for the good; some will be
not so good. It depends on the rose variety. Try different ones and you'll
soon find your favorites. If you rose turns out brown however, it's because
you micro waved either at too high of a setting or too long or both, and it
literally cooked. Back those down and try again.
When the silica gel crystals start to turn a pink
color, put the silica in a baking pan and cook for 1/2 hour or so according
to directions in the oven until the indicators turn blue again. This
evaporates the water in the crystals so they can be used again.
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