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Preserve Your Harvest,  Seasonal Recipes

Homemade Seasoned Crispy Kale Chips Recipe (Food Dehydrator or Oven-Baked)

Homemade kale chips are one of my favorite snacks from the garden! They’re absolutely delicious, super healthy, and easy to make. As much as I love eating and cooking with fresh kale in other ways, making homemade kale chips is a great way to change things up when we’re harvesting more kale than we can otherwise keep up with. It’s also the perfect use for that end-of-season kale that has become a bit tough. Even if you aren’t growing your own kale, making fresh homemade kale chips is an awesome way to add more greens to your diet – and “trick” your kids into eating more too!


I hope you enjoy our highly-addictive homemade crispy kale chips recipe. The easy step-by-step instructions will result in perfectly seasoned, crunchy, tasty kale chips – that also hold up well in storage! I’ll share our favorite seasoning combinations, but this kale chip recipe is highly customizable. Feel free to add as many or as few seasonings as you prefer, or use whatever you have available at home. You can make these kale chips using either a food dehydrator or in the oven.


Disclosure: This post may contain affiliate links to products for your convenience, such as to items on Amazon. Homestead and Chill gains a small commission from purchases made through those links, at no additional cost to you.

An outstretched arm holding a large bunch of dazzling blue lacinato kale. The edges of two raised garden beds as re visible below with large watermelon salvia growing in the background with pink flowers set on mint green foliage.
Homegrown “Dazzling Blue” lacinato kale.


Supplies & Ingredients Needed to Make Kale Chips


  • 1 large bunch of kale, or about a dozen leaves. I doubled the recipe in the photos, using about the equivalent of two large bunches of kale fresh from the garden.

  • Extra virgin olive oil for drizzling, approximately 1/2 to 1 tablespoon of oil per bunch of kale. The higher quality olive oil, the better the kale chips will taste!

  • Sea salt – the minimum seasoning I suggest. You could also use a simple seasoned salt, like garlic salt.

  • Other seasonings of choice. We love to make homemade kale chips with a variety of seasonings – sometimes using just one or two, and other times mixing several! Some of our favorites include garlic powder, onion powder, curry or turmeric powder, black pepper, cumin, lemon powder, chili powder, everything-but-the-bagel seasoning, and more. (We make most of these seasonings from homegrown ingredients. Click on any of the linked seasonings to learn how to make your own!) Nutritional yeast is another wonderful addition that we add to almost every batch of kale chips. It gives them a cheese-like tang! For a fun twist, you could even sprinkle in some fresh chopped herbs.

  • A strainer and mixing bowl, or a salad spinner

  • A food dehydrator, or oven and baking sheet(s). Either option works! We personally prefer to use our food dehydrator and find that it results in slightly more dry, crispy kale chips that stay crunchy longer in storage.

  • Recommended: Tongs for tossing


Two white ramekins sit diagonal from each other, one has a shallow layer of Celtic grey sea salt while the other has a small amount of extra virgin olive oil. There are three various sized tablespoon and teaspoon measurements laid out below, eachnone filled with a different seasoning or spice.
For this particular batch of crispy kale chips, we went with sea salt, nutritional yeast, and homegrown lemon and turmeric powders. Garlic and onion powder are also usual favorites!


Step 1: De-Stem & Tear the Kale


We need to get our kale washed, dried, de-stemmed, and broken up into chip-size pieces. The order that you accomplish these steps is up to you! 

I have found it easiest to de-stem the unwashed kale, tear it into pieces, and toss those into a salad spinner. Shoot for around 2 inch pieces, keeping in mind that they will shrink as they dry. Then, I use the basket portion of the salad spinner as a strainer to rinse the kale in the sink. Next, I put the basket into the spinner bowl and give it whirl! I like to spin the rinsed pieces once, discard the collected water, toss the kale, then spin it once more to get them extra dry.

Alternatively (if you don’t have a salad spinner), I suggest washing your kale as intact large leaves first. Shake or pat them dry, and then proceed with de-stemming and tearing. 


A strainer portion of a salad spinner is featured full of chip sized pieces of fresh lacinato or dino kale.
De-stemmed, washed, and mostly dry kale pieces – ready to turn into chips!


How to quickly de-stem kale 

It is really quick and easy to de-stem kale by hand! There is no need to fuss with a knife (unless you prefer to of course). Hold the leaf near the bottom thick stem portion, pinch and grab the leafy bits on each side, and slide your fingers down the stem. The leafy portion will peel right off, leaving behind the toughest section of stem. The more tender skinny stem in the top third of the leaf will usually stay connected to the greens, which is totally okay! From there, I tear the leaves into chip-size pieces.

I should note that you don’t absolutely have to de-stem the kale, though it is highly recommended. Including the thick portion of the stem in your kale chips can lead to varying drying times, tougher kale chips, and also reduced storage life. It is far more dense (and therefore has more moisture) than the thin leaves and skinny stem bit. 


A four way image collage on how to de-stem kale. The first image shows a hand holding a piece if kale by the stem, the second hand is pinching the kale stem where the greens are attached. The second image shows a hand holding the isle stem while the second hand is pulling the kale leaf by sliding g it along the stem which tears the leaf portion from the stem. The third image shows one hand holding the lone leftover stem while the other hand is holdingthe hdetached kale leaf. The fourth image shows two hands illustrating a chunk of the leaf that will be torn into a kale chip size portion. Below shows a strainer of de-stemmed kale torn into chip size pieces and a bunch of kale that still needs to be prepped.


Step 2: Add Oil & Seasoning


Once the raw kale chip pieces are prepped and fairly dry, transfer them into a mixing bowl. I simply dump mine from the basket into the bowl portion of the salad spinner, after getting rid of the collected water of course. That means I only use one bowl for the whole process! 

Next, drizzle the kale with a small amount of extra virgin olive oil. We usually just “eyeball it”, though I’d say about ½ to 1 tbsp of oil is good for the average grocery store bunch of kale. We used about 2 tablespoons of olive oil for this large double-batch. When in doubt, go light at first. You can always add more! The goal is to evenly coat every piece with a small amount of oil, but not have any excess dripping off or pooling in the bowl. Toss everything well with tongs (or similar) until all of the pieces are evenly and lightly coated with oil. 

Once the kale is tossed with oil, it is time to add your other seasonings of choice. I like to sprinkle a small amount of seasoning over the kale in two or three rounds, tossing them in between. That way, the seasonings get evenly distributed over all of the kale chips rather than stuck to only the top layer.

The amount of seasonings is up to you! At minimum, sprinkle on sea salt to taste (as you would when seasoning other vegetables with salt). We typically go fairly light with stronger seasonings like turmeric and lemon powder, adding only a light dusting. In this large double-batch, I added about one tablespoon of nutritional yeast total. Have fun experimenting with various combinations!


A two part image collage. The first image shows the greens after they have been seasoned with spices. The second image shows the greens after they have been seasoned and tossed with tongs to thoroughly mix.
Left: After seasoning, before tossing. Right: after tossing.
The seasoned greens are in a clear plastic bowl, a set of stainless steel tongs is being used to toss the greens until mixed.


Step 3: Dry the Kale Chips


Now, transfer the oiled and seasoned kale chips to their final drying destination. If you’re using a food dehydrator, lay out the kale pieces on your dehydrator trays. To dry them in the oven, place the kale pieces on a baking sheet. The use of parchment paper will reduce the chances of sticking to the baking sheet, though the oil helps with that as well. Either way, arrange the kale chips next to each other but not overlapping. They need space and air flow between them to properly dry. 


Two stainless steel drying racks are shown full of season kale pieces that are ready to be dried into chips. The pieces have space around each one, making sure to not overlap the pieces so they will dry evenly.
Raw seasoned kale chips ready to go in the food dehydrator. This particular batch made 5 trays full. We currently use (and absolutely love!) an Excalibur dehydrator, though we’ve made kale chips with a more basic Nesco dehydrator in the past too!


Kale Chip Drying Time & Temperature

Dry your homemade kale chips in a food dehydrator on 125°F for about 2 hours, or until they are completely crispy dry. If your food dehydrator doesn’t have a precise temperature setting, choose the “vegetable” setting or other medium-low heat option. By the end, they should crunch and crumble and no longer bend, signaling they are done.

In the oven, bake the kale chips on 225°F for about 25 to 30 minutes – or until the chips are crispy, but not burnt. Low and slow is the key when making kale chips in the oven!

The chips after they have been dried are shown. A hand is holding o. of the pieces to show how they look once finished. There are specks of yellow and orange seasoning on the dark green kale chip.  Below the featured piece is a drying rack with the remaining kale chips.


Step 4: Enjoy or Store


Are they ready yet? Yum! Now it is time to chow down on your homemade crispy kale chips. Store any leftovers in an air-tight container, such as a glass food storage container with snap-on sealing lid. For maximum crunch, enjoy within 4 or 5 days. Depending on the size batch made, it wouldn’t be unheard of to consume all of your kale chips in one sitting! And there is no shame in that.


Two bowls of finished chips are shown, the seasonings look like specks of gold on dark green chips.
The final results of two large bunches of kale turned into chips. One bowl to munch on now, and one air-tight bowl to save for later.


Are kale chips good for you?

Heck yes they are! Kale chips are made from kale after all. Kale is incredibly nutrient-dense and loaded with vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants. Plus, dehydrated or baked kale chips are not fried like most other chips are. Fresh homemade kale chips are the most healthy, as you have the ultimate control over the quality of ingredients and process used to dry them.

The small amount of olive oil (a healthy unsaturated fat) used to help them crisp by no means makes kale chips “bad for you”. One of my personal vices is organic kettle chips… and these do a dang good job at satiating the craving for something salty, crunchy, and flavorful – at a fraction of the calories!


A bowl of seasoned kale chips are shown with a stainless steel drying rack  with more finished chips shown in the background.


And that is how you make healthy, crispy, awesomely delicious homemade kale chips!


I can’t wait for you to try these bad boys yourself! Enjoy experimenting with seasonings of your own, and come back for a review to let us know how it went. Please let me know if you have any questions, and feel free to spread the love by sharing or pinning this post. Now excuse me while I go munch on some kale chips and write your next article.


If you love dehydrating things as much as we do, you’ll probably dig these tutorials too:


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4.64 from 19 votes

Homemade Seasoned Crispy Kale Chips Recipe (Dehydrator or Oven-Baked)

Please enjoy these highly-addictive, uber-healthy, homemade crispy kale chips. They're easy to make in either a food dehydrator or baked in the oven, and stay crunchy in storage! I’ll share our favorite seasoning combinations, but this kale chip recipe is highly customizable. Use whatever seasonings you like or have!
Prep Time30 minutes
Dehydrator Time2 hours
Course: Party Food, Side Dish, Snack
Keyword: Baked kale chips, Crispy kale chips, dehydrated kale chips, Kale chips, seasoned kale chips
Servings: 1 bowl

Equipment

  • A strainer and mixing bowl, or a salad spinner
  • A food dehydrator, or oven and baking sheet(s) lined with parchment paper
  • Recommended: tongs, for tossing

Ingredients

  • 1 bunch fresh kale (about 12 leaves)
  • 1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
  • sea salt (or seasoned salt), to taste
  • other optional seasonings, sprinkled over to taste (recommendations include garlic powder, onion powder, nutritional yeast, chili powder, turmeric or curry powder, cumin, lemon powder, everything-but-the-bagel seasoning, and/or black pepper)

Instructions

  • Wash, dry (pat dry or use a salad spinner) and de-stem the kale.
  • Tear or cut the kale up into chip-size pieces, about 2 by 2 inches.
  • Add the kale pieces to a mixing bowl. Drizzle over about 1/2 to 1 tbsp of olive oil per average bunch of kale. The goal is to evenly coat every piece with a small amount of oil, but not have any excess dripping off or pooling in the bowl.
  • Toss everything well with tongs (or similar) until all of the kale pieces are evenly and lightly coated with oil.
  • Sprinkle over sea salt and other seasonings of choice, to taste. (I like to lightly dust the kale with a small amount of seasonings first, toss well, dust again, toss, repeat. That way, the seasonings get evenly distributed over all of the kale chips, rather than stuck to only the top layer.)
  • If you’re using a food dehydrator, lay out the kale pieces on your dehydrator trays. To dry them in the oven, place the kale pieces on a baking sheet (parchment paper recommended). Either way, arrange the kale chips next to each other but not overlapping.
  • Dry your homemade kale chips in a food dehydrator on 125°F for about 2 hours, or until they are completely crispy dry. If your food dehydrator doesn’t have a precise temperature setting, choose the “vegetable” setting or other medium-low heat option. By the end, they should crunch and crumble and no longer bend, signaling they are done.
  • In the oven, bake the kale chips on 225°F for about 25 to 30 minutes – or until the chips are crispy, but not burnt. Low and slow is the key when making kale chips in the oven!
  • Enjoy your homemade crispy kale chips! Store any leftovers in an air-tight container. For maximum crunch, enjoy within 4 or 5 days.



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16 Comments

  • Latestmodapks

    These are the best kale chips I’ve ever had! I made them in the oven and they turned out great. I will definitely be making these again.

  • Regina Bishop

    5 stars
    Hello again. Well my second batch of kale I seasoned with cumin and turmeric and pink salt. They both taste pretty good but I think I’m going to like the 1st one better. I’m sorry about those typos in the first message please go ahead and fix them if you can thank you God bless you you look beautiful thanks to your gardening and your wonderful food I know,I know that’s why. I’ve been striving to get well from nutrition for a long time. I just decided to do the keto diet I have about 25 lb to lose so hopefully that will help me I’m going to use the kale because I’m in dialysis and you get real sick after they drain all your nutrients out of you so I’m going to take the kale with me. We’ll see if that helps.
    be blessed

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