I love dried bananas!
Just slice up bananas and dry them, no sugar added. (those very-ripe bananas on sale in the grocery stores work great for this).
The only problem is that I eat them really fast, and the calories add up.
You can also blend very-ripe bananas with other fruits to make fruit roll-ups (you have to get a solid mat to pour the ingredients on, NOT a screen. Usually, these mats are Teflon coated).
I've also made coconut macaroons (raw coconut, almond meal--I got this my grinding up raw soaked almonds to make almond milk: it's what''s left over after the straining--some agave nectar and vanilla to taste. Form into cookie shapes and dry).
I also like to soak raw nuts (6-8 hours for almonds and other hard large nuts, 4-6 hours for walnuts) or seeds (2-4 hours for sunflower seeds), then rinse and dry in the dehydrator. You can add sweetener and cinnamon, or a bit of soy sauce and spices before drying to make flavored nuts). Soaking the nuts starts the germination process, which increases nutritional value--as in sprouts--and removes some of the antinutrients in the husk of nuts that make them less digestible).
You can also dry a lot of garden produce when you have extra in the summer. Dried and reconstituted tomatoes make a nice thick base for sauces and such.
You can find a LOT of ideas for using a dehydrator in some raw-food recipe books (Alissa Cohen uses it a lot for her recipes:
http://www.alissacohen.com/shop/Books-p-1-c-2.html ). Here's another raw-food recipe book with dehydrated foods (They give recipes for many of the items they sell online. Their crackers and cookies are yummy! The crackers are basically ground nuts, flax seed, and spices).
HTH!
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