Any jerky makers here?

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I recently (as in the past year) started experimenting with jerky recipes. I've tried the following ground meats with a jerky gun: beef, bison, lamb

As for muscle meats, I've tried beef, turkey, salmon, and cod.

The cod and lamb were not very good. Cod just doesn't have enough flavor on its own and lamb (as much as I love it as a burger or a chop) has too much fat (jerky is best with very lean meats). Everything else depended on the seasoning, but mostly very good.

It seems that with ground meats, you are limited to powdered seasoning and cure. This is not my preference because you have less control over the sodium content. With muscle meats, I have had better success with liquid marinades and you can more easily control sodium content.

I usually use this meat because it's already the perfect thickness. Just need to cut to length and width:
https://www.walmart.com/search?q=sizzle steak

I've also tried this:
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Beef-Cho...ray/1888939985?classType=REGULAR&from=/search

And it works well too. It's a little too thin and narrow, but it's much easier to use because there's zero prep work for cutting. Because it's so thin, it also dries faster. It may be done after 90 minutes as opposed to 2-2.5 hours for the thicker "sizzle steak" meat.

As for marinades, I have settled on a favorite. This works for around a pound of meat. Adjust qtys as needed.
1/4 cup liquid aminos or lite soy sauce
1/4 cup Worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon liquid smoke
1 tablespoon brown sugar
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon onion powder
For some heat, add 1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper. For some variety, substitute 1 teaspoon Sriracha or Tapatio. This will increase sodium content.



This marinade works equally well with beef, turkey or salmon.

Basically, put your meat in a gallon ziplock bag. Mix the marinade ingredients until fully dissolved. Heat on stove if needed to help dissolve. Then pour (after cooled) marinade in ziplock bag, mix well til all meat is coated, flatten the bag and refrigerate for at least 12 hours, flipping the bag occasionally. When ready to cook, lay each piece of meat over paper towels, then lay another sheet of paper towels over the top and press down to absorb all the liquid away. Now you can cook your meat how you want.

I crack pepper over the raw meat just before it goes into dehydrator/air fryer/oven. This way the pepper sticks to the meat after it's done.

I don't have a dehydrator (yet) so I use either the air fryer (165 degrees for 2-3 hours) or oven (200 degrees with door cracked open) for 2-3 hours.

Since I use low sodium ingredients and do not add curing salt, the jerky will not stay fresh as long. As long as you refrigerate the jerky when not eating and finish it within a week, it should be fine.

Don't knock the turkey or salmon. Both are very tasty as jerky with this marinade! Just partially freeze the meat so that it is easier to slice thinly. You definitely want thin meat or it will take too long to dehydrate. Use boneless, skinless turkey breast, and any fresh salmon with or without skin (your preference).

Please share your jerky recipes below!
 
Some pics.

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I have done it a couple of times when I had a food dehydrator. Haven't done it for years. Had a good friend back in my Navy Days that would do this with deer meat. Made tons and tons of it. He used to bring a bag into work every Friday during deer season. He would also bring in a crock pot of "mystery meat." You never knew what it was. Squirrel, rabbit etc. I stayed away fron that, but it was always fun to see someone eating it and saying how good it was, then run to a trash can when they were told what it was.....

:)

He was from West Virginia.
 
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I make it out of Canada Goose breast.
That sounds amazing. Can you buy that somewhere, or do you shoot them?

I have done it a couple of times when I had a food dehydrator. Haven't done it for years. Had a good friend back in my Navy Days that would do this with deer meat.
Ha. I have a buddy at work who has been making tons of deer jerky (ground) with the deer he recently shot. It was pretty **** good for ground meat jerky.
 
That sounds amazing. Can you buy that somewhere, or do you shoot them?


Ha. I have a buddy at work who has been making tons of deer jerky (ground) with the deer he recently shot. It was pretty **** good for ground meat jerky.
My state has 2 different hunting seasons for them. I've never looked into whether you could buy the meat anywhere.
 
I make jerky with beef.
I don't do ground beef as the powdered cure you have to use has nitrates.
I use London broil. I run it all over with salt. Let it sit , then slice it thin. I use dry seasoning after slicing. Usually a smoked salt, onion powder, garlic salt, ground black pepper, cayenne pepper, and brown sugar. Let it sit over night then dehydrate.
 
Wow! This thread brings back memories. When one of my brothers was stationed in Alaska (Air Force), he used to make moose jerky and mail it to us. It was delicious (for jerky).
 
As a jerky lover that also is on a low sodium diet, I've been experimenting with different marinade ingredients. Yesterday I substituted Coconut Aminos for low sodium soy sauce. 270mg per Tbsp vs 630mg per Tbsp. Conclusion: I can hardly taste any salt at all in the jerky. It's not horrible, but it's not the best batch I've ever made.

Next batch I will do half Coconut Aminos and half low sodium soy sauce. That will net 450mg per Tbsp.
 
Cool thread!!! I have been mulling making some jelly for a bit now. I do not have a dehydrator and I would be haventonuse ground beef (having 80 pounds of carryover from last year).
 
Cool thread!!! I have been mulling making some jelly for a bit now. I do not have a dehydrator and I would be haventonuse ground beef (having 80 pounds of carryover from last year).
Oven works well. Set it to 190 and leave the door cracked open. Place meat on cookie sheets lined with parchment paper. Air fryer also works well but you're limited to small batch sizes.

Ground beef should be very low fat (at least 90/10) or the fat will mess with the flavor and longevity. Either use a jerky gun or a rolling pin to roll to 1/8" thick. I find muscle meat easier to work with, but ground jerky can taste amazing.
 
Thanks!! I plan on getting a jerky gun (not Jerry like spellcheck thinks). I will try both oven and Traeger.

The ground beef is very lean, so I am not worried about that. Unless one can make jerky from small chunks made from stew and stir-fry cuts....
 
Oven works well. Set it to 190 and leave the door cracked open. Place meat on cookie sheets lined with parchment paper. Air fryer also works well but you're limited to small batch sizes.

Ground beef should be very low fat (at least 90/10) or the fat will mess with the flavor and longevity. Either use a jerky gun or a rolling pin to roll to 1/8" thick. I find muscle meat easier to work with, but ground jerky can taste amazing.
I’m kind of tempted over the ground beef jerky. I like beef jerky, don’t eat it all the time, but it’s a good traveling and work snack. Controlling what’s in it would be good. I can see small bits being handy to eat in some situations.
 
Oven works well. Set it to 190 and leave the door cracked open. Place meat on cookie sheets lined with parchment paper. Air fryer also works well but you're limited to small batch sizes.

Ground beef should be very low fat (at least 90/10) or the fat will mess with the flavor and longevity. Either use a jerky gun or a rolling pin to roll to 1/8" thick. I find muscle meat easier to work with, but ground jerky can taste amazing.
I have a gas oven so I don’t think it stays on with the door open?

Maybe air fryer or I wonder if I can control the gas grill well enough?
 
I've been experimenting since buying a dehydrator last year. My favorite, so far, is using ground turkey from Costco and a jerky cannon. This is quite affordable, low fat, and has excellent texture. With beef jerky, I struggle to find a cut of meat that isn't full of gristle, and beef is expensive.

I use a small shot of bread crumbs in the mix, which I think improves texture. The pieces are easier to chew than beef. And it doesn't shrink down like crazy because the Costco Butterball is only 7% fat. Good stuff.
 
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I've been experimenting since buying a dehydrator last year. My favorite, so far, is using ground turkey from Costco and a jerky cannon. This is quite affordable, low fat, and has excellent texture. With beef jerky, I struggle to find a cut of meat that isn't full of gristle, and beef is expensive.

I use a small shot of bread crumbs in the mix, which I think improves texture. The pieces are easier to chew than beef. And it doesn't shrink down like crazy because the Costco Butterball is only 7% fat. Good stuff.
Photos of the finished product???
 
I’m kind of tempted over the ground beef jerky. I like beef jerky, don’t eat it all the time, but it’s a good traveling and work snack. Controlling what’s in it would be good. I can see small bits being handy to eat in some situations.
I have a buddy who prefers ground jerky because the muscle meat gets stuck in his teeth. His batches are always good.

I make jerky every weekend. I take 1 ounce to work with me each day as a snack. One pound of meat typically makes about 7 oz of jerky, so it works out well.
I have a gas oven so I don’t think it stays on with the door open?

Maybe air fryer or I wonder if I can control the gas grill well enough?
Try it and see?

I finally invested in a dehydrator for $120. It has been great. I can now cook all the meat in one batch whereas it took several batches (and many hours of time) in the air fryer. I got this one:
https://www.amazon.com/COSORI-Dehydrator-Temperature-Stainless-Included/dp/B0CHRWLM5Z

I've been experimenting since buying a dehydrator last year. My favorite, so far, is using ground turkey from Costco and a jerky cannon. This is quite affordable, low fat, and has excellent texture. With beef jerky, I struggle to find a cut of meat that isn't full of gristle, and beef is expensive.
I've done a lot of experimenting too. As I mentioned in the first post, I started trying fish and have discovered that salmon makes far and away the best fish jerky. Super healthy, super flavorful, and it's so buttery it melts in your mouth. Ahi tuna, catfish, and tilapia also make pretty decent jerky. Cod and mahi mahi did not turn out so well. Texture too rubbery.

Since my first post, I have fine-tuned my marinade recipe:

Savory
1/4 cup low sodium soy sauce
1/4 cup worcestershire
1 tablespoon hickory liquid smoke
1 tablespoon brown sugar (optional, still tastes good without if you're on a low sugar diet)
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon onion powder
1 teaspoon ground black pepper
1 teaspoon red pepper flakes (optional, but really enhances the flavor if you like heat)

Teriyaki
Exact same recipe as above, except instead of low sodium soy sauce, use Soy Vay Veri Veri Teriyaki sauce.
I have tried several brands of teriyaki sauce and this one is far and away the best tasting one in jerky. They carry it at my local Walmart.

The recipe will make enough marinade for 1 pound of meat.
 
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