125+ JERKY RECIPES

Started by Smoke some, February 16, 2012, 03:32:59 PM

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Smoke some

Thought I would contribute a few jerky recipes I've found on the internet

Most importantly these recipes do not contain a cure so, DON'T FORGET TO USE A CURE!!!!!!

These are references for different flavors. 



If you use any of these recipes DON'T FORGET THE CURE!!!!


Did I mention... DON'T forget to ADD THE PROBER CURE.....
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PLEASE NOTE: USE PROBER AMOUNT OF CURE FOR MEAT

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1. Beef Jerky #1
2. Beef Jerky #2
3. Beef Jerky #3
4. Beef Jerky #4
5. Beef Jerky #5
6. Beef Jerky #6
7. Beef Jerky #7
8. Beef Jerky #8
9. Beef Jerky #9
10. Beef Jerky #10
11. Beef Jerky #11
12. Beef Jerky #12
13. Beef Jerky #13
14. Beef Jerky #14
15. Beef Jerky #15
16. Beef Jerky #16
17. Beef Jerky #17
18. Beef Jerky #18
19. Beef Jerky #19
20. Beef Jerky #20
21. Beef Jerky #21
22. Beef Jerky #22
23. Beef Jerky #23
24. Beef Jerky #24
25. Beef Jerky #25
26. Beef Jerky #26
27. Beef Jerky #27
28. Beef Jerky #28
29. Beef Jerky #29
30. Beef Jerky #30
31. Beef Jerky #31
32. Beef Jerky #32
33. Beef Jerky #33
34. Beef Jerky #34
35. Beef Jerky #35
36. Beef Jerky - Basic Recipe
37. Beef Barbecued Jerky
38. Beef or Venison Jerky #1
39. Beef or Venison Jerky #2
40. Beef or Venison Jerky #3
41. Blue Ribbon Jerky
42. Cajun Jerky
43. California Beef Jerky
44. Carne Seca Jerky
45. Chicken Jerky
46. Chinese Beef Jerky #1
47. Chinese Beef Jerky #2
48. Curried Jerky
49. Dry Cure Southwest Jerky
50. Duck Jerky
51. Easy Cure Meat Jerky
52. Fiesta Jerky
53. Fish Jerky
54. Frontier Jerky
55. Gingered Beef Jerky
56. Hamburger Jerky
57. Hawaiian Jerky #1
58. Hawaiian Jerky #2
59. Herbed Jerky
60. High Plains Jerky
61. Home-Style Jerky
62. Honey Lemon Beef Jerky
63. Hot & Spicy Jerky
64. Hot & Tangy Jerky
65. Jack Daniels Beef Jerky
66. Jamaican Jerky
67. Jerky Strips
68. Killer Jerky
69. Korean Jerky
70. Low Salt Jerky
71. Mexican Jerky
72. Microwave Beef Jerky
73. Microwave Venison Jerky
74. Middle Eastern Jerky
75. Mild Mexican Jerky
76. Modern Jerky
77. Mojo Spice Jerky
78. Molasses Jerky
79. Onion Ground Beef Jerky
80. Original Jerky
81. Oven-Dried "Any Meat" Jerky
82. Paniolo Beef Jerky
83. Peppered Beef Jerky
84. Perfect Jerky Marinade
85. Pillow Case Jerky
86. Pow Wow Jerky
87. Savory Jerky
88. Smoked Jerky
89. Smoked Hamburger Jerky
90. Smoked Turkey Jerky
91. Smokehouse Jerky
92. Smoker Teriyaki Beef Jerky
93. Smoky Jerky
94. Soy Jerky
95. Spicy Jerky
96. Sweet & Sour Jerky
97. Tender Jerky
98. Teriyaki Jerky #1
99. Teriyaki Jerky #2
100. Teriyaki Beef or Venison Jerky
101. Teriyaki Turkey Jerky
102. Thai Beef Jerky #1
103. Thai Beef Jerky #2
104. Tofu Jerky
105. Triple Meat Jerky
106. Turkey Jerky #1
107. Turkey Jerky #2
108. Turkey Jerky #3
109. Turkey Jerky #4
110. Venison Jerky #1
111. Venison Jerky #2
112. Venison Jerky #3
113. Venison Jerky #4
114. Venison Jerky #5
115. Venison Jerky #6
116. Venison Jerky #7
117. Venison Jerky #8
118. Venison Jerky #9
119. Venison Jerky #10
120. Venison Jerky #11
121. Venison Jerky #12
122. Western Jerky
123. Western Barbecue Jerky
124. Wild Duck Jerky
125. World Famous Beef Jerky

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1. BEEF JERKY #1

2 lbs round steak (or flank or brisket)
1/4 C. soy sauce
1 Tbsp. Worcestershire
1/4 tsp. ea. pepper and garlic powder
1/2 tsp. onion powder
1 tsp. hickory smoke-flavored salt

Trim and discard fat from meat. Cut meat in 1/8 to 1/4 thick slices. In a
bowl combine all but meat. Stir until seasonings dissolve. Add meat and mix
thoroughly. Let stand one hour. Shake off excess liquid and put meat slices
on oven racks or shallow baking pan. Dry meat at lowest possible oven temp
maybe 180 or 200) until it is brown, hard, and dry. Can take as long as 24
hours.

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2. BEEF JERKY #2

3 LBS lean bottom or top round (or sirloin rump is the best!)

Trim all external fat from meat and cut into 1/4" - 1/8" slices (or have
store meat-cutter do this, it's his job!). Cut into 1" wide strips
length-wise.

In a large bowl put:
2c. soy sauce
1 1/2 tbls. liquid smoke
1 tsp. worcestershire sauce
1/2 c.dark brown sugar
1/2 tsp. granulated garlic
dash of cayenne pepper powder

For HOT & SPICY add:
1tbls. crushed red pepper
For EXTRA HOT:
Leave alot of crushed red pepper on beef strips!!!

Place strips in marinade and stir and poke with a fork to thoroughly
distribute marinade. Cover and put in refigerator for 24-48 hrs (the longer
the BETTER!). Place strips in a kitchen strainer. Shake off excess marinade
and place on dehydrator racks. Follow dehydrator instuctions for beef
jerky. You don't have a dehydrator?! NO PROBLEM!!! Remove oven racks. Place
foil on bottom rack and replace at lowest position. Thoroughly CLEAN & DRY
top rack and lay strips width-wise across rack. Put at middle position and
turn on oven to lowest setting. Leave oven door open a crack to allow excess
moisture to escape. Jerky is done in 6-24 hrs depending on thickness of
strips. Jerky should be dry and able to bend without breaking or crumbling.
Store in zip-lock bag for weeks or freeze for up to one year. ENJOY!!!

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3. BEEF JERKY #3

1/2 ts Pepper (MORE FOR HOT)
1/2 ts Garlic Powder
1/2 ts Onion Salt
1 lb Beef Roast
1/2 c Soy sauce
1/2 ts Garlic Salt
1/2 ts Lemon Pepper

Marinate 1 hour or overnight. Bake in oven 150 to 170, overnight or for 10 -
12 hours. Leave oven door open to allow moisture to escape. Check often for
proper level of dryness. If you have a smoker, jerky may be dried in smoker.
Keep the heat low and again check dryness of jerky often.

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4. BEEF JERKY #4

1 Flank Steak Or London Broil
Coarse Black Pepper
1/2 c Soy Sauce
Garlic Powder

Cut flank steak or london broil into 1/4" strips. Sprinkle with garlic
powder and coarse ground black pepper. Marinate in soy sauce for 24 hours.
Bake in 150 degree F oven for 10 to 12 hours. DO NOT exceed 150 degrees F.

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5. BEEF JERKY #5

2 lb London Broil
1/2 c Soy sauce
2 tb Worstershire sauce
2 ts Garlic powder
2 ts Onion powder
2 ts Fresly ground black pepper
2 ts Red pepper flakes, less for sissies
2 tb Liquid smoke

Freeze the London Broil or other lean roast. When ready to make jerky,
remove the roast from the freezer and let partially thaw. When just able to
slice, first remove all fat and then slice against the grain in thin (1/4
inch or less) slices. Cover the meat with the marinade, turn from time to
time and let marinade overnight. In the morning line a shallow cookie sheet
with a few layers of paper towels. Place on lower rack. Place upper rack in
oven in top position and lower rack in lower position. Hang the beef slices
from the upper rack with toothpicks above the paper towels. 6 hours at 160F
average temp is about right. If your oven is real tight, you might crack
open the door a bit to allow the water vapor to escape.

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6. BEEF JERKY #6

2 lb Round steak, chuck steak or roast
1 ts Onion salt
1/2 ts Salt
1/2 ts Garlic salt
1/2 ts Lemon pepper
1/2 ts Sausage seasoning
1/2 ts Thyme
1/2 ts Oregano
1/2 ts Marjoram
1/2 ts Basil

Combine the spices in a dish. Cut the meat into strips less than 1/4 of an
inch thick. Remove ALL fat. Sprinkle one side with the combined seasonings
and beat with a meat hammer. Turn and repeat the seasoning and beating.
Place the strips on a cookie sheet or other flat pan. Place in a 120 F oven
for 4 hrs. Turn and put back for another 4 hrs. Keep the oven door propped
open for the entire time to allow the moisture to escape. With a gas oven,
the pilot light may be enough to provide the heat. Store in a plastic bag.
Do not store in a paper bag.

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7. BEEF JERKY #7

1 Flank steak
1 Clove garlic, minced
1/2 c Honey
1 Pinch pepper
4 tb Lemon juice
1/2 c Soy sauce
1 Pinch salt

Put steak in freezer for about half an hour, just until firm. Slice steak
across grain, about 1/4-inch thick. Combine remaining ingredients and
marinate steak strips in this for at least 2 hours. Place slices on rack in
pan and dry in oven at 150 degrees, 12 hours.

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8. BEEF JERKY #8

1/2 c Soy Sauce
1/2 c Worcestershire Sauce
2 tb Ketchup
1/2 ts Pepper (more for hot)
1/2 ts Garlic Powder
1/2 ts Onion Salt
1 lb Beef Roast

Marinate 1 hour or overnight. Bake in oven 150 to 170, overnight for 10 -12
hours.

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9. BEEF JERKY #9

2 lb Very lean Flank Steak or Brisket
1/3 c Soy Sauce
1 Garlic Clove, minced

Trim fat off meat. Cut across grain into 2 pieces; slice lengthwise with
grain into 4" strips. Combine soy sauce and garlic in mixing bowl. add meat.
Marinate for 15 to 20 minutes, stirring occasionally. Drain and arrange in
single layer on cooling rack set in baking pan. Bake overnight at 150 degree
F for 12 hours until dried. Blot meat on paper towel to absorb excess fat.
Store in tightly covered container. Will keep for several weeks. Does not
require refrigeration.

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10. BEEF JERKY #10

2 -3 lb beef
1/2 c Soy sauce
1/2 c Worcestershire sauce
2 ts Accent
2/3 ts Garlic powder
2 ts Onion powder
2/3 ts Black pepper
2 ts Seasoned salt

Cut meat with the grain into 1/2-inch thick strips. Mix all other
ingredients to make a marinade. Submerge meat in marinade for 24 hours.
Place meat strips directly on the rack in the oven and cook for 8 hours at
150 degrees.

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11. BEEF JERKY #11

1 lb Steak or roast
5 tb Soy sauce
3 tb Worcestershire sauce
2 tb Brown sugar
1 ts Paprika
1/2 ts Pepper
1/2 ts Garlic powder
1/2 ts Onion powder

Trim ALL the fat off the meat and slice into 1/4" thick strips. Mix other
ingredients together. Marinate meat overnight in the mixture. Line cookie
sheets with foil and arrange meat on it in a single layer. Dry for 8 or more
hours at 200 deg F, turning every 2 hours. Cool and store in a tightly
covered jar or sealed in a plastic bag.

Other marinade ingredients (optional): 1/2 ts or more hot pepper sauce, /1/4
ts cayenne, 1 ts chili powder, 1 tb or more liquid smoke, 1 tb parsley
flakes, 1/2 ts ginger, 1/2 ts allspice.

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12. BEEF JERKY #12

Lean beef
Soy sauce
Lemon Pepper
Garlic Salt

Freeze lean beef for 30 minutes. Slice 1/4 inch thick. Remove all fat. Dip
into soy sauce to which you have sprinkled lemon pepper and garlic salt.
Spread slices on cake racks placed on cookie sheets. Place cookie sheets in
150 degree oven for 10-12 hours. Store in air tight container.

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13. BEEF JERKY #13

1 lb Lean beef
1/4 c Soy sauce
1 ts Garlic powder

Slice the lean beef (should cuts, flank or round steak) with the grain 1/4
to 1/2 inch wide and 2-6 inches long. Paint on or dip the strips into a
mixture of soy sauce and garlic powder. Place on wire rack in a deep oven
pan; dry completely in 150F for 8-12 hours.

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14. BEEF JERKY #14

1 lb Beef loin tip OR... 1 lb Beef brisket
Barbecue Sauce (one with no sugar!)
Onion salt
Garlic salt

If necessary, roll out meat slices as thin as possible. Trim off fat. Set
oven at 200 degrees and line cookie sheets with foil. Brush one side of meat
with sauce. Put slices on cookie sheet; DO NOT STACK. Sprinkle lightly with
onion and garlic salts. Cook for 8 to 9 hours. Turn meat after 6 hours of

cooking and brush with sauce. Cool and store in a tightly covered jar or
sealed in a plastic bag.

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15. BEEF JERKY #15


1/2 lb Flank steak
1 ts Salt
2 ts Sherry
4 ts Honey
3 tb Sugar
1 tb Catsup
1 tb Hoisin sauce
1 tb Oyster sauce
1 tb Light soy sauce
1 tb Dark soy sauce

Partially freeze meat first, then thinly slice beef Marinate in rest of
ingredients for at least 1 day. Bake single layer at 250 degrees for 45-55
minutes.

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16. BEEF JERKY #16

5 lb Beef (roast)
1/4 c Soy sauce
1 tb Worstershire sauce
1 ts Garlic powder
1 ts Onion powder
1 ts Black pepper (cracked if possible)
Red pepper flakes; optional
1 tb Liquid smoke

Place the strips of meat into marinade and let soak for about 24 hours.
Remove from marinade and allow to air dry for at least one hour. If you have
a meat smoker then omit the liquid smoke and smoke meat at a low
temperature. If not, then place meat strips directly on the rack in the oven
and cook for 12 hours at 150 degrees.

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17. BEEF JERKY #17

1 Flank steak
1 Clove garlic, minced
1/2 c Honey
1 Pinch pepper
4 tb Lemon juice
1/2 c Soy sauce
1 Pinch salt

Put steak in freezer for about half an hour, just until firm. Slice steak
across grain, about 1/4-inch thick. Combine remaining ingredients and
marinate steak strips in this for at least 2 hours. Place slices on rack in
pan and dry in oven at 150 degrees, 12 hours.

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18. BEEF JERKY #18

3 lb Rump roast (or similar cut)
1/2 c Light japanese soy sauce
1/4 c Worchestershire sauce
1/4 c White vinegar
1 c Water
1/2 ts Ground ginger
1/4 ts Ground red pepper
1/4 ts Ground black pepper
1 tb Onion powder
1 Clove garlic; smashed

Have the butcher cut your roast in 1/8 inch slice against the grain OR do it
at home. If you don't have good cutlery, have the butcher do it. It won't be
worth it! Cut off the slice of fat on the bottom. Separate the two distinct
sinews. (you can tell, the grain goes one way on one, and the other way on
the other). Trim out the "gristle" that is between them. slice the two
sinews against the grain into 1/8 inch slices. Mix the soya, and remaining
ingredients to make the marinade. Marinade the meat slices for 6 or 8 hours
in the fridge and then bake in the oven, directly on the rack, for 12 hours
at 150 F.

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19. BEEF JERKY #19
2 To 3 Pounds Round, Chuck Steak Or Chuck Roast
1 ts Onion Salt
1/2 ts Salt
1/2 ts Garlic Salt
1/2 ts Lemon Pepper
1/2 ts Sausage Seasoning
1/2 ts Thyme
1/2 ts Oregano
1/2 ts Marjoram
1/2 ts Basil

Combine the spices in a dish. Cut the meat into strips less than 1/4 of an
inch thick. Remove ALL fat. Sprinkle one side with the combined seasonings
and beat with a meat hammer. Turn and repeat the seasoning and beating._
Place the strips on a cookie sheet or other flat pan. Place in a 120 degree
F oven for 4 hours. Turn and put back for another 4 hours. Keep the oven
door propped open for the entire time to allow the moisture to escape. With
a gas oven, the pilot light may be enough to provide the heat. Store in a
plastic bag.

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20. BEEF JERKY #20

2 qt Water
2 c Salt
1 c Vinegar
2 tb Pepper

Cut meat as thin as possible. Remove all fat. Boil approximately 6 minutes.
Roll moisture from meat. Put on cookie sheet in middle of oven for 1 1/2 to
2 hours at 200 degrees F. Leave oven door cracked to let moisture out. Coat
with Liquid Smoke and A-1 Sauce. Store in airtight jar.

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21. BEEF JERKY #21

1 Flank steak
4 tb Lemon juice
1 Garlic clove, minced
1/2 c Soy sauce
1/2 c Honey
1 pn Salt
1 pn Pepper

Put steak in freezer for about half an hour, just until firm. Slice steak
across grain, about 1/4-inch thick. Combine remaining ingredients and
marinate steak strips in this for at least 2 hours. Place slices on rack in
pan and dry in oven at 150 degrees, 12 hours.

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22. BEEF JERKY #22

2 lbs. meat, cut with grain
1/4 cup soy sauce
1 Tbsp Worcestershire sauce
1/4 tsp. pepper
1/4 tsp. garlic powder
1/2 tsp. onion salt
1 Tbsp taco sauce
1 tsp. hickory smoke salt
Dash Tabasco

Pour over meat, marinate 24 hours. Lay on broiler separately. Bake at 150
degrees for 5 hours, turn a couple of times. Add more liquid smoke or more
salt (if desired).

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23. BEEF JERKY #23

1 lb Beef; your choice; if not tender cut; slice paper thin; tender cut
slice 1/8 to 1/4" thick
1/2 ts Pepper
1 ts Onion powder
1/2 ts Garlic salt
3 tb Soy sauce +1 teaspoon; can use light
5 tb Worcestershire sauce

Trim all fat off the beef. Mix other ingredients together. Marinate meat
overnight in the mixture. Remove from marinade and pat meat between towels.
Line cookie sheet with foil and arrange meat on it in a single layer. Dry
for 8 or more hours at 200 F, turning after 6 hours. Cool and store in a
tightly covered jar or sealed in plastic bag.

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24. BEEF JERKY #24

1 Flank Steak
1 Clove
1/2 c Honey
Pepper
4 tb Lemon Juice
1/2 c Soy Sauce
Salt

Put steak in freezer for 1/2 hr, until just firm. Slice across the grain
into 1/4" thick strips. Combine remaining ingredients and marinate steak
strips in this for at least 2 hours. Place slices on rack in pan, and dry in
oven at 150 degrees for 12 hours, or until when bent, it will crack, but not
break.

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25. BEEF JERKY #25

1 c Soy sauce
4 oz Mesquite smoke (hickory works well also)
1/4 c Water
1/4 c Cayenne pepper
2-3 lb rump roast

Go to the butcher and have them slice a 2 or 3 lb rump roast into slices as
thin as bacon (it sometimes takes a while to convince them that you really
want it as thin as bacon). Put soy sauce and mesquite smoke in a gallon size
ziplock bag. If the smoke came in a 4 oz bottle, use the water to rinse the
bottle, pour water into bag. Add pepper. Close bag and let sit for a couple
of hours. Trim all fat from the beef. Add beef to the mixture. Let sit for 5
or 10 minutes (I've not had any trouble if left overnight). Remove meat from
bag one or two at a time, and lay on trays from dehydrater. Put trays in
dehydrater, opening vents to about half.

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26. BEEF JERKY #26

3 lb Lean beef; flank; round sirloin tip

1 c Catsup
1/2 c Red wine vinegar
1/4 c Brown sugar
2 tb Worchestershire sauce
2 ts Dry mustard
1 ts Onion powder
1 ts Salt
1/4 ts Cracked pepper
ds Hot pepper sauce

Cut beef into strips 1/2 inch thick. Combine all marinade ingredients into a
glass bakind dish. Add strips of beef, cover and refrigerate overnight.
Drain beef slices. Dry in an electric dehydrator at 145 until pliable.
Package in home canning jars, food-grade plastic bags or seal-by-heat food
storage bags.

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27. BEEF JERKY #27

1/3 c Liquid smoke
1/3 c Soy sauce
4 tb Worcestershire sauce
1/2 ts Pepper
1/2 ts Garlic salt
1 ts Accent

Pour over sliced beef (1 lb.). Marinate at least 2 hours. Drain and then
dehydrate.

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28. BEEF JERKY #28

Beef
Soy Sauce
Brown Sugar
Cooking Oil
2 tb Coarsely ground black pepper
2 tb Garlic powder
2 tb Lawry's Seasoned Salt
2 tb Gebhardt Chili powder

Cut meat into 1 1/2 by 1/4 by 5 inch strips. Soak meat in a mixture of Soy
sauce, 1 T. brown sugar and 1 T. oil for 2 to 4 hours. Pat dry. Mix
seasonings well and place in a clean shaker. Using a foil-covered cookie
sheet, place meat (1 layer) and sprinkle mix over it to taste. Fold foil
edges up to keep in mixture. Dry at 140 to 180 degrees for 5 to 8 hours.
Keep in open container at room temperature. Do NOT refrigerate.

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29. BEEF JERKY #29

2 qt Water
2 c Salt
1 c Vinegar
2 tb Pepper
Beef

Cut meat in 1/4" strips (or as thin as possible). Remove all fat. Boil
approximately 6 minutes. Roll moisture from meat. Put on cookie sheet in
middle of oven for 1 1/2 to 2 hours at 200F. Leave oven door cracked to let
moisture out. Coat with Liquid Smoke and A-1 Sauce. Store in airtight jar.

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30. BEEF JERKY #30

1/3 c Sugar
1/4 c Salt
2 c Soy sauce
1 c Water
1 c Red wine
1/2 ts Onion powder
1/2 ts Garlic powder
1/2 ts Pepper
1/2 ts Tabasco sauce
Beef

Trim all fat from meat. Slice meat with the grain to about 1/4" to 1/2"
thick. The meat slices nicely when semi-frozen, or your butcher will slice
it for you in his machine. Place meat in the cool marinade and leave
overnight, or for no less than 8 hours. Remove from brine and allow to air
dry without rinsing. Smoke in your smoker for 12 to 16 hours or until jerky
has dried out to your liking. Use your favorite fuel for smoking.

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31. BEEF JERKY #31

4 tb Soy sauce
4 tb Worchestershire
1 tb Ketchup
1/4 ts Pepper (or more)
1/4 ts Garlic powder
1/4 ts Onion salt
1/2 ts Salt
1/4" thick meat strips

Marinate the 1/4" thick meat strips for 1 hr, then drain. Place on trays to
dry. Don't overlap, and turn meat at least once during drying. Dry at 145
degrees for 8-10 hrs. It is ready when it bends like a green willow without
breaking. Long term storage should be in refrigrigerator.

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32. BEEF JERKY #32

1 lb Beef; cut in strips
1/4 c Soy sauce
1 tb Worcestershire sauce
1/4 ts Hickory salt
1/2 ts Onion salt
1/2 ts Garlic powder
1 ts Black pepper
1 ds Hot sauce

Combine all the ingredients and marinate in the fridge for at least 8 hours,
mixing occasionally. Then, skewer the marinated strips on bamboo skewers (or
toothpicks) and hang the strips in the oven with a pan below to catch the
drippings. Set the oven on its lowest setting (100-150 F) and use something
to keep the door ajar. The jerky should be dry after 8-10 hours.

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33. BEEF JERKY #33

1/2 c Soy sauce
1/4 c Worchestershire sauce
1/2 c Water
1/4 c Brown sugar
1/2 t Black pepper
1/4 t Red pepper flakes
1/2 t Salt
4 To 5 dashes hot pepper sauce
Water to cover
2-4 lbs lean beef

While meat is still partially frozen, slice in thin slices. Mix all
ingredients of marinade together and put in large stainless steel bowl. Add
all the sliced meat, and enough water to cover. Mix well. Let marinate
overnight. Drain and rinse meat off. Lay strips on dehydrator and dry
according to manufacturers directions.

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34. BEEF JERKY #34

3 pounds of lean beef
1 tablespoon onion powder
1 teaspoon black pepper
1 small bottle of Worcestershire sauce
1 small bottle of soy sauce
8 tablespoons of liquid smoke

Freeze the meat partially so that it will be easy to slice into thin strips.
Cut off all visible pieces of fat. Slice the beef horizontally in 1/2 inch
slabs. Then cut thin strips of meat from these slabs, making sure you're
cutting against the grain. Make the strips as thin as possible. Mix the
other ingredients in a bowl. Lay the strips of meat in the bottom of a large
glass baking dish. Pour the marinade over it and refrigerate overnight. The
following day, drain the meat strips and set them directly on wire oven
racks. The strips should be close together but not touching. Set your oven
on the lowest possible setting and with the oven door slightly open, put in
the racks of strips. Leave in the oven 12 to 24 hours, checking it for
brittleness. The jerky is done when it snaps as you bend it. Place finished
jerky in brown paper bags to protect it from the light. Then place brown
bags in sealed plastic bags. The jerky will keep for a year without
refrigeration.

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35. BEEF JERKY #35

1 1/2 lb Flank steak
Soy sauce or Teriyaki suace
Onion powder, Garlic powder and/or Worcestershire sauce (opt.)

Select a 1/2 inch think flank or top round steak. Trim away all fat then
partially freeze until firm. Slice across the grain in a 1/4 to 1/2 inch
wide strips. Place meat strips in a shallow dish or heavy plastic bag. Add
soy or teriyaki sauce to cover meat. If desired onion or garlic powder or
Worcestershire sauce may be added. Toss to coat each piece. Cover and
refrigerate several hours or over night. Lift meat from marinade, drain will
then air dry for a couple of hours. Arrange meat strips in single layer on
fine wire screen or cake cooling rack. Place in low temp. oven (175 to 200
degrees) or slowly smoke-cook in smoker until meat is completely dried.
Store in air-tight container. Serve as a snack or appetizer.

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36. BEEF JERKY - BASIC RECIPE

1 1/2 lb Lean boneless meat
1/4 c Soy sauce
1 ts Worcestershire
1/2 ts Onion powder
1/4 ts Pepper
1/4 ts Garlic powder
1/4 ts Liquid smoke
Vegetable oil cooking spray

Freeze meat until firm but not hard; then cut into 1/8 to 1/4-inch-thick
slices. In a medium-size glass, stoneware, plastic or stainless steel bowl,
combine soy sauce, Worcestershire, onion powder, pepper, garlic powder, and
liquid smoke. Stir to dissolve seasonings. Add meat and mix until all
surfaces are thoroughly coated. Cover tightly and refrigerate for at least 6
hours or until next day, stirring occasionally; recover tightly after
stirring.

Drying the jerky: Depending upon the drying method you're using, evenly coat
dehydrator racks or metal racks with cooking spray; if oven drying, place
racks over rimmed baking pans. Lift meat form bowl, shaking off any excess
liquid. Arrange meat strips close together, but not overlapping, on racks.

Dehydrator drying: Arrange trays according to manufacturer's directions and
dry at 140-degrees until a piece of jerky cracks, but does not break, when
bent (8 to 10 hours; let jerky cool for 5 minutes before testing).

Pat off any beads of oil from jerky. Let jerky cool completely on racks;
remove from racks, place in a rigid freezer container, and freeze for 72
hour. Then store in airtight, insectproof containers in a cool, dry place;
or freeze or refrigerate. Makes about 3/4 pound.

Storage time: Up to 3 weeks at room temperature; up to 4 months in
refrigerator, up to 8 months in freezer.

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37. BEEF BARBECUED JERKY

1 1/2 lb Flank or lean top round steak;trimmed or all fat and connective tissue
1/2 c Catsup
1/3 c Red wine vinegar
1/4 c Brown sugar; firmly packed
1 1/2 ts Dry mustard
1 1/2 ts Onion powder
1 ts Salt
1/2 ts Garlic powder
1/4 ts Ground red pepper (cayenne)
Vegetable cooking spray

Freeze meat until firm but not hard; then cut into 1/8- to 1/4-inch-thick
slices. In a medium-size glass, stoneware, plastic, or stainless steel bowl,
combine catsup, vinegar, sugar, mustard, onion powder, salt, garlic powder,
and red pepper. Stir to dissolve seasonings. Add meat and mix until all
surfaces are thoroughly coated. Cover tightly and refrigerate for at least 6
hours or until next day, stirring occasionally; recover tightly after
stirring. Dry and cure.

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38. BEEF OR VENISON JERKY #1

8 lb Venison/beef roast
1 tb Salt
1/4 ts Black pepper
1 ts White pepper
1/2 ts Red pepper
1 ts Meat tenderizer
2 tb Seasoned salt
2 ts Accent
1 ts Garlic powder
1 tb Kitchen bouquet
2 tb Morton tender quick
1/3 c Worcestershire sauce
1/3 c Soy sauce
1/3 c Barbecue sauce
1/3 c Liquid smoke

Cut meat in thin slices. Meat is easier to cut when partially frozen and it
will cut evenly. Combine salt, peppers, meat tenderizers, seasoned salt,
accent, garlic and onion powders, kitchen bouquet, morton tender quick,
worcestershire sauce, soy sauce, barbecue sauce and liquid smoke. Marinate
meat in sauce for 24 hours in a sealable plastic bag. Place meat directly on
oven racks, line bottom of oven with foil, or on rack in shallow pan and dry
in oven for 6-8 hours on lowest setting. Continue to dry in warm oven if
necessary. Ovens with pilot lights work especially well.

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39. BEEF OR VENISON JERKY #2

3 lbs. lean venison steak or beef steak, thinly sliced
1/2 cup lemon
1/4 cup onions, drained
1/4 cup brown sugar
2 tsp. liquid smoke
1 Tbsp seasoned salt
1/4 tsp. freshly ground pepper
3 bay leaves, broken into pieces

Place meat strips into a shallow glass container. Mix rest of ingredients
together and pour over strips of meat. Cover and refrigerate overnight. Dry
strips on paper towels, pressing to remove the marinade. Place on oven racks
in a 150 degree oven to dry for at least 12 hours. Turn over once during the
drying. The oven door should be slightly ajar to allow the moisture to
escape.

please don't post till i post the rest

Smoke some

40. BEEF OR VENISON JERKY #3

Beef or Venison
Soy Sauce
Brown Sugar
Cooking Oil
2 tb Coarsely ground black pepper
2 tb Garlic powder
2 tb Lawry's Seasoned Salt
2 tb Chili powder

Cut meat into 1 1/2 by 1/4 by 5 inch strips. Soak meat in a mixture of Soy
sauce, 1 T. brown sugar and 1 T. oil for 2 to 4 hours. Pat dry. Mix
seasonings well and place in a clean shaker. Using a foil-covered cookie
sheet, place meat (1 layer) and sprinkle mix over it to taste. Fold foil
edges up to keep in mixture. Dry at 140 to 180 degrees for 5 to 8 hours.
Keep in open container at room temperature. Do NOT refrigerate.

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41. BLUE RIBBON JERKY

1/2 c Dark soy sauce
2 tb Worcestershire sauce
1 ts MSG (opt)
1/2 ts Onion powder
1/2 ts Garlic powder
1/4 ts Ginger, powdered
1/4 ts Chinese five-spice powder
3 lb Lean beef brisket, eye of round or flank steak

Trim meat completely of fat and cut across grain into slices 1/8 inch thick.
To aid in slicing meat thinly, freeze until ice crystals are formed. Blend
all ingredients except meat in small bowl. Dip each piece of meat into
marinade, coating well. Place in shallow dish. Pour remaining marinade over
top, cover and refrigerate overnight.

Oven method: Preheat oven to lowest setting (preferably 110 F). Place
several layers of paper towels on baking sheets. Arrange meat in single
layer on prepared sheets and cover with additional toweling. Flatten meat
with rolling pin. Discard towels and set meat directly on oven racks. Let
dry 8 to 12 hours (depending on temperature of oven).

Dehydrator method: Arrange meat on trays in single layer and dehydrate 10 to
12 hours, depending on thickness. Store jerky in plastic bags or in tightly
covered containers in cool, dry area.

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42. CAJUN JERKY

1 pound lean round roast
1 Tablespoon Soy Sauce
1 Tablespoon Worcestershire Sauce
2 teaspoons tomato paste
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1 Tablespoon Cajun Spice blend

Trim meat of all visible fat and any connective tissue; Cut into 2 inch or
so cubes. Place in bowl of food processor. Combine all seasonings in a small
bowl and mix well. Pour over meat cubes. Process until meat is chopped very
finely. If it is less fine it will be not extrude well and will be crumbly
after drying. Place in jerky extruder, (we got ours at Wal-Mart). Extrude
onto dryer trays and dry for about 4 hours for four trays, or until all
moisture is gone and meat is dry and leathery. We like ours almost crunchy
as it will absorb some moisture from the air after drying. We store ours in
glass jars, tightly closed. You can store in the fridge if you like. We have
a vacuum sealer and store extras in vacuum sealed jars. I'm sure you could
make turkey jerky the same way. The Dehydrator must be set to the highest
temperature it will go. I think ours is 145 degrees. You could also put it
in the oven to dry. The convection type oven will do best because of the air
flow.

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43. CALIFORNIA BEEF JERKY

1 beef flank steak trimmed
1/2 c soy sauce
1 garlic salt
1 lemon pepper

Cut steak lengthwise with grain into long strips, no more than 1/4-inch
thick. Toss with soy sauce. Arrange beef strips in a single layer on a wire
rack placed on baking sheet. Sprinkle with garlic salt and lemon pepper.
Place second rack over beef and flip over. Remove top rack. Sprinkle again
with seasonings. Bake in very slow oven (as low as it will go) or at 140 in
Dehydrator for 6 to 8 hours. Start checking at about 6 hrs. Lean fresh
brisket or lean bottom round can also be used.

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44. CARNE SECA JERKY

2 ts ground oregano
2 ts salt
3/4 c vinegar
2 lg onions, finely chopped
2 cloves garlic, mashed
1/2 ts course black pepper
1 ts liquid smoke

Mix all ingredients to make marinade and soak meat in marinade 24 hours.
Remove meat from marinade and place in oven or smoker for from 7-8 hours at
about 150- 200 degrees. It's done when meat has turned brown, feels hard and
is dry to the touch.

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45. CHICKEN JERKY

Marinade:
1/4 cup purple grape syrup
2 tablespoons rice or white vinegar
2 tablespoons tamari or good quality soy sauce
2 tablespoons white wine Worchestershire sauce
1/4 cup chopped currants
2 teaspoons onion powder
2 teaspoons crushed red pepper
4 (1 gram) packets artificial sweetener
1 teaspoon garlic powder

6 (2 to 3 ounces each) boneless, skinless chicken breasts

Purple Grape Syrup:
Place 1 (12 ounce) can of purple grape juice concentrate in a 10 inch
nonstick skillet over high heat. Bring to a boil and cook for 5 minutes.
Reduce the heat to medium and continue to cook until the juice is reduced to
1 cup, about 10 minutes more. Because of the consistency of the grape juice
concentrate, occasional light sticking may occur, so use a wooden spoon to
check and clear the bottom of the skillet two or three times during the
reduction. Let cool, place in a covered container and refrigerate.

Chicken Jerky:
Combine all marinade ingredients in a small bowl and mix well to form a
paste. Lay the chicken breasts on a hard surface, cover with waxed parchment
paper, and gently pound the breasts until they are about 1/4 inch thick. The
thinner the meat is, the easier it will be to eat later.

Remove the paper from the chicken breasts, divide the marinade evenly among
them, and gently rub on both sides. Refrigerate overnight in a covered







container.

Drain the excess liquid from the chicken breasts and lay them evenly around
the dehydrator trays. Place in machine and dehydrate until the chicken is
cooked and has dried out, about 20 to 22 hours. During this time, turn the
pieces over 3 or 4 times.

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46. CHINESE BEEF JERKY #1

3 lb Flank steak - or London broil
Marinade:
1/2 c Light soy sauce
4 1/2 tb Honey
4 1/2 tb Dry Sherry
6 lg Garlic cloves - minced
1 1/2 tb Ginger - fresh, minced
1 1/2 tb Sesame oil
1 1/2 tb Red pepper - crushed
Dash freshly ground white pepper

Cut meat in half lengthwise and slice diagonally crosswise into paper-thin
strips 1-1/2 to 2 inches wide and 4 inches long. Transfer to shallow pan.
Combine marinade ingredients and rub thoroughly into meat. Arrange meat on
racks and let dry at cool room temperature overnight (do not refrigerate).
Preheat oven to 250 F. Line two large baking sheets with foil and set wire
rack(s) on top of each. Arrange meat on racks in single layer. Bake 30
minutes. Reduce heat to 175 F and continue drying meat another 40 minutes
(meat should be lightly browned but not burned). Let meat continue to dry on
racks at cool room temperature overnight before packing into jars. Dried
meat can be brushed lightly with sesame oil for additional flavour and
shine. Makes 36 pieces or 10 buffet servings.

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47. CHINESE BEEF JERKY #2

3 lb Steak
3 Garlic cloves, minced
1 tb Ginger, fresh, minced
2 tb Sesame oil
1/2 c Soy sauce
2 ts Red peppers, dried, crushed
1 tb Honey
1/2 ts White pepper
4 tb Dry Sherry

Cut meat diagonally crosswise into 1/4" thick, 2" wide strips. Trim away any
fat or gristle. Transfer to a non-metallic pan. Add the other ingredients
and marinade 24 hours. Arrange meat on racks and let dry at cool room
temperature overnight (do not refrigerate). Preheat oven to 225. Line two
large baking sheets with foil and set wire racks on top. Arrange the meat on
racks in single layer. Bake 15 minutes. Reduce heat to 175 F and continue
drying meat another 4 hrs or more. Leave meat on racks to cool and continue
drying for several hours before bagging it.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

48. CURRIED JERKY

2 teaspoon ground black pepper
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon garlic powder
2 teaspoons curry powder
2 teaspoons lime or lemon juice

Trim meat of all visible fat and any connective tissue; Cut into 2 inch or
so cubes. Place in bowl of food processor. Combine all seasonings in a small
bowl and mix well. Pour over meat cubes. Process until meat is chopped very
finely. If it is less fine it will be not extrude well and will be crumbly
after drying. Place in jerky extruder, (we got ours at Wal-Mart). Extrude
onto dryer trays and dry for about 4 hours for four trays, or until all
moisture is gone and meat is dry and leathery. We like ours almost crunchy
as it will absorb some moisture from the air after drying. We store ours in
glass jars, tightly closed. You can store in the fridge if you like. We have
a vacuum sealer and store extras in vacuum sealed jars. I'm sure you could
make turkey jerky the same way. The Dehydrator must be set to the highest
temperature it will go. I think ours is 145 degrees. You could also put it
in the oven to dry. The convection type oven will do best because of the air
flow.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

49. DRY CURE SOUTHWEST JERKY

1 ts Salt
1 ts Pepper
1/2 ts Cayenne pepper
3 tb Chili powder
2 ts Cumin
2 Cloves garlic minced
2 lb Steak sliced thinly

Combine ingredients and thoroughly mix together. This is a dry marinade so
there is no liquid. Sprinkle the spice mixture on the meat slices and work
into the grain with your fingers. Cover and marinate overnight. Place trays
in the oven and dry at 145 F for first 4 hours, then set oven 130 F until
dry (4 to 8 hrs.). Jerky should be hard but not brittle. Blot up any fat

that appears with paper towels. *For a chewy texture, slice the meat with
the grain, or across the grain for more tender jerky.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

50. DUCK JERKY

If you hunt waterfowl you should try this. I believe waterfowl makes just as
good jerky as venison or beef... it has a really good flavor.

Cut up duck and/or geese into thin strips. Cut on the lengthwise grain.
Marinate in the following (don't skimp):

Barbecue sauce
Liquid smoke
Crushed ground peppers (I used a mixture of jalapenos,
chili, and cayenne peppers)
Jamaican jerk seasoning
A few drops of Dave's Insanity or other extra-hot sauce
A few drops of Worcestershire sauce

Marinate overnight, then dehydrate for 9-10 hours.

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51. EASY CURE MEAT JERKY

5 lb Meat, any cut
1/2 c Non-iodized salt
1/2 c Sugar
1 qt Water

Trim all fat from meat. Slice meat with the grain as thin as possible. The
meat slices nicely when semi-frozen, or your butcher will do the slicing for
you. Place the meat in cool brine and refrigerate overnight. After no less
than 12 hours, take the meat from the brine, rinse lightly and allow to dry
on paper towels for 1 hour. Place meat strips on the smoker racks and dry
for 12 hours, using your favorite fuel. When strips are the dryness you
like, allow to cool and transfer into a ziplock bag for taking on trips,
hiking, camping, etc.

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52. FIESTA JERKY

1 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper
1 tbs chili powder
1 tsp onion powder
1/4 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp garlic powder
1 lb lean meat, thinly sliced. (3/16-1/4 in thick)

In a small glass bowl, combine all ingredients except meat. Stir to mix
well. Place meat 3-4 layers deep in a container, spooning sauce mixture over
each layer. Cover tightly and marinate 6-12 hours in the refrigerator,
stirring occasionally and keeping the mixture covered. Dehydrate at 145
degrees until pliable.

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53. FISH JERKY

1/2 cup soy sauce
4 tbs. sugar
2 tsp. grated fresh ginger
1 clove garlic, minced or
3/4 cup of your favorite commercial teriyaki sauce
2 lbs. fresh raw tuna or salmon **

** You can use red snapper, sea bass, swordfish or any firm fish for fish
jerky. Salmon and tuna are outstanding. Salmon will bead oil during drying,
so be sure to keep soaking up oil with a paper towel.

Cut fish into thin strips about 1/4" thick, 1-2" wide, and 3-5" long. Mix
together marinade ingredients, pour over fish, and marinate for about 6
hours. Dry in oven at 145 degrees for about 2 hours, then lower temperature
to 130 degrees until dry. Makes about 1/2 lbs. jerky.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

54. FRONTIER JERKY
1 ts Salt
1/4 ts Pepper
1 ts Garlic powder
2 tb Worchestershire sauce
2 tb Liquid smoke
1 lb Lean meat; thinly sliced

In a small bowl, combine all ingredients except meat. Stir to mix well.
Place meat 3 or 4 layers deep in a glass or stoneware, plastic or stainless
container, spooning liquid smoke mixture over each layer. Cover tightly.
Marinate 6-12 hours in the refrigerator, stirring occasionally and keeping
the mixture tightly covered. Follow directions for drying and storing. Makes
1/4 lb. jerky.

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55. GINGERED BEEF JERKY

1 lean top round

Marinade:
1/2 c soy sauce
1/4 c white vinegar
1 tb minced ginger
6 ds tabasco sauce
2 tb sugar
1 ts garlic minced

Spice Rub:
1 ts ground cumin
1 ts chili powder
1 ts salt
2 tb cracked black pepper
1 pn cinamon

Cut top round into very thin (1/8) slices. Place the slices of top round in
a baking pan. Combine marinade ingredients and pour over the beef strips;
making sure all the strips are covered with liquid. Refrigerate and let
marinade for 10-12 hours. Remove the beef strips and discard the liquid. Lay
the strips on a wire rack, placing a cookie sheet underneath the rack. In a
small bowl, combine all the spice rub ingredients and mix well. Sprinkle the
beef strips with the rub. Place the rack in the oven at 160 degrees for 8
hours. Allow to cool to room temp. then bend it- it should break, not bend.
Store in refrigerator. You can use a dehydrator, just follow instructions
for drying beef in your instruction manual.

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56. HAMBURGER JERKY

1 lb Very lean ground beef
1 tb Worcestershire sauce
1 ts Curing salt; (optional, this contains nitrates and sugar; or subsitute
an equal amount of seasoned salt)
1 dash cayenne

Buy the leanest ground beef possible, or select a lean chuck roast and grind
it or have it ground. Combine meat with remaining ingredients, mixing well.
Cut a piece of plastic wrap the size of your drying tray. Put seasoned
ground beef on plastic wrap and, using a moistened rolling pin, roll ground
beef to 1/8" thick, spreading meat over entire area of tray. A jerky press
can be used instead. Follow manufacturer's directions. Place meat-covered
plastic wrap on gray and dry at 140 F for 4 to 6 hours. Remove tray, plastic
wrap-side up. Peel of wrap and discard. Roll paper towels over top with
rolling pin to remove melted fat. Invert meat onto another tray, plastic
wrap-side up. Peel of wrap and discard. Return meat to dehydrator and dry
for another 4 to 6 hours. Top with paper towels and roll again to absorb
fat. Dry until jerky is hard and leathery. Cut into strips before storing.
Package airtight and store in refrigerator or freezer if possible. Use_within 6 months.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

57. HAWAIIAN JERKY #1

1 lb Lean meat, thinly sliced (3/16-1/4 in thick)
1 ts Salt
1 ts Ground ginger
1 tb Brown sugar
1/4 ts Pepper
1/8 ts Cayenne pepper
1 Crushed garlic clove
1/4 c Pineapple juice
1/4 c Soy sauce

In a small glass bowl, combine all ingredients except meat. Stir to mix
well. Place meat 3-4 layers deep in a container, spooning sauce mixture over
each layer. Cover tightly and marinate 6-12 hours in the fridge, stirring
occasionally and keeping the mixture covered. Lay out on trays, 24 to 36
hours in dehydrator. I used a couple of cans of pineapple chunks with the
juice in the marinated. Just dehydrated them with the meat. Very interesting.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

58. HAWAIIAN JERKY #2

2 lb Flank steak
3/4 c Soy sauce
2 tb Hawaiian salt
1 1/2 tb Sugar
1 Clove garlic; minced
1 Piece ginger; crushed
1 Red chili pepper; crushed (optional)

Cut beef into strips about 1 1/3 inch wide. Combine all other ingredients
and soak beef in the sauce overnight. If you have a drying box, place the
meat in hot sun for two days, bringing it in at night. If drying in the
oven, set oven to 175 degrees. Place meat on a rack such as a cake cooking
rack. Place rack on a cookie sheet and dry meat in oven for 7 hours. Keep in
refrigerator.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

59. HERBED JERKY

2 To 3 Pounds Round, Chuck Steak Or Chuck Roast
1 ts Onion Salt
1/2 ts Salt
1/2 ts Garlic Salt
1/2 ts Lemon Pepper
1/2 ts Sausage Seasoning
1/2 ts Thyme
1/2 ts Oregano
1/2 ts Marjoram
1/2 ts Basil

Combine the spices in a dish. Cut the meat into strips less than 1/4 of an
inch thick. Remove ALL fat. Sprinkle one side with the combined seasonings
and beat with a meat hammer. Turn and repeat the seasoning and beating.
Place the strips on a cookie sheet or other flat pan. Place in a 120 degree
F. oven for 4 hours. Turn and put back for another 4 hours. Keep the oven
door propped open for the entire time to allow the moisture to escape. With
a gas oven, the pilot light may be enough to provide the heat. Store in a
plastic bag.

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60. HIGH PLAINS JERKY

1 pound top round steak
1/2 cup Worcestershire sauce
1/2 cup soy sauce
1/4 cup brown sugar
4 cloves garlic
2 teaspoons fresh ground black pepper
2 teaspoons ground dried red chile, New Mex -- or Ancho
1 teaspoon onion powder

About 2 hours before you plan to barbecue, place the meat in the freezer to
make slicing it easier. After 30 to 40 minutes, remove the meat from the
freezer and slice it as thin as you can with a good sharp knife. Trim the
meat of all fat. Combine the marinade ingredients in a lidded jar. Place the
meat in a plastic bag or shallow dish and pour the marinade over it.
Marinate for about 1 hour. Prepare the smoker for barbecuing, bringing the
temperature to 200-220 degrees. Remove the meat from the refrigerator, drain
it, and let it sit at room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes. Transfer the
meat to a sheet of heavy-duty foil, separating the pieces. Place the meat in
the coolest part of your smoker and cook until the meat begins to blacken,
about 45 minutes. Wrap the foil loosely over the meat and continue
barbecuing for another 1 to 1 1/4 hours, until well-dried. Remove the jerky
from the smoker and let it cool to room temperature before serving.
Refrigerate any leftovers.

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61. HOME-STYLE JERKY

1 lb Round steak, cut in strips 4"x1/8 " thick
1/4 c Soy sauce
1 tb Worchestshire sauce
1/2 ts Onion powder
1/2 ts Garlic powder
1/2 ts Black pepper
3/4 ts Hot sauce
1/2 ts Hickory salt

Slice round steak, cut in strips about 4 in. long and 1/8 in. thick. (The
slicing is easier if the steak is partially frozen.) Combine all the
ingredients and marinate in the fridge for at least 8 hrs, mixing
occasionally. Then skewer the marinated strips on bamboo skewers or
toothpicks and hang the strips in the oven with a pan below to catch the
drippings. Set the oven on it's lowest setting (l00-150 F) and use something
to keep the door ajar. The jerky should be dry after 8-10 hours. This was my
first time making jerky and the product come out surprizingly good, but
perhaps a bit too salty. You might want to try low salt soy sauce.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

62. HONEY LEMON BEEF JERKY

1 Flank steak
1 Garlic clove, minced
1/2 c Honey
1 pn Pepper
4 tb Lemon juice
1/2 c Soy sauce
1 pn Salt

Put steak in freezer for about half an hour, just until firm. Slice steak
across grain, about 1/4 inch thick. Combine remaining ingredients and
marinate steak strips in this for at least 2 hours. Place slices on rack in
pan and dry in oven at 150 degrees, 12 hours.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

63. HOT & SPICY JERKY

5 pounds beef brisket or venison
1 large fresh white onion or 1/3 cup onion powder
1 large fresh garlic clove or 2 tbl. garlic powder
1 bottle liquid smoke (4 fl. oz.)
1 cup soy sauce
3/4 cup worcestershire sauce
2 tablespoons steak sauce
1 tablespoon monosodium glutamate
2 teaspoons seasoned salt
1/3 cup black pepper -- ground
1 tablespoon fresh rosemary leaves
2 tablespoons sugar

THE HOT STUFF:
5 whole fresh Habanero chiles (more to taste) -- with seeds
1 tablespoon dried Pequin chile pepper -- with seeds
1/2 bottle hot sauce (5 fl. oz.)
4 tablespoons dried Cayenne pepper -- ground

Prepare meat by cutting into strips 3/4" X 1/2" and as long as you prefer.
Cut across grain for tender and lengthwise for chewy. The more consistent
you are when cutting the strips the better your jerky will dry evenly. Mix
all ingredients in blender except meat and Cayenne. Soak strips of meat in
the above mixture and refrigerate for 24-48 hours in a closed container (I
use a Tuppleware bread box). Shake several times to mix well. Pat dry. Place
directly on oven racks that have been covered with tin foil and sprayed with
Pam. Cook in preheated oven @ 160 F for 2-3 hours (with door closed). This
kills bacteria, removes a lot of the excess moisture and melts any excess
fat. Return hot strips to mixture and refrigerate for another 6-12 hours
(remember to shake several times). Pat dry and sprinkle with Cayenne powder.
Spread in dehydrator. Set dehydrator at 145 F. The final drying usually
takes about another 6-10 hours. Do not over dry (Check every few hours).
Jerky should be tuff and leathery, not brittle or hard. A real mouth
watering HOT treat! Enjoy.

If you don't have a dehydrator return Jerky to 150 F oven for 6-12 hours
leaving door open a little. An alternate for the final drying would be to
use a low heat smoker. Leave out the Liquid Smoke in the Marinade.

Notes: Venison has always cooked faster for me than beef (less moisture?).
So check it more frequently. Yields about 1.75 - 2 lbs. dried jerky. I make
this nice and hot for a reason. If I leave out most of the hot ingredients
my children eat it like candy (2 lbs. in 3 days!). Experiment with the heat
factor to your taste.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

64. HOT & TANGY JERKY

1 teasp salt
2 cloves garlic, crushed
1/4 teasp cracked pepper
2 tablesp A-1 Steak Sauce
1/4 teasp cayenne
3 tablesp Worcestershire Sauce
1 teasp onion powder
1/2 teasp paprika
1 lb lean meat, thinly sliced

In a glass bowl, combine all ingredients (except meat). Place meat slices in
mixture, sloshing around so all sides get covered. Marinate 6-12 hours, in
covered bowl (refrigerate), sloshing liquid around occasionally. Dry in a
commercial dehydrator or oven, at a temp setting of 140 degrees F. The test
I use to tell if it is done is to bend a piece. If it breaks instead of
bends, it's done.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

65. JACK DANIELS BEEF JERKY

2 pound flank steak
½ cup soy sauce
½ cup Jack Daniels bourbon
¼ cup brown sugar
1 tablespoon Liquid Smoke
½ cup water
4 cloves garlic
2 tablespoons fresh ground black pepper
1 teaspoon red pepper
1 teaspoon white pepper
1 teaspoon onion powder

Combine the marinade ingredients in a bowl. Place the meat in a plastic bag
or shallow dish and pour the marinade over it. Marinate for about 2 days.
Stir up the mixture once in a while. Dry meat in the lowest temperature of
your oven or in a food dehydrator, until flexible but stiff.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

66. JAMAICAN JERKY

2 lbs lean beef
6 cloves garlic, minced
3-4 habaneros, minced (I left the seeds in)
2 tsp ground allspice
2 tsp dried thyme
1 tsp dried oregano
1 tsp nutmeg
1 tsp ground cinnamon .
5 tsp ground cayenne
3 tsp salt
1 tsp fresh ground black pepper
1 2" piece of fresh ginger, grated
1 lime, juiced
6 tbs crushed pineapple & juice
2 tbs basalmic vinegar
1 tbs soy sauce

Cut the beef into very thin strips (partially frozen helps a lot), and
marinade overnight. Pat dry and dehydrate! This is not OUTRAGEOUSLY hot, but
certainly hot enough. I really liked the pineapple, but you could probably
use just about any acidic fruit juice.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

67. JERKY STRIPS

---MEAT---
1 lb Ground beef
1 ts Garlic powder
1 ts Salt
1/4 ts Black Pepper
1 ts Liquid smoke
1 tb A-1 Sauce
1/2 c Quick Quaker Oats
1 Eggwhite

---SAUCE---
2 tb A-1 Sauce
2 tb Worchestershire Sauce
3 tb Ketchup
2 tb Vegetable Oil
1 ts Soy Sauce
1 ts Liquid Smoke
2 tb Water

Mix ground beef with all other ingredients, stir until mixed. Put into a
food processor with chopping knife and chop for a good minute, until
well-mixed together and consistency of putty. On a floured cutting board,
take ball of meat mixture and coat both sides lightly with flour so it won't
stick and roll out with floured rolling pin, fold and roll until roughly 8"
by 12" rectangle 1/8" or less thick. Using a pizza cutter, cut into 1" wide
strips 8" long and carefully transfer to a wire rack. Heat oven to 300 F,
place wire rack with meat in oven on oven rack in center of oven, with
second oven rack one notch below. On lower rack, place cookie sheet under
meat to act as a drip pan. Bake for 1 hour at 300 F. Mix together sauce
ingredients in shallow dish. Remove rack of meat, roll each strip into sauce
mix and return to rack. When all coated, return to oven and increase temp.
to 450 F. Bake for 15 min. Remove rack again and recoat strips and return to
oven for another 15 min. or until strips become almost burnt around edges.
Remove from oven and coat one last time, then let sit and cool to room temp.
Enjoy!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

68. KILLER JERKY

1 c soy sauce
1/2 c worcestershire sauce
1/2 c water
1 tb salt
1 tb pepper
1 tb onion powder
1 tb coarse ground garlic powder
1 1/2 ts tobasco sauce
1 1/2 ts liquid smoke

Mix all together and let sit for about an hour. Stir once in awhile. Get
about 3-4 pounds of the cheapest, leanest meat you can find. I like flank
steak or arm roast, but they aren't very cheap. Put it in the freezer for a
couple hours. Its easier to slice properly when its partially frozen. Slice
the meat WITH, NOT AGAINST the grain of the meat. Slice into strips 1/8 -
1/4 inch thick.
TRIM AS MUCH FAT OFF AS POSSIBLE.
Dip the meat strips in the sauce with a stirring motion to
cover the meat with the spices. Layer the meat in a pan. Pour the remaining
sauce over the layered meat and marinate overnite. Drain the meat, trying to
keep as much spice as possible on the meat strips. Place on a drying rack or
oven rack and heat about 175 degrees for about three hours. The meat should
be dry and leathery, not brittle.

Smoke some

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69. KOREAN JERKY

1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper
2 tsp sugar
1 tsp MSG (if desired)
1 tbs dry sherry (if desired)
2 tbs sesame seeds
1/4 cup soy sauce
1 lb lean meat, thinly sliced. (3/16-1/4 in thick)

In a small glass bowl, combine all ingredients except meat. Stir to mix
well. Place meat 3-4 layers deep in a container, spooning sauce mixture over
each layer. Cover tightly and marinate 6-12 hours in the refrigerator,
stirring occasionally and keeping the mixture covered. Dehydrate at 145
degrees until pliable.

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70. LOW SALT JERKY

8 oz low salt soy sauce
4 tb liquid smoke

Soak meat at least 2 hours, then place on dehydrator trays. We like the
pepper jerky, so after placing on the trays I sprinkle coarse grind black
pepper on it, turn over and repeat to other side of meat. Dry on high until
hard, but not brittle.

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71. MEXICAN JERKY

1 lb lean meat, thinly sliced
1 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. pepper
1 tsp. chili powder
1/2 tsp. garlic powder
1/2 tsp. crushed oregano
1 tsp. paprika

Blend all ingredients except meat in a bowl. Dip each piece of meat into
marinade, coating well. Place in shallow glass dish. Pour remaining marinade
over top, cover and refrigerate for 8-12 hours. When the meat is ready,
remove it from the marinade and pat dry with paper towels. Proceed with
drying either in oven or food dehydrator.

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72. MICROWAVE BEEF JERKY

2 lbs. beef
(can use flank steak, chuck roast, brisket, sirloin tip or steak)
1/2 tsp. seasoned salt
1/3 tsp. garlic powder
1/3 tsp. pepper
1 tsp. MSG
1 tsp. onion powder
1/2 c. Worcestershire sauce
1/2 c. soy sauce
2 tbsp. liquid smoke

Trim off excess fat. Semi-freeze meat for easier slicing. Cut across grain
into 1/8 inch strips. Place meat in shallow pan. Combine all ingredients and
pour over meat slices. Let set overnight in the refrigerator. To cook: Lay
out strips on microwave bacon rack. Cover with paper towel. Cook on high
power for 2 1/2 minutes. Turn strips. Cook 1 1/2 minutes. Turn strips. Cook
1 1/2 minutes. Let stand 5 minutes before eating. Cooking time may vary with
thickness of meat. Store in airtight container.

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73. MICROWAVE VENISON JERKY

1/2 lb Trimmed venison
1/4 ts Salt
1/3 ts Garlic Powder
1 ts Accent
1/4 ts Black Pepper
1/4 c Worcestershire Sauce
1/4 c Soy Sauce
1/4 c Water
6 Drops Liquid Smoke

Cut meat into 1/8" thick strips, which is easier if it is slightly frozen.
Combine ingredients, and place with meat in refrigerator overnight to
marinate. Then place the meat strips in a microwave roasting rack. Set the
microwave on high for 4 to 6 minutes. After 4 minutes, add time in 30 second
increments. The idea is to have a dried jerky, which means a color change
from brown to dark brown, and a consistency in the meat that has changed
from supple to leathery in it's texture. That's it!

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74. MIDDLE EASTERN JERKY

1 tsp salt
1/8 tsp pepper
1 1/2 tsp coriander
1/4 tsp ground ginger
1/4 tsp turmeric
1/8 tsp ground cumin
1/4 tsp chili powder
1 lb lean meat, thinly sliced. (3/16-1/4 in thick)

In a small glass bowl, combine all ingredients except meat. Stir to mix
well. Place meat 3-4 layers deep in a container, spooning sauce mixture over
each layer. Cover tightly and marinate 6-12 hours in the refrigerator,
stirring occasionally and keeping the mixture covered. Dehydrate at 145
degrees until pliable.

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75. MILD MEXICAN JERKY

1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp crushed oregano
1/4 tsp pepper
1 tsp paprika
1 tsp chili powder
1/2 tsp garlic powder
1 lb lean meat, thinly sliced. (3/16-1/4 in thick)

In a small glass bowl, combine all ingredients except meat. Stir to mix
well. Place meat 3-4 layers deep in a container, spooning sauce mixture over
each layer. Cover tightly and marinate 6-12 hours in the refrigerator,
stirring occasionally and keeping the mixture covered. Dehydrate at 145
degrees until pliable.

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76. MODERN JERKY

2 lb Round steak; 1" thick
1/2 c Worcestershire sauce
1 ts salt_pepper to taste
2 tb Parsley flakes
1/4 ts Garlic powder; optional

Note: Chili powder, barbeque salt, paprika, horseradish, and onion salt or
flakes may also be used in the marinade (or any ideas of your own).

Slice steak into 1/2 inch wide strips and place in a single layer in a pan
or baking dish. Mix other ingredients and pour over meat. Marinate in
refrigerator overnight. Remove and place meat carefully on cookie sheet. Dry
in 175 F oven for one hour and then reduce temperature to 150. Continue
baking strips in the low oven until dry, but pliable, one to three hours.
Cool jerky and store in tightly sealed containers.

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77. MOJO SPICE JERKY

1 pound lean round roast
2 Tablespoons lime juice
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
2 teaspoons ground black pepper
2 teaspoons garlic powder

Trim meat of all visible fat and any connective tissue; Cut into 2 inch or
so cubes. Place in bowl of food processor. Combine all seasonings in a small
bowl and mix well. Pour over meat cubes. Process until meat is chopped very
finely. If it is less fine it will be not extrude well and will be crumbly
after drying. Place in jerky extruder, (we got ours at Wal-Mart). Extrude
onto dryer trays and dry for about 4 hours for four trays, or until all
moisture is gone and meat is dry and leathery. We like ours almost crunchy
as it will absorb some moisture from the air after drying. We store ours in
glass jars, tightly closed. You can store in the fridge if you like. We have
a vacuum sealer and store extras in vacuum sealed jars. I'm sure you could
make turkey jerky the same way. The Dehydrator must be set to the highest
temperature it will go. I think ours is 145 degrees. You could also put it
in the oven to dry. The convection type oven will do best because of the air
flow.

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78. MOLASSES JERKY

5 lb Lean meat
1 c Curing salt
1/2 c Molasses (or brown sugar)
1 ts Liquid garlic
4 tb Black pepper
2 qt Water

Remove all fat and membrane from the meat. Combine the rest of the
ingredients. Soak the meat in the solution for 8 to 10 hours. Remove meat
and rinse thoroughly. Pat dry with paper towels to remove excess moisture.
Let stand to air-dry for an hour or so. Then rub in the seasonings of your
choice, such as onion salt, garlic salt, pepper or a prepared seasoning mix
from the spice department at the market. Smoke meat for 8 to 12 hours or
until ready. Test the meat by twisting a strip of meat. It should be
flexible but stiff like a piece of rope. Remove and let stand until cool.

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79. ONION GROUND BEEF JERKY

2 oz Package dried onion soup mix
1/4 c Water
1/4 c Soy sauce
1 ts Garlic; chopped
1 ts Curing salt
Dried herbs or flavorings of choice
1 1/2 lb Very lean ground beef

In a bowl, combine onion soup mix and water. Let sit for 10 mintues. Add the
remaining ingreidents, including the beef, and combine well. Let marinate
for at least 2 hours. For a more pronounced flavor, cover and refrigerate
for 8 to 12 hours. Put through a jerky press, OR shape the meat into 1-to
2-inch balls. Line each drying tray with a solid leather sheet. Top it with
a mesh sheet. Arrange the meat rounds on the mesh sheets. Dry at 145 F. or
above until hard, about 6 to 10 hours. With some dehydrators, you will have
to turn the rounds to ensure uniform drying. If beads of melted fat form on
the rounds as they are drying, blot them up with a clean, uninked paper
towel. Each lb. of ground beef makes about 4 oz. jerky.

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80. ORIGINAL JERKY

Meat; cut into 1/2" thick by 1" wide
Wire or Cord
Brine solution; boiling
1 cup salt_1 gallon water

Cut meat strips 1/2 inch thick by 1 inch wide. String onto a piece of wire
or cord. Dip into boiling brine solution (1 cup salt to 1 gallon water)
until meat loses its red color. Remove meat from water and let drip dry.
Hang near a fire, but not so close as to cook the meat. May be air dried or
sun dried, but this takes much longer (days or weeks), and the meat must be
protected from insects.

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81. OVEN-DRIED "ANY MEAT" JERKY

This particular jerky can be made from beef-flank, brisket, lean rump roast,
top round steak, venison or the white meat from chicken or turkey. Partially
freezing the meat makes it easier to slice evenly. Cut with the grain if you
want your jerky chewy, across the grain for more tender, brittle jerky.

1-1/2 to 2 pounds lean boneless meat
1/4 cup soy sauce
1 tablespoon Worcestershire
1/4 teaspoon EACH pepper & garlic powder
1/2 teaspoon onion powder
1 teaspoon hickory smoke-flavored salt (liquid smoke with pinch of salt is
ok too)

Trim and discard ALL fat from the meat (as it becomes oily). Cut meat in 1/8
to 1/4 inch thick slices. If necessary, cut large slices to make strips
about 1-1/2 inches wide and as long as possible. In a bowl combine soy
sauce, Worcestershire, pepper, garlic powder, onion powder and
smoke-flavored salt. Stir until seasonings are dissolved. Add all the the
meat strips and work them thoroughly into the mixture until all surfaces are
well coated. The meat will absorb most, if not all, the liquid. Cover
tightly and let stand overnight in the refrigerator. Or you can let stand
one hour and proceed. Shake off any excess liquid, arrange strips of meat
close together, but no overlapping, directly on oven racks or cake racks set
in shallow, rimmed pans. Dry meat in oven at the lowest possible setting 150
degrees to 200 degrees (F). Flip every hour or two - until it feels hard and
is dry to the touch - 5 hours for chicken & turkey, 4 to 7 hours for beef
and vension. Pat off any beads of oil. Cool and store in airtight plastic
bags or in jars with tight fitting lids. Keeps in refrigerator or at room
temperature indefinitely.

NOTE: This is good with garlic too. If you have one of those herb mortar and
pestle things of glass, metal or ceramic, mash up a finely diced garlic
clove with the pepper, onion powder and hickory-smoked salt until it is a
greyish mess. To this add the liquids and proceed.

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82. PANIOLO BEEF JERKY

1 1/2 lb flank steak; trimmed of all fat
1/4 c lime juice
2 tb reduced-sodium soy sauce
2 tb worcestershire
1 tb fresh ginger; grated
1 ts crushed red pepper flakes
1/4 ts coarsley ground black pepper
1/8 ts liquid smoke
vegetable oil cooking spray

Freeze meat until firm but not hard; then cut into 1/8- to 1/4-inch-thick
slices. In a medium-size glass, stoneware, plastic or stainless steel bowl,
combine lime juice, soy sauce, Worcestershire, ginger, red pepper flakes,
black pepper, and liquid smoke. Stir to dissolve seasonings. Add meat and
mix until all surfaces are thoroughly coated. Cover tightly and refrigerate
for at least 6 hours or until next day, stirring occasionally; recover
tightly after stirring. Then proceed in whichever drying method you prefer.
Storage time: Up to 3 weeks at room temperature; up to 4 months in
refrigerator; up to 8 months in freezer.

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83. PEPPERED BEEF JERKY

1 cup Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon liquid smoke
2/3 cup light soy sauce
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon onion powder, or 2 teaspoons finely minced fresh onion
3 tablespoons catsup or salsa
1 1/2 teaspoons finely chopped garlic
2 1/2 teaspoons brown sugar
1 teaspoon ground black pepper
fresh ground pepper

Combine all in a microwave safe dish. Mix well. Microwave on high 1 1/2 to 2
minutes, until hot but not boiling. Stir well and set aside to cool down.
When just warm to the touch, you are ready to marinate the meat. Start by
pouring just a little of the marinade in the bottom of your dish, followed
by a single layer of meat, more marinade, more meat, etc. until all the meat
is covered. Pour any remaining marinade over the top. Let the meat marinate
1-2 hours depending on the thickness. The longer the better. As you layer
each tray of your food dehydrator with meat, sprinkle with fresh ground
pepper. Press lightly to "set" the pepper into the meat. How much? Depends
on your taste. Dehydrate according to manufacturer's directions.

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84. PERFECT JERKY MARINADE

1 c Soy sauce
1/2 c Water
1/2 c Vinegar
1/4 c Balsamic vinegar
1 ts Salt
2 tb Cracked peppercorns
1/2 c Black coffee
2 ts Honey
1 pn Cayenne pepper
1/4 ts Liquid smoke
1 Splash of white wine

Makes enough marinade to cover 2 lbs of meat.

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85. PILLOW CASE JERKY

1 lg Boneless Butt Roast
Salt And Pepper

Get as large a Boneless Butt as you can. Cut the individual muscles out of
the meat and cut off and discard all the fat and connecting tissue. Cut the
meat across the grain as thin as possible, 1/16 to 1/8th of an inch. The
thinner the slices, the easier it will be to dry. Salt and pepper the meat
generously on both sides, using more pepper than salt. Lay out the meat
strips on a cake or oven rack without overlapping them. Set the rack in an
insert fireplace and cook on low heat for 8 to 10 hours, turning every 3 to
4 hours, until dried. You can do the same with a dehydrator or oven, but it
wont turn out as good. After it's done, store in a pillowcase. Don't STORE
it in plastic, as the meat has to be able to breath, and a paper sack will
leave a paper taste.

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86. POW WOW JERKY

2 lb Very Lean Ground Beef Or Other Meat
1/3 c Soy Sauce
1 ts Liquid Smoke
1 1/2 ts Brown Sugar
1 ts Salt_1 ts Pepper
1 ts Pureed Garlic

Mix all ingredients together well. Refrigerate, covered, overnight to blend
flavors. Roll out the mixture between sheets of wax paper or plastic wrap to
a 1/4-inch thickness. Place the layers of meat in a 150 F dehydrator, in
convenient size pieces or place on metal mesh over cake racks in a 150 F
oven. Dry meat for 7 to 8 hrs. The jerky will be chewy but not completely
dry. Cut into 3/4- to 1-inch strips with kitchen shears. Makes 3/4 lb jerky.

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87. SAVORY JERKY

Beef or venison, cut into 1/4 inch thick strips, preferrably WITH the grain
1 (10 oz.) bottle Worcestershire sauce
1 (10 oz.) bottle Soy sauce
1.5 oz. Liquid Smoke

Mix Worcester, Soy, and Liquid Smoke together. Marinate the beef or venison
strips in this mixture overnight. Dry in a 150 degree oven for 6-8 hours, or
until dried to desired dryness. If you are using a dehydrator, set to 140
degrees F; it should take about 4-6 hours.

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88. SMOKED JERKY

10 oz Bottle of lo salt soy sauce
1/3 c Worcestershire sauce
2 tb Liquid mesquite smoke **
1 1/4 ts Onion powder
1 1/4 ts Garlic powder
2 1/2 ts Pepper
2 tb Brown sugar
Up to 3 lb lean meat (beef, deer, elk etc.)

** use only in place of smoker

Mix all ingredients except meat to make marinade. Cut thinly sliced meat
into 1/2 inch strips and marinate for 12 to 24 hours (the longer the
better). Smoke using mesquite chips for about three hours and then finish
drying in oven. If doing whole operation in oven use liquid smoke and hang
strips of meat on highest rack and put shallow pan underneath to catch
drippings. Turn oven on and set to lowest possible setting and leave for 6
to 8 hours until thoroughly dried.

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89. SMOKED HAMBURGER JERKY

1/2 c Soy sauce; can use light
1 tb Allspice
4 tb Sugar
2 ts Fresh ginger; grated
1 Clove garlic; minced
1 tb Liquid smoke; hickory or mesquite
2 lb Ground meat; leanest possible

Press hamburger meat into flat strips 5 inches long by 1-1/2 wide and 1/4
inch thick. Place one layer of hamburger strips in dish for marinating. Mix
marinade ingredients together in a bowl. After well mixed, sprinkle marinade
sauce over meat, soaking well. Turn meat over and sprinkle with sauce. Add
layers of hamburger strips to marinating dish and repeat sprinkling of
marinade. Pour remaining marinade sauce over meat. Cover tightly and let
marinate in refrigerator for 6 to 12 hours. Rotate layers of meat
occasionally. Place in dehydrator until dry. While meat is drying, blot
excess oil with paper towel.

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90. SMOKED TURKEY JERKY

1/2 c Soy sauce; can use light
4 tb Sugar
2 ts Fresh ginger; grated
1 Clove garlic; minced
1 tb Liquid smoke
2 lb Cooked turkey; sliced paper thin (turkey thighs or breasts are best)

Mix marinade ingredients together in a bowl. Dip meat slices into marinade.
Place dipped meat in layers in a bowl or dish. Pour remaining marinade sauce
over meat. Cover tightly and let marinate in refrigerator for 6 to 12 hours.
Rotate layers of meat occasionally. Place in dehydrator until dry. While
meat is drying, blot excess oil with paper towel.

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91. SMOKEHOUSE JERKY

Meat:
venison
top round steak
turkey breast

Brine:
Kiln dried medium malt
molasses (Brer Rabbit light or Grandma's)
black and/or red pepper

The Meat: Generally, the lean scraps from most venison (elk, deer, caribou,
antelope and moose) work very good. Bear is greasy (sorry Bear), as is pork.
Buffalo is similar to beef and makes good jerky. The best cut of beef that
will yield the most usable lean meat is the top round. If you like turkey,
use large bone in breasts and remove the bone. I haven't done reptiles, but
what the hey, if that's your bag give it a shot. The meat should be
reasonably aged, at least kept cool for a week or so after it's dressed out
and skinned. It is important to trim as much fat off as possible, even if
you have to cut it out or scrape it off. The fat will not take salt very
well when the meat brines, it will become rancid and grow mold quickly. Cut
the meat with the grain, into strips as big around as your thumb (3/4-1"
square) and as long as possible.

The Brine: This is a self brining method and works in two stages,
dehydration and rehydration. The ingredients needed are: A kiln dried medium
salt. Most feed stores have 50# bags for about $3.00 which will make about
eight thousand pounds of jerky. Medium salt is about the size of salt that
comes on a pretzel. Molasses. I use Brer Rabbit light or Grandma's. Brer
Rabbit comes in pint bottles and have a small top that you can pour a nice
'string' from. Grandma's comes in a large mouth bottle and it's best if you
transfer it to some sort of a squeeze top ketchup or pancake syrup bottle (1
pint = about 20# of meat). Black Pepper, medium grind or coarse - your
choice. If you like it hot, use red pepper flakes instead, if you don't like
pepper leave it out. This brine process goes easier and more quickly if you
have a few extra happy hands joining in - the kids, the wife and myself
usually make it a project and when it's done everyone gets to pat each other
on the back. Since we're all together and helping each other, some
interesting conversations usually surface. Anyway, you will need a flat
bottom non-corrosive container and lid, a Tupperware storage bin, a plastic
bus tray or a stainless steam table pan will work well. The size depends on
the amount of meat and the room in your refer - the lids keep things out and
are handy for stacking the containers. Salt the bottom of the pan evenly,
making sure to get in the corners as well. This may not be as easy as it
sounds. Put a few pounds of salt in a bowl, cup your fingers together and
scoop out about a half a handful - not in your palm. Shake your hand back
and forth across the top and about a foot above the top of the pan. As the
salt starts to leave your hand, slowly open your fingers and let the salt
run through evenly. Hand salting may require some practice. Practice salting
the bottom of the pan until it becomes comfortable and the coverage is
without gobs or streaks or voids. If this method becomes too frustrating, a
shaker top jar works too - a mayonnaise jar with the metal lid poked full of
holes by a 16 penny nail. The coverage amount should be between light
coverage (barely covering) and full coverage (completely covering) - the
only comparison I can think of, is sugar on a pie crust, or, sugar on your
cereal. You don't want it too salty, so, one might consider their first
batch of jerky experimental and take it from there. String the molasses.
Same kinda deal as the salt, hold the bottle about a foot above the pan,
start moving it from side to side and pour. When the molasses starts running
try to get a 'string' about the size of a pencil lead and let it crisscross
the pan bottom over the salt. Once the strings are even in one direction,
change directions (perpendicular) and string evenly across again. Don't
forget the corners. When it's done it will be an even grid about 1/2" square
covering the pan bottom. Good luck... don't worry, 10-12 layers and you'll
be able to sign your name with it. The pepper will vary as to individual
taste. One note though, pepper almost doubles its intensity as it soaks and
is easy to overpower the finished product. I would recommend that a light
dusting would be sufficient for most people (about the way you would pepper
a baked potato). Red pepper flakes, even more so. Again, hold the pepper can
about a foot above, and dust it evenly - good, you remembered the corners.
Layer the meat strips across the bottom of the pan one at a time. Starting
on one side, place the strips next to each other without overlapping and
with all of the strips running in the same direction. Work the meat across
until the layer is complete, without voids. Pat the surface, edges and
corners down smooth and flat. Salt, molasses and pepper the surface as was
done to the bottom of the pan to start. The second layer of meat is done the
same, but it is ran perpendicular to the first layer. Pat smooth, salt,
molasses and pepper. Each additional layer is placed perpendicular to the
layer before it. Continue layering the meat until it reaches to a level
about 2" from the top of the pan. The last layer, or partial layer, gets the
salt, molasses and pepper treatment as well. This brining method will cure
the meat in two days. Place the pan in the refer, cover and let sit
undisturbed for the first day (refrigeration is not necessary if prepared in
a cool climate 35-45F). After about 24 hours the meat should be 'turned' -
Dig your hands in the pan and separate all of the strips, turning it over
several times to get the meat redistributed into a random order. Mash the
meat back down into the brining juices ( at this point the juice will be
thin and watery) cover and let sit for another day. I usually taste the
juice at this point - if it tastes too salty it can be rinsed with water,
but it will not be as good. If the salt is right it will have a slightly
sweet, peppery flavor. During this next day the meat will soak up the brine
juices and when the meat is removed before smoking, it will have a 'candied'
texture - sticky and pliable. There should be very little, if any, brine
solution left in the pan. The meat will have soaked up the brine and be
somewhat swelled up, as compared to the first turning.

Smokehousing the meat: The smoking process will require a smokehouse or
smoking unit that is capable of maintaining 80-90F. If there is a small
volume, piping the smoke from an external source will provide a cooler
smoke, and a hot plate or a few briquettes/lump charcoal could provide the
heat source. In a medium size unit (refrigerator size), a cast iron frying
pan with chips set on a hot plate will work - although it may be difficult
to maintain a constant temperature. The more volume, the easier it is to
control the temperature. I would recommend that a fire be built and
maintained throughout the smoking process, which will take from 48 to 70
hours - depending upon the thickness of the meat. The smokehouse that I use
is medium - large (350) cu.ft., it will maintain a good smoky 80-100F with
2-3 half gallon milk jug sized pieces of wood burning. Use seasoned,
barkless wood - your choice, I use red alder, apple, plum, cherry, oak, pear
and some of the best I've ever done was with some 75 year old grape stumps.
Citrus works good too. Get the smokehouse going and rack or hang the meat
while the temp becomes stabilized. If you rack the meat, place it *without*
the pieces touching each other - just enough room to run a finger between
the strips. Stainless 3/16" rod sharpened on both ends works good for
hanging - again, leave some space between the strips. As you place the
strips, run them through your thumb and index finger to squeegee off any
excess brine. Before placing the racks or skewers into the smokehouse,
coarse black pepper or additional red pepper flakes may be added - for those
who like lotsa zip. Load the smokehouse and leave the door cracked open for
the first couple hours, or until the surface of the meat has dried to the
touch. Close the doors, poke the fire and keep an eye on the temps for a
couple of days. Don't worry about the meat spoiling if the fire goes out.
The meat is cured. It's said that the old timers used to make their jerky
while they traveled. When they made camp at night they would hang the jerky
over the campfire until dawn, when they broke camp they simply packed up the
jerky and continued smoking the next night. This process takes about 4-5
days and is worth every minute. Probably the two most important items would
be too much salt and too much heat. If you decide to try this method, I
garr-own-tee you'll never find another piece of store bought jerky that even
comes close.

Notes: This is a jerky making process that goes back a long way, before
refrigerators, before electricity. To the best of my knowledge it has never
been written down, just passed along from one old timer to the next - until
now... Showing a person how to do something is one thing, but putting it
into words is,... an incommodiously arduous task?

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92. SMOKER TERIYAKI BEEF JERKY

1/3 cup brown sugar
1/4 cup salt
2 cup teriyaki sauce
1 cup water
1 cup burgundy or red wine
1/2 tsp. onion powder
1/2 tsp. pepper
1/2 tsp. garlic powder
1 shot whiskey (optional)
7 lb. steak

Trim all fat from the meat. Slice meat with the grain about 1/4 inch to 1/2
inch thick. Place in Marinade and leave overnight or for less than 8 hours.
Remove from brine and hang strips on shish kabob skewers. Smoke for 12 to 16
hours depending on how dry you prefer your jerky. Use 3 pan fulls of hickory
chips and chunks in early stages of drying cycle.

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mikecorn.1

Nice. Thanks for sharing. Bookmarking now :)


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Mike

Smoke some

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93. SMOKY JERKY

1 pound lean round roast (I generally get top round)
2 Tablespoons Tamari Soy Sauce
3/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
pinch cayenne pepper or to taste
1 teaspoon garlic powder
2 teaspoons liquid smoke

Trim meat of all visible fat and any connective tissue; Cut into 2 inch or
so cubes. Place in bowl of food processor. Combine all seasonings in a small
bowl and mix well. Pour over meat cubes. Process until meat is chopped very
finely. If it is less fine it will be not extrude well and will be crumbly
after drying. Place in jerky extruder, (we got ours at Wal-Mart). Extrude
onto dryer trays and dry for about 4 hours for four trays, or until all
moisture is gone and meat is dry and leathery. We like ours almost crunchy
as it will absorb some moisture from the air after drying. We store ours in
glass jars, tightly closed. You can store in the fridge if you like. We have
a vacuum sealer and store extras in vacuum sealed jars. I'm sure you could
make turkey jerky the same way. The Dehydrator must be set to the highest
temperature it will go. I think ours is 145 degrees. You could also put it
in the oven to dry. The convection type oven will do best because of the air
flow.

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94. SOY JERKY

3 lb Lean beef (flank, round or sirloin tip)
3/4 c Soy sauce
1/4 c Worcestershire sauce
1/4 c Brown sugar
1 ts Onion powder
1 Garlic clove, crushed
1/2 ts Cracked pepper
1/4 ts Liquid smoke (optional)

Cut beef into strips 1/2 inch thick. Combine marinade ingredients in a large
glass baking dish. Add strips of beef, cover and refrigerate overnight.
Drain beef slices. Dry in an electric dehydrator at 145 until pliable.
Package.

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95. SPICY JERKY

8 lb Beef or caribou, round or flank steak
6 ts Salt
4 ts Pepper
4 ts Chili powder
4 ts Garlic powder
4 ts Onion powder
2 ts Cayenne pepper
2 ts Liquid smoke
1 c Water
3/4 c Soy sauce
1/2 c Worcestershire sauce

Trim all fat off the meat and cut into 1/4" thick strips. Mix other
ingredients together in a bowl. Add the meat and cover. Marinade overnight.
Remove from marinade and let dry on a rack. Line a cookie sheet with foil
and arrange meat on it in a single layer. Dry for 6 or more hours at 175,
turning after 3 hours. Cool and bag it.

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96. SWEET & SOUR JERKY

1 teasp salt
1/4 teasp pepper
1/2 teasp onion powder
1 clove garlic, crushed
3 tablesp brown sugar
1 tablesp soy sauce
1/4 cup red wine vinegar
1/4 cup pineapple juice
1 lb lean meat, thinly sliced

In a glass bowl, combine all ingredients (except meat). Place meat slices in
mixture, sloshing around so all sides get covered. Marinate 6-12 hours, in
covered bowl (refrigerate), sloshing liquid around occasionally. Dry in a
commercial dehydrator or oven, at a temp setting of 140 degrees F. The test
I use to tell if it is done is to bend a piece. If it breaks instead of
bends, it's done.

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97. TENDER JERKY

10 lb Deer, elk, moose, etc., ground
2/3 c Curing sugar or curing salt in a pinch
1 ts Cardamom
1 ts Marjoram
1 tb MSG
1 1/2 ts Cayenne pepper
2 tb Black pepper
3 tb Liquid smoke
2 tb Water
1/2 ts Garlic powder

Begin preparation by deboning and removing the tendons and fat from the
meat. It is important that you remove all fat or it will go rancid. Either
grind the meat yourself or have someone grind it for you; a coarse grind
gives the best results. Mix the spices thoroughly and then add the spices a
bit at a time while kneading the meat like dough. Put the meat in the fridge
for at least 6 hours to allow the spices to work through the meat. At this
point you prepare the meat for jerking. If you have an electric meat slicer,
make the meat into logs about 4 x 14"; place the meat in the fridge until it
is solid but not frozen, and then slice 1/8" slices from end to end. You'll
end up with a big stack of circular patties. If you don't have a slicer,
roll the meat out to a 1/8" thickness between two pieces of wax paper.
Remove the top paper and score the meat into strips and place them in the
freezer for about 45 minutes. Remove the meat and break at the score marks.
Place the jerky on wire racks and place them in a 150 F. oven, leaving the
door ajar so moisture can escape and the heat does not build up. Turn the
jerky once or twice during drying and rotate the racks if the jerky near the
elements begins to dry too fast. Meat should be left slightly pliable, that
should take somewhere around 3 or 4 hours to get to. Cure yours to whatever
point you like; if you like potato chips, be my guest. Jerky can can be
stored for months in the freezer; the drier it is the longer it lasts.

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98. TERIYAKI JERKY #1

1/2 teasp salt
1/8 teasp pepper
1/2 teasp ground ginger
2 tablesp brown sugar
1/4 cup soy sauce
1 lb lean meat, thinly sliced

In a glass bowl, combine all ingredients (except meat). Place meat slices in
mixture, sloshing around so all sides get covered. Marinate 6-12 hours, in
covered bowl (refrigerate), sloshing liquid around occasionally. Dry in a
commercial dehydrator or oven, at a temp setting of 140 degrees F. The test
I use to tell if it is done is to bend a piece. If it breaks instead of
bends, it's done.

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99. TERIYAKI JERKY #2

1 cup soy sauce
1 t ginger powder
1 t garlic powder
1/2 t sugar
1/2 t white pepper
sliced scallions (optional)
1 lb lean meat, thinly sliced. (3/16-1/4 in thick)

In a small glass bowl, combine all ingredients except meat. Stir to mix
well. Place meat 3-4 layers deep in a container, spooning sauce mixture over
each layer. Cover tightly and marinate 6-12 hours in the refrigerator,
stirring occasionally and keeping the mixture covered. Dehydrate at 145
degrees until pliable.

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100. TERIYAKI BEEF OR VENISON JERKY

10 oz Bottle Soy Sauce
1 c Burgundy Wine
1 c Brown Sugar
2 ts Liquid Smoke (use 2 if Dehydrator/ 1 if smoking)
1 ts Salt
1/2 ts Garlic Powder
1/2 ts Onion Powder
1 ts Black Pepper
1/2 ts Cayenne Pepper (or more)

Mix marinade and let stand for 1/2 hour while you cut Beef/Venison into
1/4" - 3/8" strips. Marinade in refrigerator over night. Dehydrate or smoke
for 8 hours or so until jerky is dark, dry but still pliable. Don't overdry.
Refrigerate until ready to use.

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101. TERIYAKI TURKEY JERKY

1 lb Boned, skinned turkey breast or turkey tenderloins trimmed of all fat
and connective tissue
1/4 ts Onion powder
1/4 ts Garlic powder
1/2 c water
1/4 c Reduced-sodium soy sauce
2 ts Worcestershire
2 tb Firmly packed brown sugar
1 ts Pepper
1/2 ts Liquid smoke
Vegetable cooking spray

Freeze turkey until firm but not hard; then cut into 1/8- to 1/4-inch-thick
slices. In a medium-size glass, stoneware, plastic or stainless steel bowl,
combine onion powder, garlic powder, water soy sauce, Worcestershire, sugar,
pepper,and liquid smoke. Stir to dissolve seasonings. Add turkey and mix until
all surfaces are thoroughly coated. Cover tightly and refrigerate for at least
6 hours or until next day, stirring occasionally; recover tightly after
stirring.

Drying the jerky: Depending on the drying method you're using, evenly coat
dehydrator racks or metal racks with cooking spray; if oven drying, place
racks over rimmed baking pans. Lift turkey from bowl, shaking off any excess
liquid. Arrange strips close together, but not overlapping, on racks.

Dehydrator drying: Arrange trays according to manufacture's directions and
dry at 140-degrees until a piece of jerky cracks and breaks when bent (4-1/2
to 6 hours; let jerky cool for 5 minutes before testing).

Oven drying: Set oven to 140 to 200 degrees (the lower, the better--the
lowest your oven allows). Place racks at least 4 inches away from (above or
below) heat source. Prop oven door open by about 2 inches. Dry until a piece
of jerky cracks and breaks when bent (4 to 6 hours; let jerky cool for 5
minutes before testing).

Pat off any beads of oil from jerky. Let jerky cool completely on racks;
remove from racks, place in a rigid freezer container, and freeze for 72
hours. Then store in airtight, insectproof containers in a cool, dry place;
or freeze or refrigerate.

Storage time: Up to 3 weeks at room temperature; up to 4 months in
refrigerator; up to 8 months in freezer.

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102. THAI BEEF JERKY #1

8 lb Beef or caribou round or flank steak

Stock:
1 c Beef stock
4 tb Fresh lime juice
4 tb Nam pla (fish sauce)
4 ts Sugar_1/2 c Loosely packed mint leaves*
1/2 c Thinly sliced shallots
4 Scallions, sliced in half lengthwise and cut into 1/4" lengths
2 fresh hot chiles, seeded & finely chopped

Marinade:
Stock (above) plus
4 ts Pepper
1 ts Cayenne pepper (opt)
4 ts Liquid smoke
1/2 c Soy sauce

*You might want to add come basil leaves or cilantro sprigs here.

Trim all fat off the meat and cut against the grain into 1/4" thick strips.
(Meat is easier to cut when partially frozen and it will cut evenly.) In a
saucepan, combine beef stock, lime juice, fish sauce, sugar; bring to a boil
over high heat. Add mint, shallots, scallions and chiles. Cool and strain.
Mix the stock and the other ingredients together in a bowl. Add the meat and
cover. Marinade overnight. Or put meat and marinade in a sealable plastic
bag. Either way turn the meat occasionally to ensure that all portions get
well soaked in the marinade. Remove from marinade and let dry on a rack.
Line a cookie sheet with foil and arrange meat on it in a single layer OR...
place meat directly on oven racks, line bottom of oven with foil OR...
place on a rack in shallow pan. Dry for 6 or more hours at 175, turning
after 3 hours. Continue to dry in warm oven if necessary. Gas ovens with
pilot lights work especially well. Cool and bag it.

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103. THAI BEEF JERKY #2

2 to 2 1/2 lbs. top sirloin or top round roast
3 tbsp coriander seeds
1 tbsp cumin seeds
1 1/2 tbsp sugar
4 tbsp Thai light soy sauce (See Aew Sai)
1 1/2 cup oil

Slice beef across the grain 2"X 3" in size and 1/4" thick. Roast coriander
and cumin seeds in a fry pan over low heat until fragrant, cool, and grind
coarsely in a mortar or a spice grinder. Combine beef and the rest of the
ingredients and marinate 1 hour. Place beef pieces on a cake rack sprayed
with Pam and put the rack in a foil lined cookie sheet large enough to catch
any liquid dripping from the beef. Place the cookie sheet in a lowest
setting oven until the beef pieces are dry to the touch and no liquid seep
out when pressed (between 6-12 hours depending on the oven). Over medium-low
heat, heat the oil in a flat-bottomed fry pan and drop the beef in 5-6
pieces at a time. Fry until crispy on the outside and around the edges.
Drain on a cake rack over paper towels. Keeps up to 1 week in an airtight
container at room temperature. Serve alone or with cooked sticky rice.

NOTE: Tenderize beef lightly with a mallet if using other cuts of beef. Be
sure to drain the oil well. Any excess may become rancid. Cool completely
before storing.

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104. TOFU JERKY

1/2 c Soy sauce
3 tb To 4 tb liquid smoke
1/8 c Water
1 tb Onion powder
1 ts Garlic powder or
1 Clove crushed fresh garlic
1 tb Fresh ground black pepper
1 ts Honey
1 lb Firm or extra firm tofu

Cut and drain the tofu. I usually take a 1 lb cube, cut it in half,and then
slice it into strips on its short side. Strips should be about 4-5 mm in
thickness. They may look big, but they'll shrink to about half their size.
Mix all the marinade ingredients together well. Put the tofu in a single
layer in a shallow baking pan or cookie sheet and pour the marinade over it.
Let soak for several hours or overnight. Drain excess liquid (and reuse!)
and dry tofu in food dehydrator or warm (200 F) oven. This will take
probably 4-8 hours, depending on the weather. If you live in a sunny, dry
climate, you can sun dry it, but it'll take all day. If you dry indoors in
the winter, your house gets filled with a wonderful smoky smell. If you're
drying in the oven, you'll need to flip the tofu over hourly so it dries
evenly. The stuff is delicious and keeps indefinitely. Dry the stuff until
it's very chewy, but not crispy.

Be creative: Use low-sodium soy if you want less salt (it is rather salty).
Use tabasco or ground cayenne if you want it hot. Chili powder makes chili
jerky. Oregano and basil makes pizza jerky.

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105. TRIPLE MEAT JERKY

1 pound of chicken breast
1 pound of pork
1 pound of beef
1/4 cup of soy sauce
3 tablespoons of brown sugar
1 tablespoon of dijonnaise from Hellemans
1 tablespoon of Louisiana hot sauce
3 tablespoons of ketchup
Salt and pepper
1 clove of garlic minced
1 onion minced
1 tablespoon of Worcestershire Sauce
2 tablespoons of liquid smoke (found in grocery stores)

Cut meat into strips, remember that the meat will shrink. Mix seasoning
together, and add to meat. If you have a convection oven, put the temp at
150 degrees. Put the strips of meat on a rack, that you will put over a pan.
Place in oven, place a wooden spoon, so the oven door will not close
completely. It takes between 6-8 hours. Turn the strips from time to time.
Once the dehydration process is over, and the strips cool off, you may keep
them in a glass jar or in the fridge for a long time. If you have a regular
oven , put the temp at the lowest. You will need to keep the oven door open
wider, turning the strips even more often, and the cooking time will
probably vary.

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106. TURKEY JERKY #1

1 lb Turkey breast or tenderloins, boned and skinned
1 tb Salt
1/2 c Water
2 tb Brown sugar; firmly packed
2 cl Garlic;pressed or minced OR... 1/4 ts Garlic powder
1/2 sm Onion; minced OR... 1/4 ts Onion powder
1 ts Pepper
1/2 ts Liquid smoke
Nonstick cooking spray

Rinse meat and pat dry. Pull off and discard any fat and connective tissue.
To make meat easier to slice, freeze it until it feels firm, but not hard.
Cut turkey into 1/8 to 1/4-inch-thick slices. Cut breast piece with or
across the grain, and tenderloins lengthwise. In a bowl, stir together salt,
water, brown sugar, garlic, onion, pepper, and liquid smoke. Add turkey and
mix well. Cover and chill at least 1 hour or up to 24 hours; meat will
absorb most of the liquid. Depending on drying method, evenly coat
dehydrator racks, (you need 3, each about 10 by 13 in.) or metal racks (to
cover a 10- by 15-inch baking pan) with nonstick cooking spray. Lift turkey
strips from liquid, shaking off excess, and lay strips close together, but
not overlapping, on racks.

In a dehydrator: Arrange trays as manufacturer directs and dry at 140 until
a cool piece of jerky (remove from dehydrator and let stand about 5 minutes)
cracks and breaks when bent, about 4 1/2 to 5 hours.

In an oven: Set at 150-200, place pan on center rack; prop door open about 2
inches. Dry until a piece of jerky cracks and breaks when bent (see above),
about 3-5 hours. Let jerky cool on racks, then remove.

Serve or store in airtight containers in a cool, dry place up to 3 weeks, in
the refrigerator up to 4 months, or longer in the freezer. Makes about 7
ounces.

TERIYAKI TURKEY JERKY: Prepare turkey jerky as above, omitting salt and
water. Add 1/4 cup soy sauce and 2 teaspoons Worcestershire.

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107. TURKEY JERKY #2

1 Turkey meat sliced thin
2 tb Liquid smoke
3 tb Soy Sauce
10 ds Tabasco sauce
1/3 c Worcestershire sauce
1 1/2 ts Hickory seasoning liquid
1 tb Onion salt

Mix all ingredients together in a marinade dish. Mix together and add strips
of turkey or beef into marinade. Marinade for 8-24 hours, depending upon how
often you shake mixture and how flavorful you want it. Take strips out of
marinade and lightly dampen with towel to try excess liquid off. Place in
dehydrator or on sheets for oven. Dehydrate till jerky is tough/crisp. Time
varies based on method of dehydration, use your best judgement (12-36
hours). Add extra tabasco for more spicy flavor.

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108. TURKEY JERKY #3

1 1/2 lb Raw turkey; preferably breast
1/4 c Soy sauce
1 tb Fresh lemon juice
1/4 ts Dried powdered garlic
1/4 ts Pepper_1/8 ts Ginger

Slice turkey across grain in strips 1/8 to 1/4 inch thick (for easier
cutting, freeze meat and thaw enough to slice easily). Mix together
remaining ingredients and pour over turkey. Distribute marinade well through
turkey. Place on trays in a single layer on dehydrator trays. Dry about 5
hours or overnight.

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109. TURKEY JERKY #4

1 cup brown sugar
1/3 cup white sugar
1/4 cup salt
2 tsp garlic powder
2 tsp onion powder
1 tsp white pepper
1 tsp black pepper
1 tsp powdered smoke flavoring

Combine all ingredients for rub. Slice deli fully-cooked turkey breast in
1/4 - 3/8 inch thick slices. Coat both sides of turkey slices with rub.
Using an American Harvest Jet-Stream Oven (or a dehydrator), dry at 200
degrees F, with low fan for 40-45 minutes.

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110. VENISON JERKY #1

2 lb Venison
1 c Soy sauce
1 t Lemon juice
1/2 t Black pepper
1/4 t Garlic

Cut the venison in strips approximately 1/4 x 1 x 8-inches. Mix all
ingredients and marinate venison approximately 10 hours turning once every
hour. Smoke venison on grill until completely dry or you may use oven on low
heat with venison spread out on broiler pan.

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111. VENISON JERKY #2

3/4 C soy sauce
1 C worcestershire sauce
3 T kosher salt
2 T crushed black peppercorns
2 T graham marsala
1 T garlic powder
1 T onion powder

Combine in a blender, mix with sliced beef or venison in a white trash bag
(in a metal container so you don't create a mess!). Refrig 24-36 hours,
mixing occasionally. Dry about 15 hours at 125 F.

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112. VENISON JERKY #3

1 1/2 To 2 lbs lean boneless deer meat, partially frozen
1/4 c Soy sauce
1 tb Worcestershire sauce
1/4 ts Ground pepper
1/4 ts Garlic powder
1/4 ts Onion powder
1/4 ts Hickory smoked salt
1/4 c Firmly packed brown sugar
1 sm Bottle liquid smoke

Trim all fat from the meat. Slice the meat as thinly as possible. In a bowl
combine the remaining ingredients. Stir until dissolved. Add the meat and
mix well. Cover and refrigerate overnight. Shake the excess liquid from the
meat and arrange in a shallow pan or cookie sheet. Dry the meat in a 150 or
200 degree F oven until dry and brown, a minimum of 8 hours. Cool, remove
from the pan, and store in a glass jar.

Smoke some

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113. VENISON JERKY #4

1/2 ts Salt
1/3 ts Garlic powder
1/2 ts Black pepper
1 ts Accent
1 ts Onion powder
1/4 c Worcestershire sauce
1/4 c Soy sauce
1-1/2 lbs deer meat.

Using meat half frozen for easier slicing, slice in 1/8 inch strips with the
grain, desired lengths. Cover with the above sauce and marinate overnight.
Spread single layer on oven wire rack,using foil under to catch drippings.
With the oven door cracked open and at the lowest temperature, bake 6 - 8 hours.
May be eaten immediately. Becomes dryer when cold. This should work with beef
as well, if you get the leanest beef available (Flank Steak for example).

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114. VENISON JERKY #5

3 lb Lean venison
1 tb Salt
1 ts Garlic powder
1/2 ts Black pepper
1/3 c Worcestershire sauce
1/4 c Soy sauce
1 tb Prepared mustard

Cut venison into 1/2 inch wide and 1/4 inch thick strips. Mix all other
ingredients and pour over the meat. Marinate overnight. Remove from marinade
and dry with paper towels. Place in oven. In a gas oven the pilot flame will
dry jerkey in 4 days. In a 200 degree electric oven, leave in the oven until
dry by feel. This should work with beef as well, if you get the leanest beef
possible (Flank Steak for example).

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115. VENISON JERKY #6

2 lb Sliced venison 1/8" thick
2 T Worcestershire sauce
2 T Soy sauce
1 T Salt
1 t Ground red pepper
2 Cloves garlic, sliced
1 c Corn whiskey
1 c Water

Slice the meat when it is lightly frozen. The cuts should be long, thin and
with the grain. Cut across the grain if you want more tender, but more
brittle jerky. Trim off all of the fat. Marinate strips in a glass container
overnight. You_may substitute 2 cups of red wine for the corn whiskey and water. Pat dry
and arrange pieces side by side on an oven roasting rack, without overlap.
Cook at minimum heat (150F) for 6 hours. Leave oven door ajar to allow
moisture to escape. Meat should be dark, dry and store jerky in a cool,
airtight container.

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116. VENISON JERKY #7

3 lb Lean Venison
1 tb Salt
1 ts Onion Powder
1 ts Garlic Powder
1 1/2 ts Pepper
1/3 c Worcestershire sauce
1/4 c Soy Sauce

Cut the venison into strips 1/4 to 3/8" thick. Mix other ingredients
together, and marinate meat strips in it over night, in the refrigerator.
Drain and pat dry with towel. Place in smoker until proper consistancy is
reached. Use only two or three pans of chips. Store in covered jar, or in
plastic bags.

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117. VENISON JERKY #8

Deer meat, sliced 1/8" thick
2 tb Hickory smoked salt
1 tb Garlic salt
2 tb Monosodium glutamate
4 tb Seasoned pepper
2/3 c Soy sauce
1/3 c Worcester sauce smoked
Tabasco sauce to taste

Sprinkle meat with dry mixture, both sides. Drape on oven racks without
touching while oven heats to 200 degrees. Place in oven with door open 2-3
inches. After one hour, baste with sauce, repeating every half-hour for the
remaining two hours at 200 degrees. Now drop oven to 170 degrees and finish
meat in 45 to 90 minutes.

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118. VENISON JERKY #9

3 lb Deer meat, thinly sliced
3/4 c Wine, dry
1/3 c Lemon juice
1/4 c Onion, minced
1/4 c Brown sugar
2 ts Liquid smoke
1 ts Seasoned salt
1/4 ts Pepper
3 Bay leaves

Marinade deer meat for 24 hours in the marinade mixture, covered, in a cold
part of the refrigerator. Turn meat several times. Remove meat, spreading
out to bring to room temp. Place on greased racks in a smoker and smoke at a
low heat (160-190 degrees) for 5 to 7 hours, until meat becomes slightly
translucent and darkly red, near black. Store in plastic bags in
refrigerator.

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119. VENISON JERKY #10

4 lb Venison
1 c Barbecue sauce
2 tb Liquid smoke
1 ts Chili powder
1 tb Worchestershire sauce
Few grains cayenne pepper

Freeze venison until firm and solid enough to slice easily. Cut into
1/8-inch slices witha a sharp knife or slicer, then cut slices into strips 1
& 1/2 inches wide. Meanwhile, blend remaining ingredients and pour over
venison strips that have been arranged in rows in a shallow baking pan.
Marinate overnight in refrigerator. Drain well.

Dehydrator: Cover trays with strips without overlapping. Dry 4 hours at 140F.
Turn strips and rotate trays. Dry another 6 to 8 hours. Well-dried jekry
should be dark and fibrous looking and brittle enough to splinter when bent
in two.

Oven: Lay strips of marinated meat in rows over trays being careful not to
overlap strips. Dry at 110 F until strips will splinter on the edges when
bent in two, 18 to 24 hours.

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120. VENISON JERKY #11

2 lb Venison
1 c Soy sauce
1 ts Lemon juice
1/2 ts Black pepper
1/4 ts Garlic

Cut the venison in strips approximately 1/4 x 1 x 8-inches. Mix all
ingredients and marinate venison approximately 10 hours turning once every
hour. Smoke venison on grill until completely dry or you may use oven on low
heat with venison spread out on broiler pan.

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121. VENISON JERKY #12

4 lb Venison
1 c Barbecue sauce
2 tb Liquid smoke
1 ts Chili powder
1 tb Worchestershire sauce
Few grains cayenne pepper

Freeze venison until firm and solid enough to slice easily. Cut into
1/8-inch slices with a sharp knife or slicer, then cut slices into strips 1
& 1/2 inches wide. Meanwhile, blend remaining ingredients and pour over
venison strips that have been arranged in rows in a shallow baking pan.
Marinate overnight in refrigerator. Drain well.

Dehydrator: Cover trays with strips without overlapping. Dry 4 hours at 140F.
Turn strips and rotate trays. Dry another 6 to 8 hours. Well-dried jekry

should be dark and fibrous looking and brittle enough to splinter when bent
in two.

Oven: Lay strips of marinated meat in rows over trays being careful not to
overlap strips. Dry at 110 F until strips will splinter on the edges when
bent in two, 18 to 24 hours.

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122. WESTERN JERKY

4 ts Salt
1 ts Pepper
1 ts Chili powder
1 ts Garlic powder
1 ts Onion powder
1/4 ts Cayenne pepper
3 ds Liquid smoke
1/2 c Water

2 lb Round, flank steak or other

Cut meat thinly. Mix marinade ingredients together in a bowl. Dip meat
slices into marinade. Place dipped meat in layers in a bowl or dish. Pour
remaining marinade sauce over meat. Cover tightly and let marinate in
refrigerator for 6 to 12 hours. Rotate layers of meat occasionally. Place in
dehydrator until dry. While meat is drying, blot excess oil with paper
towel. Makes 1/2 pound jerky.

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123. WESTERN BARBECUE JERKY

1 ts Salt
3 tb Brown sugar
1/4 ts Pepper
1/3 c Red wine vinegar
1/8 ts Cayenne pepper
1/3 c Ketchup
1 ts Onion powder
1 lb Lean meat
1/2 ts Garlic powder
1 ts Dry mustard

Slice meat into long strips 3/16 to 1/4 inch thick. Uniform slices will
shorten the drying time, so use a meat slicer or have your butcher slice it
for you. Cut across the grain for increased tenderness. Remove excess fat.
In a small bowl, combine all ingredients except meat. Stir to mix well.
Place meat 3 or 4 layers deep in a glass, stoneware, plastic or stainless
steel container, spooning vinegar mixture over each layer. Cover tightly.
Marinate 6 to 12 hours in the refrigerator, stirring occasionally and
keeping the mixture tightly covered. Place the meat strips on drying racks.
Do not overlap the strips to ensure good air circulation. Oven temperature
should be 140 to 160 F (60 to 70 C) for the first 8 to 10 hours. After that
it may be lowered to 130 F (55C) until dry. Place aluminum foil or a baking
sheet underneath the drying tray to catch the drippings. Occasionally blot
the jerky with paper towels as it dries to remove beads of oil. Test jerky
for dryness by cooling a piece. When cool it should crack when bent but not
break. There should be no moist spots.

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124. WILD DUCK JERKY

1 several duck breasts
1 liquid smoke
1 tender quick salt
1 soy sauce
1 c brown sugar
1 tb garlic powder
1 soy sauce

Use several duck breasts.... Depends on how much you want to make.... Slice
Duck breast about 3/8 thick. In a bowl with a tight lid, brush both sides
with liquid smoke (I used Mesquite for last batch but hickory works well
too). Sprinkle with tender quick salt and repeat layering until all duck is
used. Pour enough soy sauce gently over duck until just covered completely.
Put in refrigerator for 48 hours.

Just before drying make:
1 cup brown sugar
1 tablespoon Garlic powder (I like Garlic...so you might change to taste.)
Enough soy sauce to make into a paste

I dry in my gas oven.....on cookie sheet with cookie rack. Lay duck on rack
and brush in brown sugar paste. Oven at 170 for two hours.... turn over and
brush again.... Dry until dry but not too dry.. everyone likes a little bit
of chewy, but not so dry that it breaks when you bend it.

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125. WORLD FAMOUS BEEF JERKY

Soy sauce
Worcestershire sauce
Brown sugar
Crushed garlic
Hot pepper sauce (Tabasco or other)
Red cooking wine
Jamaican Jerk seasoning or A-1 sauce

Start with several pounds of very lean beef roast. You should choose a roast
with visible grain, if possible, and little or no fat. It needn't be very
high quality, and in fact, tougher cuts seem to actually work better. Mix a
marinade with some or all of the following: Mixing the sauce is largely a
matter of taste. The result should be close to 3 parts soy sauce, 1 part
Worcestershire, 1 part brown sugar and the rest as desired. It should be a
very strong salty, spicy and slightly sweet solution. The rest of the
ingredients depend on your taste, and the list is by no means exhaustive.
Adding red wine will decrease the saltiness and/or dilute it if you get it
too spicy without affecting the flavor greatly. You should not use more than
about 30 to 40% red wine, however, since the saltiness is necessary to
preserve the meat. Don't get too hung up on the recipe, it is good just
about any way you fix it. With a very sharp knife, slice the uncooked roast
with the grain (usually lengthwise down the roast) into strips about 1/8
inch thick. Thinner will make the jerky spicier and crisper, thicker, up to
about 1/4 inch will make it easier to slice, but increases drying time. Trim
fat once again, and put the slices in a large Ziploc bag with the marinade.
Squeeze to remove as much air as possible, and have a helper seal the bag.
Let soak at room temperature for at least an hour. Remove the strips and
place in a dehydrator. Spread them in a single layer on each rack, and
sprinkle with great quantities of black pepper on one side. Dry on high (145
degrees) in the dehydrator, or turn your oven temperature selector until the
light just comes on (the lowest setting possible) and dry on a rack in the
oven. In the oven, prop the door open about 3 inches at the top. Drying time
is about 8 to 10 hours, but can take twice that long for thicker pieces.
Bending should splinter some of the outside fibers when done. It should keep
at room temperature for a couple of weeks, and will actually get better in a
day or two as the moisture content becomes more uniform throughout.

Sam3

Love this.  It's so nice for guys starting out to have something to reference to.  Thank you again 

viper125

Copied and pasted to notepad and saved to hard drive. Thanks for sharing.
A few pics from smokes....
http://photobucket.com/smokinpics
Inside setup.

loejukan


RossP

Thanks I think.....now I have to try all of the recipes you posted, I think the wife might be a little miffed but what the heck it is almost spring and that means more smoking time.
Original Bradley Smoker
Cold Smoker Attachment
Teal Termapen

12AMNSX

What an awesome list!  Has anyone tried any of these recipes?