I was wondering if sliced beef is better than GB also i was think of get large pieces of top round cubed then cutting them down by hand into strips
I prefer whole muscle meat over GB. GB can be quite good also, Nepas makes a fine looking Hillbilly jerky out of GB. I think the top round would work out great for you.
Try this for 5 lbs of strip jerky
2 cup Worcestershire sauce
2 cup Soy sauce
1/2 cup Liquid Smoke
1/2 cup Franks Red Hot Sauce (opt)
6 TB Honey
3 TB Mustard (PYM) Plain Yellow Mustard, Frenches or any kind.
6 TB Garlic Salt
2 TB Pepper
4 TB Onion Powder
1 cup Brown Sugar
1 level t cure 1 (only if your going to use smoker)
To Add HEAT
2 1/2 TB Crushed Red Pepper or
1/2 cup Tabasco sauce
Mix all marinade ingredients in a sauce pan and bring to a boil, stirring occasionally. Remove from heat and let cool completely. Pour into plastic container and refrigerate until needed. Measure out 2 cups of mixture for every 3-5 lbs of meat to be marinated. Pour over meat slices that are already in a quart size zip lock bag. Thoroughly wet all sides of meat. Refrigerate overnight or at least 6 hours. Rotate bag every few hours, working the marinade over all meat. Drain the meat and spread the meat (be sure to NOT overlap) onto trays in single layers. If using a dehydrator, dry for 4-5 hours, (depending on thickness) checking every 2 hours. Make sure to rotate trays
(bottom to top and flipping the meat as needed) Jerky should be hard but not brittle. Blot up any fat that appears with a paper towel or place jerky in a brown paper bag. For a chewy texture, slice the meat with the grain, or across the grain for a more tender jerky.
If you use your smoker start at 130* and bump 10* until you reach 170* on your smoker.
Quote from: NePaSmoKer on December 28, 2010, 04:45:48 PM
If you use your smoker start at 130* and bump 10* until you reach 170* on your smoker.
Bump every hour?
That sounds good i will mix that up later in the week and try it out this weekend as long as pucks get here
I did a 5 lb batch today,,, I followed the directions to a tee.... it was awesome , my Daughters loved it.
I will be doing more soon, I used my dehydrator 5 hours.
Thanks for the recipe.
"7 days without BBQ makes one weak"
Ray
Can I cut out the liquid smoke if I plan to smoke it? Should I just leave it out or replace with more soy / wor. sauce?
I have been using London broil and results have been good...any lean cut should work well.
Quote from: mjdeez on January 22, 2011, 02:11:39 PM
Can I cut out the liquid smoke if I plan to smoke it? Should I just leave it out or replace with more soy / wor. sauce?
I would leave the Liquid smoke out if I was going to smoke it and leave the rest of the recipe as is.
SL2010
When I send you your parts I will include some GD [ground deer] jerky that I have made. If done right you can make a jerky that is very much like whole muscle meat jerky. The one thing is you have to spice them differently because marinading a muscle jerky means that you are not going to have all the spices in the finished product. You will rinse some of it off. In GB jerky you eat everything you put in it. Just keep that in mind if you are looking at a recipe for regular jerky you will need a different amount for ground meat.
Quote from: pikeman_95 on January 25, 2011, 06:26:19 PM
SL2010
When I send you your parts I will include some GD [ground deer] jerky that I have made. If done right you can make a jerky that is very much like whole muscle meat jerky. The one thing is you have to spice them differently because marinading a muscle jerky means that you are not going to have all the spices in the finished product. You will rinse some of it off. In GB jerky you do eat everything you put in it. Just keep that in mine if you are looking at a recipe for regular jerky you will need a different amount for ground meat.
Ditto!
Ground goes faster than whole muscle around here. ::)
More flavor same texture everyone says.
Cool thanks
I have a question on the need for cure in a jerky recipe that has soy sauce in it. I have always made ground venison jerky and I soak the meat in chunks before grinding for a week. I'm thinkin that would pretty much cure anything. Until now I have done it in the dehydrator. I have some soakin right now and will be smoking it this sat.
I am from the school that says you need cure. Salt is a cure, but the amount in soy sauce may not be enough to keep the nasties away at long low temp cooking such as smoking in a Bradley. I also imagine it would make the jerky last longer too once done. From what I have read and learned here, using cure is the safe way to go. I have read a few posts that don't use and only use soy or salt and say it's no problem at all. I'm sure an expert will be along shortly and give you a few ideas.
Nepas, when going straight to the deydrator without cure what do you set yor temp at?
I set my dehydrator temp at 150.
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I finished the jerky. It came out okay, slightly overdone but with a good taste. I've been eating it all week and haven't had any stomach issuesssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss
While I personally prefer whole meat jerky, it's very difficult for the home jerky maker to achieve the same kind of results as commercially made jerky when using whole muscle meats. Over the years I've found that ground meat jerky offers excellent results because you can better control the distribution of the cure and the seasonings throughout the meat; that's all I make now. The best seasoning/cure mixture I've found is available at www.nesco.com; the flavor is "cracked pepper and garlic". This stuff is awesome - I'm continuously overwhelmed by requests from family and friends to "please crank out a batch"...
Quote from: BBQIT on February 14, 2011, 04:34:05 PM...it's very difficult for the home jerky maker to achieve the same kind of results as commercially made jerky when using whole muscle meats.
Can you explain what you mean by this? I generally use whole muscle meat in a wet marinade. I rarely use GB and almost always use eye round and think my results are waaaay superior to anything commercially made. If mine is pretty darn good, I bet NePas' is super darn good.
My post was in response to the very first post which asked the question as to what was better to use, whole sliced meat or ground meat. I've made both, but have had more consistent and better results using ground meat versus whole sliced meat. When eating the product, you'd never know that the jerky was made using ground meat as it has pretty much the same texture and consistency as whole sliced meat. At the end of the day, it's a matter of personal preference, but if you haven't tried using ground meat, I'd encourage you to give it a try - you might be pleasantly surprised with the results. Give the "Cracked Pepper and Garlic" seasoning from Nesco a try too - like I said, it's awesome. Seeing as how Nepas has a jerky extruder from Dakota, it looks like he sometimes makes jerky using ground meat too...
Sorry, didn't mean to criticize, was wondering what you meant by more consistent results. For some reason I found the opposite true, better stuff from muscle meat.
My fault - I was trying to respond to the first post and responded to yours (the last one) by mistake, so I can see where it got confusing; sorry about that. Chalk it up to my being a "rookie" on the Bradley forum...What I meant by more consistent results is that no matter how long you marinade whole muscle meat, you can't ever really get the flavor all the way through the meat (at least I've never been able to). When you use ground meat, the spices are completely mixed with the meat (just like in sausage making).
Ok I see what you mean. My last several batches, I used Big John's Soy Ginger jerky recipe and it sure goes penetrates...lol. Maybe it is the soy component that helps. I recently made nuggets from the same recipe and it penetrated pretty good too.