Heya. I just got a food dehydrator for Christmas, mainly to make jerky, which the family loves. I knew nothing about how to do it, did a couple quick Internet searches, bought some seasonings, and completed my first attempt last week. It was pretty good, but nothing as good as I hope I can make it. Hopefully, some of you have done it and can give me tips.
I am not a hunter, and am not really a fan of wild game meat. I will almost always be purchasing a roast or trying turkey, or some such thing. I read that Beef Top Roast is the best choice along those lines, I bought a nice one, sliced it pretty well/thin (after freezing it until it became pretty hard). After that, I used some terriyaki seasoning mixed with part of the cure packet - followed the directions and think it was very close. I rubbed that into the sliced beef pretty well. Placed the slices in my dehydrator and let it dehydrate on the proper meat setting (160 degrees) and checked it after two hours, then 3.5 hours, a little longer, and it was definitely done. Almost too done, and the pamphlet said to dehydrate it for from 4 to 15 hours. Had I done this for 15 hours, I think my house might have burned down... :shrug:
Long story short, it was pretty good beef terriyaki jerky, but not nearly as good as I would like. I think it was dehydrated a little too long, and I only used seasonings. I think I cut it across the grain of the meat, attempting to make it less chewy and hard, based on the instructions. SO, I think I did things about right from what I can tell, but want to do better.
Next time I will try marinating it in a mixture overnight, it seems like that might be better, but of course take a lot longer. Do any of you marinate, or just use seasoning rubs? Do you do both? Seems that might be the ticket, but maybe too strong?
We're pretty basic flavor folks - we love terriyaki, I bought some bourbon black sugar sounding spice mix too, which sounds really good. It's not that difficult to make, but if it's not good, it's fairly expensive if it doesn't get eaten and enough work to not want to do it.
I think it would make a nice gift to people who like jerky, and I'd like to get good at it. Any ideas or tips would be appreciated. Thanks!
I am not a hunter, and am not really a fan of wild game meat. I will almost always be purchasing a roast or trying turkey, or some such thing. I read that Beef Top Roast is the best choice along those lines, I bought a nice one, sliced it pretty well/thin (after freezing it until it became pretty hard). After that, I used some terriyaki seasoning mixed with part of the cure packet - followed the directions and think it was very close. I rubbed that into the sliced beef pretty well. Placed the slices in my dehydrator and let it dehydrate on the proper meat setting (160 degrees) and checked it after two hours, then 3.5 hours, a little longer, and it was definitely done. Almost too done, and the pamphlet said to dehydrate it for from 4 to 15 hours. Had I done this for 15 hours, I think my house might have burned down... :shrug:
Long story short, it was pretty good beef terriyaki jerky, but not nearly as good as I would like. I think it was dehydrated a little too long, and I only used seasonings. I think I cut it across the grain of the meat, attempting to make it less chewy and hard, based on the instructions. SO, I think I did things about right from what I can tell, but want to do better.
Next time I will try marinating it in a mixture overnight, it seems like that might be better, but of course take a lot longer. Do any of you marinate, or just use seasoning rubs? Do you do both? Seems that might be the ticket, but maybe too strong?
We're pretty basic flavor folks - we love terriyaki, I bought some bourbon black sugar sounding spice mix too, which sounds really good. It's not that difficult to make, but if it's not good, it's fairly expensive if it doesn't get eaten and enough work to not want to do it.
I think it would make a nice gift to people who like jerky, and I'd like to get good at it. Any ideas or tips would be appreciated. Thanks!