The Best Homemade Beef Jerky Recipe
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This is the best homemade beef jerky recipe, and it’s easy to make without any special equipment.
After road tripping with my family and sampling jerky from gas stations along the way — and spending a small fortune on it — I resolved to come up with a good homemade beef jerky recipe. The good news is that beef jerky is surprisingly easy to make and doesn’t require any special equipment other than a standard oven, baking sheets, and wire racks. However, most homemade jerky isn’t nearly as tender as the store-bought kind. That’s because commercial jerky producers use special equipment and curing preservatives to make their signature jerky. Finally, after falling down an internet rabbit hole of pitmaster video tutorials, I learned the secret to making tender jerky at home: adding plenty of sugar to the marinade. The extra sugar not only helps preserve the meat but also locks in moisture. This recipe makes a salty-sweet, smoky jerky with a chewy yet tender texture, similar to the well-known brands.
What You’ll Need To Make Homemade Beef Jerky
When making beef jerky, it’s important to start with a well-trimmed, lean cut of meat, as fat does not dry out and accelerates spoilage. An eye of round roast is ideal; it’s affordable, accessible, lean, and easy to trim. Before slicing, pop it in the freezer for 1 to 2 hours; it will be much easier to cut.
The marinade contains soy sauce, brown sugar, Worcestershire sauce, seasoning, and unseasoned meat tenderizer. Meat tenderizer contains bromelain, an enzyme that breaks down meat tissue. You can find it in the spice section of your supermarket (I use McCormick).
Step-by-Step Instructions
1. Slice the Meat
Slice the meat between 1/8 and 1/4 inch thick with the grain. If the roast is too thick to slice easily, cut it in half horizontally before slicing.
2. Make the Marinade
In a medium bowl, combine the brown sugar, soy sauce, Worcestershire sauce, smoked paprika, meat tenderizer, black pepper, red pepper flakes, onion powder, and garlic powder.
Whisk until evenly combined and the sugar is dissolved.
3. Marinate the Beef
Add the meat to the marinade and toss until all of the pieces are evenly coated. Cover with plastic wrap (or transfer to a large ziplock bag) and marinate in the refrigerator for at least 12 hours or overnight. Toss the meat (or flip the bag) once or twice to be sure the meat marinates evenly.
4. Dry Out The Meat
Line two baking sheets with aluminum foil for easy clean-up. Place a wire rack over each pan. Preheat the oven to 175°F and set two oven racks in the centermost positions.
Arrange the marinated meat on the wire racks in a single layer.
Bake, rotating the pans from front to back and top to bottom midway through, until the meat is dried out, 3 to 4 hours. To determine if the jerky is thoroughly dried out, take a piece out of the oven and let it cool to room temperature. It should be dry to the touch, leather-like in appearance, and chewy but still somewhat tender.
Store the jerky inside an airtight plastic container, Ziploc bag, or airtight glass jars. Properly dried jerky will keep at room temperature for about one week.
video tutorial
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The Best Homemade Beef Jerky Recipe
This is the best homemade beef jerky recipe, and it’s easy to make without any special equipment.
Ingredients
- One 3-pound eye of round roast (see note), trimmed of fat and silver skin
- 1 cup (packed) dark brown sugar
- 1 cup soy sauce
- 3 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
- 1 tablespoon smoked paprika
- 1 teaspoon unseasoned meat tenderizer (see note)
- 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
- 1 teaspoon red pepper flakes
- 1 teaspoon onion powder
- ½ teaspoon garlic powder
Instructions
- Slice the meat between ⅛ and ¼ inch thick with the grain. (If the roast is too thick to slice easily, cut it in half horizontally before slicing.)
- Make the marinade: In a medium bowl, combine the brown sugar, soy sauce, Worcestershire sauce, smoked paprika, meat tenderizer, black pepper, red pepper flakes, onion powder, and garlic powder. Whisk until evenly combined and the sugar is dissolved.
- Add the meat to the marinade and toss until all of the pieces are evenly coated. Cover with plastic wrap or transfer to a large ziplock bag and marinate in the refrigerator for at least 12 hours or overnight. Toss the meat (or flip the bag) once or twice to be sure the meat marinates evenly.
- Line two baking sheets with aluminum foil for easy clean-up. Place a wire rack over each pan. Preheat the oven to 175°F and set two oven racks in the centermost positions.
- Arrange the marinated meat on the wire racks in a single layer. Bake, rotating the pans from front to back and top to bottom midway through, until the meat is dried out, 3 to 4 hours. To determine if the jerky is thoroughly dried out, take a piece out of the oven and let it cool to room temperature. It should be dry to the touch, leather-like in appearance, and chewy but still somewhat tender.
- Store the jerky inside an airtight plastic container, Ziploc bag, or airtight glass jars. Properly dried jerky will keep at room temperature for about one week. Refrigerate or freeze for longer storage.
- Note: Pop the meat in the freezer for 1 to 2 hours before slicing; it will be easier to cut.
- Note: Meat tenderizer contains bromelain, an enzyme that breaks down meat tissue. You can find it in the spice section of your supermarket. (I use McCormick.)
Amazing… added cayenne pepper and some franks red hot and it’s perfect … a blend of sweet and spicy that my tongue wants more of
Anyone use a sugar sustitute like Stevia or the like? Would love this to be a Keto friendly, sugar-free recipe. As is, my family loves it!! Just looking for a sugar-free option.
What if u use a dehydrator
Hi Jacob, Surprisingly, I found that the jerky turned out much better (and more tender) when made in the oven as opposed to the dehydrator, so I’d recommend sticking with the oven.
I don’t have a dehydrator and my family loves it as is. I was just curious if there was a substitute anyone used in place of the sugar. As I am eating a keto diet, I may do some experimenting.
I too do Keto for over a year now and I commend you on your choice. I’ve never been healthier in my life. I have made jerky every month since I started Keto and I use Swerve brown sugar. It’s erythritol and the lowest sugar alcohol on the glycemic index at just a 1, and it is a byproduct of sugar itself. It also does not have the digestive upset so common with all the other sugar alcohols. I use it in everything, including cookies and barbecue sauces too. I’m finding it a wonderful substitute. I vacuum seal my jerky into individual serving packages then freeze to get the best shelf life. I take out a few packages at a time and keep them ready in the fridge, but it thaws fast and sometimes it’s kinda yummy half frozen too. Therefore I don’t really have preservation concerns to worry about. If I ever needed to take it somewhere like on a hike or camping, etc, it will be shelf stable for that time period since I remove what I want to bring directly from the freezer before going.
Sugar has preservative and moisture retaining qualities that substitutes don’t have. You may get the same flavor, but texture and shelf life may well suffer.
I hear people all the time talk about how they want to cure meat but want to do it low-sodium or low-sugar. Curing and preserving meats is a science. It’s the osmotic pressure between the brining solution and the cells that cause the actual curing/preservation to take place. If you lower or change the salt and/or sugar in a solution, you are changing the osmotic pressures and the cure may well not be safe or effective.
If you use sugar substitutes, I would refrigerate the finished jerky and consume it relatively quickly.
Just slaughtered and butchered our annual grass only fed steer: 6 trials of recipes later, this one is hands down is the best we have had. Super mild spicy with our peppers, so we are adding about double to get a medium/hot spice effect. Done on racks in a propane smoker/oven with oak chips. We use every cut on the animal except rib eye in jerky, we cut against and/or with grain depending on cut, it all works. I doubled the amount of meat in the recipe per amount of marinade, no problem there, and we make 30+ lbs. Love the sugar effect. No tenderizers used/needed for us. Nice job, Chef!
I have tried many different Recipes for jerky and this one the the BEST!!!! the only changes that I did was to give it more of a kick I added 3 TABLE spoons of peppers, Swapped the powered garlic with 1 Table spoon of minced garlic and 1 Table spoon of Siracha. Spend a few bones and get a dehydrator and you will have the most awesome jerky ever!
I made this as directed with eye round. The flavor was excellent, but it was so tough, I fed it to my dogs.
Will try again with another cut of beef, so disappointed 😞.
This is a great guide, thank you! I didn’t have any tenderizer but it’s made from pineapple or papaya extract so I blended up frozen pineapple with the marinade because that’s what I had on hand. You could also use pineapple juice. I also added fresh grated ginger because it is supposed to help tenderize. I followed some of the other suggestions in the comments (vinegar pre soak, adding apple cider vinegar to the marinade, add sriracha) and the jerky turned out great! It’s not tough, maybe a little crunchier than I would like though. It’s great overall, my family loves it. I will definitely be saving this for future use! Thanks for sharing!
Why did you say commercial jerky from the store and on the road is usually more tender?? I find the jerky I buy from the store and on the road is so CHEWY HARD AND ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE TO EAT!! That’s why I looked for a tender jerky recipe! I’m going to try your recipe but if it turns out like the hard chewy jerky from the store I WILL LET YOU KNOW IF I WAS DISAPPOINTED!!
Hi Rob, I guess it depends on the jerky. Certain brand are more tender than others. That said, I hope you enjoy the recipe! 🙂
Can anyone figure out the nutritional breakdown of it? Made it last night and is delicious! Just dont know how much I can have
Tenderness is related to how dry you make it even more than the cur of meat. You can dry it a little less so that it is chewy but not hard. You should keep it refrigerated if you do. I make this recipe with “London Broil” which is usually round steak. I also use regular paprika as I don’t like a smoke flavor. I put it in my 40 year old dehydrator over night and love it.
Yery easy and delicious!!
Simple, yet very tasty recipe. Used with beef. Should also be good with venison. Thank you!
Excellent recipe! I used venison eye of round and gluten free soy sauce. I sliced it thinner than suggested, but I like the thicker pieces better, so I’ll change that next time. Flavor is spot on. Delicious and easy! Thank you for this one!
I’ve always wanted to try making beef jerky and I used your recipe as my first attempt. It turned out so perfectly! Fantastic recipe!
Wonderful results …cant wait to make another batch. Very easy and simple to yield such a delicious snack.