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.)
This is excellent. Really tasty! I was wondering though how to work out he calorie content of this. Any ideas?
So glad you like it! I didn’t include the nutritional info for this intentionally. It’s hard to know how much of the marinade gets soaked into the beef and I didn’t want to provide inaccurate information – sorry!
Those of you looking for a jerky recipe look no further. I did a batch of elk and a batch of beef. this makes the best jerky you’re going to find. I did mine in the smoker with 1 pan of chips. It really is the best.
FANTASTIC RECIPE… BEST ONE YET! Followed recipe exactly with two small additions to the marinade to satisfy my heat demands Added 1 tsp of liquid smoke (hickory), and 1 tsp of Tabasco sauce and I confess, I also went a little heavy on the crushed red peppers. 4 1/2 hrs for perfect texture.
Really was much better than any store bought, and at 80 years young, I’ve had a few.
👏🏻😋👏🏻😋👏🏻😋👏🏻😋👏🏻😋👏🏻😋👏🏻😋👏🏻😋👏🏻😋👏🏻😋👏🏻😋👏🏻😋👏🏻😋
I have made numerous beef jerkey recipies and this is the best so far. Everyone says to have foil for dripping, but prop your oven open a pinch with a wooden spoon or something to let the moisture escape. No foil needed and it cuts down on drying time a tone.
I’ve tried making this recipe 3 times now. The first time the slices were closer to 1/4 inch thick and the last 2 attempts I sliced them as thin as I possibly could and they still took way longer than 3 hours at 175. First batch took 9 hours. 2nd and 3rd batch took close to 8 hours. Flavor is delicious though!
Just a suggestion. I had a similar problem with a different recipe in the past and after checking my oven with a quality heat meter I found that it was not heating nowhere near what it was supposed to be on the dial. Best of luck.
This recipe is awesome.. sweet with a little heat. It will be my go to from now on.
This has become my go-to for beef jerky made in my air fryer (dehydrator mode). It’s so good. Thanks so much for the fantastic recipe. I sometimes add a bit of pineapple or pineapple/orange juice to the recipe, too. My son brings a bag of it to school and all of his friends beg him for some.
U need to flip jerky halfway through cooking ! This helped tremendously…
Simple recipe and the flavor is good. I would cut back on the brown sugar 3/4 to half, half will be good for me. Tastes vary. I used a flank steak as the grocer had no round roasts. Should have held out for the round or some other lean, lean roast. I used a raw onion as I had no onion powder I discovered. I also used my dehydrator as that is what I aways used to make jerky with in the past. Took 6 hours. Delicious.
This is the first jerky I’ve ever made. Did it yesterday. Turned out good. A little to spicey for my taste so cutting back on the hot pepper flakes. I read that in a lot of the other comments that it was too sweet. I used a cup of brown sugar but didn’t pack it. I’ll be making more jerky.