Theada's Beef Jerky
Submitted by roy
Theada’s beef jerky uses an old-school boil-and-bake method with a salt-vinegar brine, finished with Liquid Smoke and A-1 sauce. A pantry-friendly homemade jerky that skips the dehydrator.
YIELD
1 batchPREP
10 minCOOK
2 hrsREADY
2 hrsTheada’s beef jerky takes the no-dehydrator route, leaning on a quick boil in salty vinegared water to both season and pasteurize the strips before they finish drying in a low oven. It’s a deeply old-school approach passed down in homes that didn’t have specialty equipment, and it produces a chewy, savory jerky with a vinegar-tang backbone.
The propped-open oven door is the key step. It lets the steam escape so the meat actually dries instead of slow-roasting in its own moisture. A finishing brush of Liquid Smoke and A-1 sauce stands in for the smoke ring you’d get off real hardwood and adds the umami punch this recipe needs.
Pro Tips
- Slice the meat against the grain for tender bites or with the grain for the chewier, more traditional pull. Lean cuts like top round or eye of round work best.
- Trim every visible bit of fat. Fat doesn’t dry out and turns rancid quickly in storage, ruining a batch.
- Pat the strips genuinely dry after the boil. Damp meat steams in the oven instead of drying.
- Set the oven low, around 175°F (80°C). Higher and the outside crusts before the inside dehydrates.
Variations
- Stir a tablespoon of brown sugar and red pepper flakes into the brine for a sweet-heat profile.
- Swap the A-1 finish for a brush of teriyaki or Worcestershire sauce.
- Add a teaspoon of garlic powder and onion powder to the brine for a more seasoned, snack-style jerky.
Ingredients
Directions
Cut meat into strips.
Remove all fat.
Boil approximately 6 minutes.
Roll moisture from meat. Put on cookie sheet in middle of oven for 1 to 2 hours.
Leave oven door cracked to let moisture out.
Coat with Liquid Smoke and A-1 Sauce. Store in airtight jar.
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