What is Beef Jerky?
Beef Jerky is a shelf-stable snack made from lean beef cut into thin strips, marinated in a salt-and-spice mixture, and slowly dried at low temperature until the moisture content drops below 25%. The resulting product is chewy, intensely flavored, and rich in protein, with a long shelf life that requires no refrigeration. The technique has roots in indigenous North and South American food preservation, where dried meat called charqui sustained Andean peoples and was later adopted and adapted by European settlers across the continent.
Popular Recipes and Regional Variations
The classic American beef jerky uses lean cuts marinated in soy sauce, Worcestershire, brown sugar, garlic, and black pepper, then dried in a dehydrator or low oven for 4–8 hours. Teriyaki jerky emphasizes Japanese-influenced sweet-soy flavors with mirin and ginger. Peppered jerky features a heavy crust of cracked black pepper. Sweet and spicy versions incorporate brown sugar with cayenne or chipotle for layered heat.
The South American Charqui is the technique’s ancestor — sun-dried strips of beef, llama, or alpaca cured only with salt, originating in Inca civilization and still produced in Andean regions today. South African Biltong is a related air-dried beef product that uses vinegar and coriander seed in addition to salt, dried at room temperature for 4–7 days rather than in heated dehydrators. The Mongolian Borts is air-dried beef strips typically reconstituted in soup rather than eaten dry.
Modern variations include turkey jerky, lower in fat and calories; salmon jerky, drier and saltier with omega-3 benefits; and vegan jerky made from seitan, mushrooms, or soy curls flavored with smoke and spices to mimic the texture of beef. Premium artisan brands have produced wagyu jerky, bison jerky, and elk jerky, while gas-station industrial jerky remains the dominant form by volume in the United States, where annual sales exceed $1.5 billion.
Preparation Technology
Choose 1 kg of lean beef with under 5% fat content — top round, eye of round, sirloin tip, or flank steak. Fat does not dehydrate properly and goes rancid during storage; trim all visible fat thoroughly before slicing. Partially freeze the meat for 1 hour to firm it up, then slice into strips 4–5 mm thick, cutting either with the grain (chewy) or against (tender). Consistent thickness is essential for even drying.
Prepare the marinade by combining 120 ml soy sauce, 60 ml Worcestershire sauce, 50 g brown sugar, 1 tablespoon liquid smoke (optional), 4 minced garlic cloves, 2 teaspoons coarse black pepper, 1 teaspoon onion powder, 1 teaspoon paprika, ½ teaspoon ground ginger, and 1 teaspoon pink curing salt (#1, sodium nitrite) for safety against botulism during the long low-temperature drying process. Whisk thoroughly until sugar dissolves.
Place beef strips in a shallow dish or zip-top bag, pour marinade over to coat all surfaces, and refrigerate at 4°C for 12–24 hours. Longer marination intensifies flavor and improves preservation through deeper salt penetration but should not exceed 36 hours, beyond which the meat texture becomes overly cured and rubbery. Massage the bag every few hours to redistribute marinade.
Drain the strips on paper towels for 10 minutes; do not rinse. Pat tops dry but leave seasoning crust intact. Arrange strips in a single layer on dehydrator trays or oven racks lined with foil, leaving space between pieces for air circulation. Dry at 70°C for 4–6 hours, rotating trays once at the halfway point. Test doneness by bending a strip — properly dried jerky cracks at the bend but does not break in two; it should feel dry but pliable. Cool completely before storing in airtight containers; refrigerated jerky lasts 1–2 months, frozen 6–12 months.
Tips and Common Mistakes
Drying at temperatures below 65°C creates a food safety risk because pathogenic bacteria like Salmonella and E. coli can survive extended drying at lower temperatures. The USDA recommends pre-heating meat to 71°C internal before drying, or maintaining the dehydrator at 70°C minimum. Pink curing salt provides additional protection by suppressing Clostridium botulinum spores during the dehydration window when moisture and warmth combine.
Slicing inconsistently produces some pieces that are over-dried and brittle while others remain dangerously underdried in the center. Use a sharp knife and a cutting guide, or have a butcher slice the partially frozen meat on a deli slicer for perfectly uniform 4–5 mm thickness. Test multiple pieces from different parts of the dehydrator at the bend test, since hot spots can dry some sections faster than others.
Storing finished jerky while still warm or in containers without moisture absorbers traps residual humidity and encourages mold growth within days. Cool jerky completely on a wire rack for 1 hour before packaging. Use vacuum-sealed bags or jars with oxygen absorbers and silica gel packets for long-term storage. Refrigerated jerky lasts 1–2 months; freezing extends shelf life to 6–12 months without flavor degradation.
History and Cultural Significance
Beef jerky traces its lineage to charqui, the dried llama and alpaca meat preserved by the Incas in the Andean highlands at least 1,000 years ago. According to Wikipedia’s account of jerky, the Quechua word “ch’arki” entered Spanish as “charqui” and eventually English as “jerky” through contact between Spanish colonizers and indigenous Andean peoples in the 16th century. The technique spread northward through Spanish colonial trade and was adapted by North American indigenous nations using bison, deer, and elk.
European settlers in the American West adopted jerky as a cornerstone provision for long overland journeys, military campaigns, and frontier subsistence, where the meat’s lightweight, calorie-dense, shelf-stable qualities made it indispensable. Industrial jerky production began in the United States in the early 20th century, with brands like Pemmican (founded 1928) and Slim Jim (founded 1929) bringing standardized commercial jerky to gas stations and grocery stores nationwide.
Today beef jerky is a defining American snack food and a major export category, with brands such as Jack Link’s, Oberto, and Krave dominating retail shelves. The product has gained international visibility through extreme sports sponsorships, low-carb diet trends, and Paleo-style nutrition movements that emphasize jerky as a clean protein source. Artisan and craft jerky producers have proliferated since the 2010s, offering grass-fed, organic, and exotic-protein versions at premium price points alongside the inexpensive industrial product.