Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (2024)

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Ground beef jerky is easy to make and less expensive than store-bought jerky. You can make it with a dehydrator or dry it in the oven. Use your choice of ground meat – lean beef or venison – whichever you have available.

Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (1)

Myjerky gun came with seasoning and cure packets. Unfortunately, these were full of ingredients I'm trying to avoid in commercial jerkies (MSG, hydrolyzed soy protein, nitrates, etc.). (Those little packets are expensive, too, if you purchase them separately.)

This recipe uses soy sauce and sea salt for preserving instead of curing salt. It doesn't contain nitrites or nitrates.

Do you need a jerky gun to make jerky with ground beef? Nope! You can make jerky without a dehydrator or a jerky gun, but the jerky gun is handy and entertaining.

We have a basic Nesco jerky gun. For those who want to make big batches of jerky, try the LEM jerky cannon.

Why Use Ground Beef for Homemade Jerky Instead of Beef Strips?

I prefer ground beef jerky for three main reasons:

  1. It's cheaper. I can get ground beef or venison much cheaper than a roast.
  2. It's easier to make. Working the jerky gun or rolling the meat out thinly goes quickly. Wrestling to cut strips out of a piece of meat with bone and connective tissue intact is tough.
  3. It's easier to chew. Eating a piece of regular muscle jerky can sometimes be like chewing on an old shoe, especially when there's a lot of connective tissue. Ground beef jerky has the meaty, salty jerky taste we love, without getting stuck in your teeth.

This recipe is adapted fromMary Bell's Complete Dehydrator Cookbook – “All American Marinated Beef Jerky”. Mary makes hers with beef strips, but it worked well as a ground beef jerky recipe, too.

Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (2)

How to Reduce Sodium in Beef Jerky

For the soy sauce,I prefer grain free organic tamari. Most US non-organic soy is genetically modified, and may have glyphosate residue. Non-organic wheat may be sprayed with glyphosate prior to harvest.

I use San-J, which has 940 mg of sodium per tablespoon. In comparison, La Choy has 1330 mg. A tablespoon of regular table salt has 6976 mg of sodium(2325 mg per teaspoon).

If you use a saltier soy sauce, it's easy to overdo the salt in the recipe. Stick with a soy sauce that has less sodium. If you want to skip the teaspoon of sea salt, store the finished jerky in the fridge or freezer. Salt is a preservative.

If your finished jerky is still too salty, boil it with some potatoes to draw off the salt, then dry it again. You'll need to store the de-salted jerky in the refrigerator or freezer.

Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup soy sauce
  • 1 teaspoon liquid smoke
  • 1/2 teaspoon onion powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon garlic powderor 1 teaspoon mincedgarlic
  • 1 teaspoon sea salt
  • 1 pound lean ground beef or venison, at least 93% lean

Directions

In a glass bowl, combine all ingredients and let sit (refrigerated) for at least two hours. I mixed this up at bedtime and let it sit until after lunch the next day, and it wasn't too strong.

Load the mixture in the jerky gun and use the gun to load your dehydrator trays. I do recommend using the mesh inserts or fruit leather traysfor your dehydrator. This mixture is fairly softbecause of the liquid ingredients, which makes it easier to fire through the gun.

If you don't have a jerky gun, use a rolling pin to roll the mixture out very thinly (1/8 inch thick). Score lines to form long strips of jerky.

Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (3)

Dry at 145° – 165°F (63° – 74° C) for 4 to 12 hours. The jerky should be hard but still flexible and contain no pockets of moisture. For extra safety, heat finished jerky in a 275° F (135° C) oven for 10 minutes.

Jerky will last in an airtight container at room temperature for 1 – 2 months. For longer storage, place in an airtight container in the refrigerator or freezer. Vacuum sealing extends shelf life.

How Much Homemade Jerky Do You Get from One Pound of Raw Meat?

The weight of the jerky decreases by about two-thirds during the drying time. So for every pound of raw meat you use, you'll get around one-third pound of finished homemade jerky.

How Can I Be SureMy Jerky is Safe to Eat?

The University of Wisconsin suggests the following two optionsfor safe jerky making at home:

  1. Dry meat at 145° – 155°F for at least 4 hours followed by heating in a preheated 275°F oven for 10 minutes. Drying meat at a temperature below 145°F produces a product that looks done before it is heated enough to destroy pathogens, and before it has lost enough moisture to be shelf-stable.

    Only a few dehydrators currently on the market will maintain the necessary temperature of 145° – 155°F. The Gardenmaster by Nesco/American Harvest and the Excalibur are two such units.

    Each of these units has a large heating element, strong air flow, and adjustable temperature setting. Dry for at least 4 hours (6 hours is preferable) and remove jerky from the dehydrator.

    Place dried strips on a baking sheet, close together but not touching or overlapping. Heat in a pre-heated 275°F oven for 10 minutes to an internal temperature of 160°F. Strips thicker than ¼” (when raw) may require longer to reach 160°F.

    In our research, strips removed from the oven were sizzling hot. Remove oven-heated samples from the oven, cool to room temperature, and package. Always include the post‐drying oven‐heating treatment as a safety precaution.


  2. Steam or roast meat strips in marinade to an internal temperature of 160°F before drying. Heat poultry to 165°F (internal temperature) before drying. The USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline currently recommends this method for making safe jerky.

    The pre‐heating step assures that any bacteria present will be destroyed before drying. This allows a lower dehydrator temperature (130° to 140°F) to be used. After boiling, dehydrate meat for 4 to 6 hours. No post-dehydration oven-heating is necessary.

    Since it can be impossible to accurately measure the internal temperature of a thin strip of meat, consumers can boil meat in marinade (or water) for 5 minutes before drying. Unfortunately, this USDA recommended method produces a dried, crumbly product. It would be judged inferior by Wisconsin standards for chewy, flexible jerky.

Holding meat above 145°F for over an hour pasteurizes the meat. Pathogens start dying at temperatures above 130°F, but the lower the temp, the longer they take to kill.

We get our beef or venison from a single animal, so I use the dehydrator above 145°F and call it good. If you had ground beef from unknown animals, I'd suggest some time in the oven to finish it.

Do I Need a Dehydrator to Make Jerky?

It's possible to make jerky without a dehydrator. Here's how to make jerky in the oven.

Roll out the jerky on a piece of parchment paper and place it on a baking sheet (or use a jerky gun). Dry the homemade jerky at your oven's lowest temperature with the door slightly open for 2 hours. Our oven's minimum temperature is 170°F (77°C).

Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (4)

Flip the jerky and rotate the baking sheet. Bake for 1-2 hours more, until jerky is dry but flexible. Oven drying jerky shrinks it up faster and plumper, and creates more of a salty crust.

Using the Excalibur Dehydrator and Jerky Gun

With the Excalibur dehydrator, a batch of jerky is done in about 4-6 hours, depending on the humidity level. Drying overnight gets the jerky a little too dry for my taste. It's still good, but a little too crumbly.

The last time we made jerky, my eldest mixed up the jerky marinade and meat the evening before drying. My youngest loaded up the Excalibur the next morning.

Make sure to pack the ground meat tightly into the tube to avoid air pockets. The jerky gun shoots strips about an inch wide when you use the “double barrel” attachment. The gun also has option of a single wide strip or a tube shape.

Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (5)

We made wide strips and scored them with a thin spatula. This makes them easier to break apart once dry. (You can use this same scoring technique for jerky made with a rolling pin.)

Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (6)
Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (7)

This has become one of my favorite snack foods since we've been working to reduce our carbohydrate and grain intake. It's relatively quick and easy to make, and the gun was pretty inexpensive.

Nesco Jumbo Works Beef Jerky kit, 1 Count (Pack of 1), Red

Wrights Liquid Smoke, Hickory and Applewood, 3.5 Oz (Pack of 2) - with Make Your Day Mini Spatula or Basting Brush

LEM Products Jerky Cannon with Nozzles and Brush, Backwoods Seasonings, Anodized Aluminum and Stainless Steel

Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (8)

Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (9)

Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (10)

$19.99

$12.49

$49.99

Nesco Jumbo Works Beef Jerky kit, 1 Count (Pack of 1), Red

Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (11)

$19.99

Wrights Liquid Smoke, Hickory and Applewood, 3.5 Oz (Pack of 2) - with Make Your Day Mini Spatula or Basting Brush

Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (12)

$12.49

LEM Products Jerky Cannon with Nozzles and Brush, Backwoods Seasonings, Anodized Aluminum and Stainless Steel

Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (13)

$49.99

Homemade Jerky without Soy Sauce (Gluten Free, Soy Free Option)

For those who avoid soy and/or gluten, substitute liquid coconut aminos for the soy sauce. Coconut aminos have a similar flavor profile, and are gluten free and soy free.

Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (14)

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Beef Jerky Recipe with Ground Beef

Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (15)

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5 from 1 review

Easy and economical jerky recipe that's great for lean beef or venison.

  • Author: Laurie Neverman
  • Prep Time: 10 minutes
  • Drying Time: 4 hours
  • Total Time: 4 hours 10 minutes

Ingredients

UnitsScale

  • 1/2 cup soy sauce
  • 1 teaspoon liquid smoke
  • 1/2 teaspoon onion powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder or 1 teaspoon minced garlic
  • 1 teaspoon sea salt
  • 1 pound lean ground beef or venison, at least 93% lean

Instructions

  1. In a glass bowl, combine all ingredients and let sit (refrigerated) for at least two hours. I mixed this up at bedtime and let it sit until after lunch the next day, and it wasn’t too strong.
  2. Load the mixture in the jerky gun and use the gun to load your dehydrator trays. I do recommend using the mesh inserts or fruit leather trays for your dehydrator. This mixture is fairly soft because of the added liquid, which makes it easier to fire through the gun.
  3. If you don’t have a jerky gun, roll the mixture out very thinly (1/8 inch thick) and score lines where you would like the pieces to break apart.
  4. Dry at 145° – 165° F (63° – 74° C) for 4 to 12 hours, until jerky is hard but still flexible and contains no pockets of moisture. For extra safety, heat finished jerky in a 275° F (135° C) oven for 10 minutes.

For oven drying:

Roll out the jerky on a piece of parchment paper and place it on a baking sheet (or use a jerky gun). Dry the homemade jerky at your oven's lowest temperature with the door slightly open for 2 hours. Our oven's minimum temperature is 170°F (77°C).

Flip the jerky and rotate the baking sheet. Bake for 1-2 hours more, until jerky is dry but flexible. Oven drying jerky shrinks it up faster and plumper, and creates more of a salty crust.

Notes

Jerky will last in an airtight container at room temperature for 1 – 2 months. For longer storage, place in an airtight container in the refrigerator or freezer. Vacuum sealing extends shelf life.

Do you have a favorite jerky recipe? Have you tried making jerky with ground beef? Has anyone tried making jerky out of organ meats? I'd love to hear from you.

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Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (16)

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Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (17)

This article is written by Laurie Neverman. Laurie grew up in the kitchen, learning baking and home cooking from her momma. At age 15, she and her mom and two sisters created Irene’s Custom Cakes & Catering, which was her summer job through most of high school and college.

Last updated in 2024.

Easy Homemade Ground Beef Jerky Recipe (2024)

FAQs

How long does ground beef jerky take to dehydrate? ›

Place in a dehydrator and dry at 160°F for 3 hours or until ground jerky is dry when touched.

How much jerky does 1lb of ground beef make? ›

You can understand why, since processing jerky takes time, and a pound of meat only produces about 1/4-pound of finished jerky. However, it really is a manageable process that you can do at home.

Do you need curing salt for ground beef jerky? ›

Yes, beef jerky can be made without curing salt. As long as beef jerky has been properly cooked and dried, it does not require the use of a jerky cure.

What is the best meat to grind for beef jerky? ›

Eye of Round: It is a large, primal cut consisting of the rump and the rear leg of a cow. It is ideal for beef jerky because it has a lot of meat on it. This cut has a lot of connective tissues and cartilage with very little fat marbling. Since the grain runs lengthwise, you can easily cut it into strips.

Do you have to cook ground beef before dehydrating? ›

Cooking meat before dehydrating is the surest way to eliminate any harmful bacteria. You can skip the pre-drying cooking step, however, as long as you ensure proper dehydrating practices. Heating meat to an internal temperature of 160°F and poultry to 165°F kills any harmful bacteria and pathogens of concern.

Can you dehydrate raw ground beef? ›

Spread small pieces of ground beef on dehydrator trays with Excalibur Paraflexx® sheets under the mesh sheets. The nonstick sheets will catch any small pieces of dried beef that fall through the mesh. With Nesco Dehydrators, use the clean-a-screen or fruit-roll trays. Dry at 145°F (63°C) for approximately six hours.

Is ground beef jerky good? ›

Many people love the tender consistency of jerky made from ground beef compared to the firmer texture of whole-muscle jerky. Our take on ground beef jerky is our Beef Bites. Even though ground beef jerky is great, many brands don't produce it, and thus customers aren't aware of it.

Is it cheaper to make your own beef jerky? ›

Making your own beef jerky at home is not only incredibly simple, but it is also cheaper than buying quality store-bought jerky. Plus, you'll be able to control all the ingredients that go into making it; no weird stabilizers or unpronounceable additives.

What is the best salt for making jerky? ›

Curing salt can be Prague powder #1 or Prague powder #2. Choose the first one for wet-curing meats which you wish to cook before eating. It has 6.25% sodium nitrite to keep your meat preserved by dehydrating it and killing germs.

How do you know when ground beef jerky is done? ›

The jerky should bend and eventually break, but not snap off. If you're unable to break the jerky into two pieces, and it's still rubbery, that means it needs more time. If the jerky snaps into two pieces with bending, it's most likely over-dried. Pro Tip: Finished jerky should be like a green tree branch.

What happens if you use too much cure in jerky? ›

Too much cure will make the jerky salty. How long did you let it cure for? Recommended curing time is 24 hours for stripped meat and 12 hours for ground meat. Letting it cure too long will make it too salty as well.

What is a substitute for curing salt? ›

Luckily, there are several substitutes that you can use instead of curing salt:
  • Sea Salt: Sea salt contains natural nitrates that can help preserve meat, but it is less potent than curing salt. ...
  • Celery Juice or Powder: Celery juice or powder contains natural nitrates that can be used to preserve meat.
Mar 20, 2023

What is the best thickness for homemade beef jerky? ›

Consistent thickness is the name of the game when it comes to jerky slicing. Slicing your jerky evenly will ensure that each piece cooks and dries at the same rate. This prevents over-drying and under-drying. We recommend slicing meat for jerky at a thickness between 1/8" and 1/4" with the perfect thickness at 3/16”.

Why is beef jerky so expensive? ›

Even so, beef jerky is expensive. Beef jerky is so expensive because it uses a lot of quality meat to make just a little bit of jerky, the process takes resources and employees' time, and beef jerky producers often buy from the beef industry and the price of beef can be expensive.

What is the toughest meat for jerky? ›

Bottom round

If you want to make beef jerky with a rough and rugged texture, bottom round is the cut of meat you should select. Compared to the previously mentioned top round, this cut is quite a bit tougher but it's even more flavorful.

How do you know when ground jerky is done in a dehydrator? ›

The jerky should have a dry, leathery appearance. Any intramuscular fat should be rendered and cooked out. Any residual fat should have a deep, rich, golden brown color. White or ivory colored fat is a sign the jerky still needs more time.

How do you know when jerky is fully dehydrated? ›

When bent, an adequately dry jerky does not break in half but should crack instead. The dry strip should exhibit a firm, flexible form that can easily bend completely back on itself without snapping. Dried jerky should not be crumbly but instead displays a leathery texture that tastes palatably chewy.

How long to dehydrate ground jerky at 155? ›

Dehydrate at 155 degrees for about four hours. After four hours, check it every half hour. The drying timing is dependent upon several variables. One is how much jerky meat you place into the dehydrator (the more you put in, the longer it will all take to dry).

Is 3 hours enough for beef jerky? ›

Dry Out The Meat

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.

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