Super Furry Jerky

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Tenderfoot
Jul 28, 2005
65
0
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I recently made some beef jerkey, using the following method:

Sliced the beef thinly,
Sprinkled on some salt,
Hung it on a 'washing line' to dry in the sun for 10 hours until the meat was deep brown and dry.
Whilst drying, I smoked it using a fire with added basil to keep the bugs away and flavour the meat.

It tasted great (although i should have used less salt) and I experienced no ill effects.

The problem was this.

I decided to keep some of the jerkey aside to see what bacterium was still present. After two days my jerkey got a bit furry.

Should I have dried it longer?
Has anyone else found this problem?

All the best.
 
10 hours is no way near long enough, the middle would have still been raw, in a dry climate it takes about a week to dry the sticks out properly. Try slicing the meat much thinner and using a warm dry environment.
 
You can force dry it in an oven I know this might sound like cheating but at least you know its cooked .There used to be a product called Big Buck Jerky Cure but I havent seen it for many years that worked well and tasted great. Smoking and salting should do the trick but you will have to experiment with the times.
 
here is a link to a recipe for beef jerky done by a chef on usa foodtv show "Good Eats"

you could find the episode on bittorrent. and since it isn't released on dvd yet you could download it legaly.

he uses a stack of furnace filters available at a DIY stores and a box fan to dry his jerky

any way heres the link
Jerky Recipe

Aimlessb
 

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