Non-Period Jerky Recipes

I made three different types of jerky for the
Esperanza Tourney II, October 01, 2000.
The fighters were heard to say, "Oh boy, jerky!"


CHIPOTLE BEEF JERKY
A recipe from: Master Adamantius

2-3 pounds lean beef roast, trimmed of all fat (I usually use eye round)
One 7-ounce can chipotle peppers in adobo sauce (Goya, La Morena, any of several brands exist)
Additional garlic (there's some in the sauce) optional
1/2 - 1 tsp salt
~1 Tbs sugar

Slice meat along the grain less than 1/8 inch thick. I usually cut the roast into four lengthwise quarters along the grain, semi-freeze the quarters, then slice them, again, along the grain, into thin strips. If you want the pieces smaller, you can cut the roast in half first, across its "waistline", so your strips are shorter.

Puree the peppers and sauce in a food processor. Leave it slightly coarse (unless you prefer it that way, but too smooth is wimpy, IMO) Mix the beef slices by hand with the puree and the other ingredients. Leave to sit for an hour, then dry.

What I have done with some success is set this up at about 10PM, string the strips on bamboo skewers at 11PM, allowing them to hang by one end of each slice from the skewers, without overcrowding or touching, then lay the skewers across the oven racks, with the beef hanging down between the grid bars of the racks. A cookie sheet underneath catches the drips, and I've found that this makes the best use of the oven space, with room for more jerky without crowding or touching. You may need to slide the skewers around, or the meat on the skewers, to get all the meat to hang straight down, but it gets a lot of meat in the oven without doing anything too heinous to the oven racks.

I usually dry this in a gas oven (Gott sei dank for the New Old Oven with a pilot light; I cooked for ten years with one of those spark-plug ovens and it was vastly inferior). Put the beef in a cold oven, heat it to about 200 degrees F. for just long enough for it to light and start to warm, then lower to 175 or so, maybe 150, and leave overnight with the door cracked open an inch or so. Go to bed and wake up in the morning and you have jerky (provided you've sliced it thin enough and it isn't unbelievably humid). Allow to cool completely before packing in ziplocs or other airtight container. Laugh hysterically at the price of jerky in the stores.
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TERIYAKI JERKY
A Recipe from: Lady Ariann

2- lbs of lean beef roast
1/2 cup soy sauce
3 Tbs mirin (rice wine vinegar)
3 Tbs brown sugar

Semi-freeze the meat. Trim off the fat. Slice into 1/4 inch slices about 6 inches long. Mix the other ingredients in a bowl until the sugar is dissolved. Add the meat, pushing it below the surface of the liquid. Water may be added to cover the meat. Marinate for 1-2 hours.

Impale the strips on bamboo skewers and hang in an oven, at 175 F, overnight or for eight hours. In the morning, your jerky is ready to go to fighter practice, or wherever.
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LEMON GINGER JERKY
A Recipe from: Lady Serian

2-3 lbs meat cut into even thin slices, clear of all fat

add lemon juice to a little water and make sure marinade covers the meat

add ginger to taste

put all the meat into a bowl, make sure the ginger is mixed in well.

refrigerate and marinate for 8-12 hours

dehydrate
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