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Ground Beef Jerky Recipe

Katie Wells Avatar

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Ground Beef Jerky Recipe
Wellness Mama » Blog » Recipes » Beef Recipes » Ground Beef Jerky Recipe

My kids really like beef jerky, and actually I do too. For a long time, we never had it in the house because a) it’s expensive and b) unless its full of sugars and nitrates, it is really expensive!

When a road trip left me desperate for some kind of portable protein, I tried an idea a friend had recommended: making jerky from ground beef. It was surprisingly easy, much cheaper, and the kids loved it. I now keep this on hand for daily snacks and make big batches for trips.

I’ve also found that ground venison and other game meats can be prepared this way and are excellent! Usually, we just use grass fed beef though.

Some Notes:

The jerky will harden up more after taking it out, so don’t let it get too dry in the oven. It also shrinks a lot as the moisture leaves it, so make more than you think you will need. My kids actually like this dipped in guacamole or salsa, but we also eat it plain or with raw cheese slices.

Ground Beef Jerky Recipe

Ground Beef Jerky Recipe

Make healthy, nitrate-free, beef jerky at home with ground beef. Easily customize the flavor with natural spices…
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 8 hours
Total Time 8 hours 10 minutes
Calories 161kcal
Author Katie Wells

Servings

8 servings

Ingredients

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to its lowest setting. On my oven this is 170°F.
  • Lightly rub olive oil over the bottom of a large baking sheet with a lip. (It is ok to use olive oil here because we aren’t heating to high temps!)
  • In a medium size bowl, mix together the ground meat with desired spices.
  • Using the bottom of a glass baking dish or a rolling pin, roll the meat evenly around the baking sheet to ¼ inch thickness. If it is too thick, use a second baking sheet.
  • Use a butter knife to lightly score the meat to make the sizes you want for the jerky. You can also skip this step and use kitchen scissors to cut into strips when it’s done.
  • Brush with coconut aminos or fermented soy sauce if desired and sprinkle with a little extra sea salt.
  • Place in the oven and cook for 8-12 hours or until hardened. It is a good idea to flip it once, but not necessary at all. I usually stick this in at night and it is ready to flip in the morning and done a few hours later.
  • Store at room temperature for up to a couple weeks, or keep in the freezer if you aren’t going to use it before then.
  • Enjoy!

Nutrition

Nutrition Facts
Ground Beef Jerky Recipe
Amount Per Serving (2 oz)
Calories 161 Calories from Fat 45
% Daily Value*
Fat 5g8%
Saturated Fat 2g13%
Cholesterol 70mg23%
Sodium 1031mg45%
Potassium 396mg11%
Carbohydrates 1g0%
Protein 24g48%
Calcium 10mg1%
Iron 2.7mg15%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Notes

You can easily mix up the flavors in this recipe with different spices. I’ve made a Mexican type flavor with cumin and cilantro; a Chinese variation with ginger and coconut aminos; and an Italian version with oregano, basil, marjoram, extra garlic, and pepper.
Make sure you use lean ground meat for best flavor and longest lasting jerky.

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Ever made jerky? Were you successful? Let me know below!

This ground beef jerky is easy to make and customize and is much cheaper to make than traditional jerky.

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

76 responses to “Ground Beef Jerky Recipe”

  1. Kristin Avatar

    Hi Katie, I just tried this recipe. It cooked in my oven at 170 for 12 hours, however it still seemed rather pink/red on the inside. I rolled the meat very thin and its definitely dry, but is this normal? I know a lot of jerky seems reddish, so I wasnt sure.

  2. sarah Avatar

    I mixed up the meat and put it on the baking sheet tonight, I’m gonna put it in the oven tomorrow morning. The lowest setting on my oven is 200, how long do you think I should cook it for? Also, wouldn’t the fat cook off of the ground beef and need to be drained?

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      With the beef I’ve used, it cooks so slow that the fat has never been a problem, but definitely drain it if it does collect. 200 should be fine, but I’d start watching carefully after a couple of hours…

  3. Julia Avatar

    I made this yesterday but m not sure I cooked it long enough. It was about 8 hrs. How do I know when it’s done? I’m afraid to store it at room temp if it’s not fully dried. It’s in the fridge now. Thanks for your help!

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      It should not bend easily when it’s fully done, and the inside shouldn’t look wet at all…

  4. Val Avatar

    I’ll go try ground beef jerky! It’s a lot less expensive then the steak i normally buy. LOL. my recipe is amazing. It’s base is soy sauce and add worchester sauce to taste. Then garlic, cinnamon, and pepper. Then pour it over and let it sit for like 12 hours and then dry it. Fantastic!

  5. Kam Avatar

    Will this technically work with “regular” ground beef? I haven’t been able to get grass-fed meats yet. Will it still store just as well?

    1. Peggysue Avatar
      Peggysue

      This works just as well with regular ground beef. My husband tried it and although it was a little bit greasy because of the fat content of the meat we used ( we bought 80/20) just to try this, it was delicious. Were in the market for some venison and bison that’s grass fed right now so we can make our snacks healthier.

  6. Cseibe Avatar

    I have been making this for years now, having figured it out by trial and error. I always pat it out by hand (easier than using a rolling pin) onto wax paper that I set directly onto the oven racks. You can also set the jerky/wax paper on a baking sheet if preferred. After an hour or less, when the surface is somewhat dry to the touch, I flip the sheet of jerky directly onto the oven rack and peel the wax paper off. It dries far more quickly with this method. I also open the door periodically to let out the moisture. Once dry, I cut it into strips for a portable protein snack or quick meal. My family loves it! I also make a variety of flavors, usually using 1 tsp salt per pound of meat, and 1.5 lbs per baking sheet. My oven has convection which I sometimes use, and also has an adjustment to calibrate the oven temperature, so I can reduce the temperature by 30* to make the temp. 140*. Hope this helps.

  7. Lillian Davenport Avatar
    Lillian Davenport

    wow, this is wonderful.. all the goodness of grass-fed and by-product free with the convenience of jerky! You’ve really demystified this process for me, thank you!

  8. Vanille Avatar

    Making this today with some elk meat that I had thawing. I hope it turns out well! 🙂 My hubby has a hard time finding healthy things to snack on since the office cupboard where he works is full of candy bars and, at the very best, rancid nuts. I hope this goes over well with him, cause it’d be nice to give him something to eat if he’s hungry.

    I made this with cumin, a lot of garlic, cayenne and coriander (and of course salt and pepper). It smelled SO good raw, Hopefully it tastes good cooked as well!

    Thanks for the recipe! If this turns out, I will be making it again and again!

  9. Jenna Sliker Avatar
    Jenna Sliker

    I have made jerky a lot from grass f’ed top round steaks usually. It is delicious, but a lot of work to cut thin slices. I have a food dehydrator and am going to try your recipe with it! Can’t wait! Thanks!

      1. suzette Avatar
        suzette

        Deer jerky works great! It has zero fat but lots of healthy protein and vitamins.
        try it.

  10. Sezno Avatar

    Thank you for your site. I search and search for recipes and always end up back here. You have everything!

  11. Dotty Avatar

    I’ve had good results making this in the dehydrator.  I usually make it with one pound at the time and add onion powder as well as garlic powder, about a half teaspoon or so of the onion powder, along with sea salt and a little other spice sprinkled in.  I form the pieces with my hands, first making a small ball usually, and try to make them fairly small and thin.  I put the dehydrator on 105 degrees or less for a few hours so that it’s not so hard and chewy.  I’ve found that you don’t really need the liners on the trays and it dries better without them.  Of course, it doesn’t last long, so I should probably be making bigger batches at one time and storing them in the frig.  I like the fact that they’re basically raw, so we get more of the enzymes, etc.

    1. Lauren Smallcomb Avatar
      Lauren Smallcomb

      what temp do you put it on for the majority of the time?? 105 at the end or the whole time??

  12. Bree Avatar

    Thank you! I’ve been putting this off, thinking I needed some way to extrude the meat (and didn’t want to go buy something to do that). This is great.  Here’s a great ingredient to try: smoked paprika.  Awesomely smoky.  

    1. Zam Avatar

      Actually just an hour ago I used the rolling pin method to prepare ground beef for jerky. I still want a jerky gun however, it would make my job much easier.

      1. AJ Avatar

        would a manual trigger or electric cookie press work with one of the flat dies? that would make long strips and it becomes a multitasker vs. a one use wonder 😉 This sounds interesting. I made jerky for my kids from a roast that I thin sliced and dried in my dehydrator. Would a dehydrator work for this as well? I’m not sure what the max temp is (Excalibur) but probably up around 150 or so.

          1. Sandra Avatar

            I never cook the roast before dehydrating my beef jerky. I slice it, then marinate overnight with the spices and aminos in the frig. Spread it on the dehydrator racks and season with different things like lemon pepper, or cayenne and Himalayan salt, garlic salt, etc. The dehydrator is basically “cooking” the meat at a low temp.

  13. Timon Avatar

    I make pemmican from 96/4 ground beef (I don’t have easy access to grass-fed beef): I dry the beef, put it in a blender and grind it down into almost a powder. I weigh the dried beef and add about 40% BY WEIGHT of grass-fed tallow, salt to taste, and chipotle chili powder. It keeps longer than jerky. (I read an article several years ago some archeologists found pemmican in a cave in France and decided the pemmican was about 100 years old and was still a viable product.) Native Americans would add various berries and such to theirs.

    1. Joel Regen Avatar
      Joel Regen

      how’s it taste? I just made some pemmican from ground up home-made jerky and tallow, 50/50 by weight. Kinda hard to get down. Needed something to make the tallow not taste like tallow.

      1. Marie_S Avatar

        I made my pemmican and added dried blueberries and coconut oil as I didn’t have tallow. It’s delicious, the kids even eat it like candy.

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      They are similar to soy sauce, but fermented from coconut instead. I
      can’t find them locally where I am, but there are available several
      places online… just do a search

    2. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      They are similar to soy sauce, but fermented from coconut instead. I
      can’t find them locally where I am, but there are available several
      places online… just do a search

  14. Todd Dosenberry Avatar
    Todd Dosenberry

    Is it best to use 2-3 lbs of ground beef or will 1 lb work? I ask because I have 1 lb. thawed right now. Thanks!

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      One pound would work. I’ve always just made it in bigger amounts
      because it takes so long.

  15. lee shu-han Avatar
    lee shu-han

    this sounds like such a great idea!! I will definitly be trying this out. Must this be refrigerated and how long can they keep?

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      Doesn’t need to be refrigerated unless it will take you longer than a
      week or two to eat it. If it will, just keep in the fridge for up to
      4 weeks and the freezer indefinitely.

  16. Thana Avatar

    I’m curious about the texture. Is it very tough? Chewy? Not that I know that much about regular beef jerky, but how is it different?

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      It is a little easier to chew than regular beef jerky, though if it
      cooks too long, it can get a little harder. It isn’t tough, but hard
      enough to seem like jerky.

  17. Todd Dosenberry Avatar
    Todd Dosenberry

    Wow!!!!! I have been wanting to make my own homemade beef jerky for months. You just made that more possible then ever. I new knew it could be so simple! I am actually thawing a lb. of ground beef as I type this…. I think I might make some beef jerky with it. THANK YOU!!

  18. Erin Avatar

    I’ve been looking for something like this! I’m so impatient with cutting meat for homemade jerky. This looks like the solution!

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