My homemade beef jerky recipe is way healthier & cheaper than the packaged stuff, & it's easy to make! All you need to do is put your oven on a low setting!
Ingredients in homemade beef jerky
I use top sirloin steak to make homemade beef jerky. It’s a pretty lean cut of meat already and we will be trimming away any fat that remains. It is juicy and tender and makes a fantastic choice not just for jerky, but also for grilling or cubing for skewers. I highly recommend buying grass-fed organic beef for the best flavour. I get all my grass-fed beef from Butcher Box.
For flavour, we will marinate the beef. For the marinade you will need:
- Soy sauce
- Worcheshire sauce
- Honey
- Hot sauce
- Black pepper
- Onion powder
- Garlic powder
- Paprika
- Red pepper flakes
How to make this recipe
It takes awhile to make homemade beef jerky. It’s an all day project, but thankfully, most of that time is hands-off and you'll be left with plenty of snacks for a few weeks – especially if you refrigerate it or freeze it. Here's how to make it:
- Freeze the steak for an hour. This makes it easier to cut into small strips.
- Slice it as thin as possible, trimming away any fat as you go.
- Mix together the marinade and let the steak sit in it for at least 30 minutes. Pour the marinade and the beef into a ziplock bag for easy marinating.
- Squeeze the beef dry on paper towels. Get it as dry as possible to keep it from dripping all over your oven.
- Thread the strips of steak on bamboo skewers. Leave about an inch of space between each strip so it dries evenly.
- Put one oven rack at the highest position possible. Hang the skewers of beef from this rack so the beef strips hang down. Put the other rack at the lowest setting and cover it with tin foil to keep the mess to a minimum.
- Cook the steak at 170F in the oven for five hours. This is the lowest temperature most ovens will set to. Prop the oven door open slightly to release any moisture (you can just stick a pot holder in the door). Check on the jerky about every hour to monitor the progress. You can dry it to the consistency you prefer.
Ingredient substitutions
You can swap out some of the marinade ingredients when making homemade beef jerky. Use more or less hot sauce depending on how spicy you like it to be. You can substitute white wine vinegar for the Worcheshire. Soy sauce contains wheat products. If you are gluten free or avoiding soy, you can use coconut aminos or tamari instead.
You can also add liquid smoke to any marinade blend to create a rich smoky flavor.
If you like your beef jerky to be sweet, add some maple syrup. If you prefer a peppery flavor, include some fresh cracked black pepper.
How to make different marinades
For different flavours of beef jerky, you can change the marinade. There are nearly endless options for the flavour combinations.
You can try to make your own or use some of these suggestions:
- Lemon pepper with soy sauce and lemon pepper seasoning
- Chili lime with lime juice, Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce and chili garlic sauce
- Bring the heat by adding diced jalapeno to the sauce
- Asian with soy sauce, rice vinegar and ginger
- Sweet and spicy with balsamic vinegar, pineapple juice and teriyaki sauce
- Caribbean using jerk seasoning
- Thai including cumin and coriander
Oven vs. dehydrator
A dehydrator is a bulky piece of kitchen equipment that some of us just don’t have room for. While a dehydrator is versatile and can help you dehydrate fruits and veggies as well as beef, you can use your oven instead.
Making homemade beef jerky in a dehydrator takes about twice as long. You will need to leave it for at least eight hours, but it doesn’t take over your oven.
Drying the beef jerky in the oven is a little messy though because some of the juice from the meat will drip to the bottom. Just make sure you add some tin foil to the bottom of your oven that you can remove once you're done.
What cut of beef is best?
You can also use top round or bottom round steak for beef jerky. Along with top sirloin, these are the most tender and flavorful cuts of beef.
Jerky can also be made from pork and venison. It is not recommended to use raw poultry for making jerky.
Storing beef jerky
If you are going to eat the homemade beef jerky within three or four days, you can keep it at room temperature.
However, homemade beef jerky is not the same as what you buy at the store and so is not as shelf stable. Put it in the refrigerator to keep it for up to 14 days.
Can you freeze beef jerky?
Beef jerky can be frozen. It’s important to get as much air as possible out of the container you are storing it in. Once it is appropriately packaged, beef jerky will last for seven to twelve months in the freezer.
More meal prep snacks
Meal prep tools
- Grab some glass meal prep bowls if you plan on turning this salad into meal prep lunches
- Freeze this recipe in glass microwave-safe bowls up to 3 months
- And of course I get all my grass-fed beef from Butcher Box
- Use these Ziploc bag holders for mess-free marinating
Homemade Beef Jerky Recipe
Ingredients
- 16 oz top sirloin steak
- 3/4 cup low sodium soy sauce
- 1/4 cup Worcestershire sauce
- 2 tbsp honey
- 2 tsp hot sauce (such as Tabasco)
- 2 tsp black pepper
- 1 tsp onion powder
- 1 tsp garlic powder
- 1 tsp paprika
- 1/2 tsp red pepper flakes
Instructions
- Freeze steak for 1 hour and then slice as thinly as possible against the grain, trimming away any fat.
- Mix together marinade ingredients then add to a large freezer bag. Add steak strips to a bag and let marinate at least 30 minutes.
- Preheat oven to 170 F. Place steak strips on a paper towel-lined plate and squeeze excess liquid out of strips with paper towel until dried. Add steak strips to bamboo skewers, then hang along the highest rack of the oven.
- Close your oven door, propping it open slightly with an oven mitt. Be sure to do this so some moisture can escape from the oven, and cook for 5 hours.
- When finished, remove jerky from skewers and store in the fridge up to 14 days.
Video
Nutrition
Rodney Morris says
This is the best Jerky recipe ever! Especially if you enjoy a little heat.
Taylor Stinson says
So happy you enjoyed!
Darrin says
I have made beef jerky for a long time, but not in oven. It is so wonderful like this! We love it!
Love the texture and taste, eye of round roast great call! Thank you.
Taylor Stinson says
I’m so happy you enjoyed Darrin! 🙂
Colbi T says
So if I do it in the dehydrator do I do all the steps up until putting them in the oven? And for how long usually?
Taylor Stinson says
Hey Colbi! Sorry I wouldn’t be able to advise on the dehydrator method since I didn’t do it this way myself.
Simon Périgny says
I use a dehydrator (Excalibur 9 trays).
A couple things:
1- The length of time will depend on the actual thickness of your pieces of meat. Myself, I use a slicer. I go against the grain as it makes tender jerky.
2- The more dehydrated your meat becomes, the more resistant to mold it will be, as mold requires oxygen, moisture, organic matter and a “livable” temperature. Because I slice my meat quite finely (I’d say somewhere along the lines of 0.1 inch thick) and it becomes very dry, I store my jerky at room temperature for several weeks. I haven’t had a single batch spoil yet (15 years and counting).
3- Another enemy of jerky is fat. I cannot say this enough. Fat will go rancid. I use eye of round and trim all the fat, and the connective tissue. I lost a few batches at the beginning because there was some fat and I had neglected to trim it off.
4- I usually dehydrate at 165 for 5 hours. I do not turn the meat because it is thin enough, but if you go for a thicker cut, I would suggest you turn your meat over, halfway through, as the side that touches the tray will not dry as fast.
Jennie says
Love this recipe and directions, however i did mine with londo n broil at 160d and as Patti above mentioned i proper the door open with a wooden spoon. It was done in 3 hours. Is it safe to not refrigerate? It’s definitely cooked all th e way. i love in southern florida, and have noticed differences in oven times did to elevation, just wondering if this is the case.
Taylor Stinson says
Hey Jennie! You could definitely leave it in a container on the counter for a few days without putting it in the fridge – thinking 3 to 5 days tops. If you’d like it to last up to 2 weeks, I’d store it in the fridge. I unfortunately can’t speak to oven times and elevation but I will say that all ovens are different and can result in changes in cook times – I know this from experience in baking!