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Author Topic: Bottom Round Jerky  (Read 945 times)

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Clonesmoker

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Bottom Round Jerky
« on: April 19, 2021, 03:37:33 PM »

Got a couple 3.5 lb bottom round roasts for $3.00/lb. Amazing what Walmart has on specials first thing in the morning in the meat department. I have been making a lot of jerky lately. Teriyaki and Sweet Asian Chile. The pic is of the Sweet Asian Chile. Just a $2 bottle of that from Walmart, curing salt, and some black pepper. Vac sealed for two days and then had it on the smoker for around 8 hours. Kinda nice with the GMG app that you can manipulate the temp to get it below 150 with the calibration screen. Jerky was soft yet. I hand sliced the roast semi frozen and the strips turned out nice. Didn't get any pics of the teriyaki but it turned out just as good. Nice little weekend to smoke since the wife was gone. I won't even start with the bacon cheddar brats I put on with the first batch of jerky!! 2.5 hours on the smoker and finished on the gasser. OMG!! Brats on the smoker are the bomb!!

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BigDave83

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Re: Bottom Round Jerky
« Reply #1 on: April 19, 2021, 09:00:19 PM »

You can never go wrong making jerky, or never make enough of it.
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Bar-B-Lew

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Re: Bottom Round Jerky
« Reply #2 on: April 19, 2021, 09:08:48 PM »

I was on a jerky kick for a few years, but have not made any in about 18+ months.  May need to fix that this summer.  That jerky looked tasty.
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Bentley

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Re: Bottom Round Jerky
« Reply #3 on: April 20, 2021, 02:19:30 PM »

That stuff looks Outstanding!
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Bacon is a Gateway Food...

hughver

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Re: Bottom Round Jerky
« Reply #4 on: April 21, 2021, 05:26:17 PM »

I'll have to admit, I'm jerky challenged but this post inspired me to give it another try, especially since top round roast were $1.97/lb. today. I picked up four of the roast and if my slicer will handle them, will start the process Saturday when I get back from a short trip to check on the boat in Bellevue, WA.
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hughver

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Re: Bottom Round Jerky
« Reply #5 on: April 25, 2021, 06:15:58 PM »

My first attempt at making jerky from round, how thick do you slice it, with or against the grain, do you Jacard (tenderize) and how much of the fat do you trim off? All responses will be appreciated.  ???
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02ebz06

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Re: Bottom Round Jerky
« Reply #6 on: April 25, 2021, 06:59:08 PM »

My first attempt at making jerky from round, how thick do you slice it, with or against the grain, do you Jacard (tenderize) and how much of the fat do you trim off? All responses will be appreciated.  ???

How sliced - I tried once against the grain and it didn't come out well. May have been the cut of meat though. Somebody else may have a though on it.
How Thick - Depends how you like it. I usually do 1/8" - 3/16" tops.  The thicker it is, the longer it takes...
Tenderize  -  I don't
How much fat - Every bit of it!  The fat can get rancid.

Do you have Cure #1 ?  Should use some of that in your marinade.
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Bentley

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Re: Bottom Round Jerky
« Reply #7 on: April 25, 2021, 07:08:36 PM »

I used to love the thin, thin stuff when I was younger, but it just messes to much with my teeth.  I now opt for the more mini steak pieces, 1/2 inch thick!  Will usually end up 1/4 to 3/8, I also like my just slightly pliable. 
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BigDave83

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Re: Bottom Round Jerky
« Reply #8 on: April 25, 2021, 08:47:05 PM »

I usually hand cut mine, to lazy to clean the slicer I guess.

I cut mine with the grain, 3/8" or a little over usually. Cut with give you a more chewy, and against more tender.

Never tenderized.

Fat, I don' get that picky about, I get most of the big stuff, I don't mind some on it, I save those pieces for myself. They will  mold eventually, but I have had jerky in a lock n lock container on the counter for months and no mold.

I use Cure 1 in all of my jerky. I just got used to using it especially when I started doing pork and poultry jerky years ago.

I will occasionally use ground meat but I can't seem to get it to come out the way I think it should, but I still give it a shot now and then.

I have really come to like the dry marinade/cure, I don't remember but I think it was on a post from Yorkdude where he just used a dry seasoning instead of a wet marinade. I was never a big soak it in soy sauce guy.

Usually cure for 3 to 4 days.

If you have a seasoning you like about 1.5T per pound of meat works well. Add the cure in if you so choose. Depending on the coverage I will sometimes lightly dust with more of the seasoning or maybe even a little different one once I lay it out on  my racks, no cure in it a this point.

I like 150 to 170 for a temp range. Also thanks to Bar B Lew for the idea of smoking for a few hours and then finishing in the dehydrator.

No matter what method of drying I use i have found it best to rotate top to bottom and even front to back at least once.

Also save those little scraps and odd pieces, put them on the front of the rack for a snack when you check it now and then. If the pieces are really small and want to fall through the rack just kind of smash them all together, when they dry they kind of fuse together.


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hughver

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Re: Bottom Round Jerky
« Reply #9 on: April 26, 2021, 10:02:54 AM »

Thanks for all of the prompt responses. (BigDave, I've book marked your response for future reference.)  The grain was not that obvious so I just sliced it. I sliced half to 1/4" and half to 3/8". I did use the Jacard to tenderize. I trimmed all of the fat that I could. I did wet marinade, half in Lem Cajun jerky seasoning and half in a DTY concoction. The Lem came with cure but I did not use cure in the DYI version, I will next time.

Most of the articles that I've read say to marinate at least 8 hours so I intend to start smoking this afternoon. I don't have a dehydrator so I'll do it all on the smoker. For my pass attempts at jerky, I smoked for about 4 hours at 180° (the lowest that the grill at the time would go), for this batch, I'll use 150°. Guesses at timing?
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Re: Bottom Round Jerky
« Reply #10 on: April 26, 2021, 10:11:46 AM »

About 6 hours for me, but I flip at 3 hours and I like pliable.
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Clonesmoker

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Re: Bottom Round Jerky
« Reply #11 on: April 26, 2021, 10:20:40 AM »

The key to slicing it is having it semi frozen.  I've done jerky at 150 and the best is around a 6-7 hour time frame on the smoker. I see where Baby Ray's is selling BBQ jerky now. I will have to try that next. After that since my son is a huge buffalo sauce fan, I will try to do chicken jerky marinated in buffalo sauce.

I will always put cure in my jerky. I have had some where I didn't and the little bit of fat that is one it, started to mold in about a month in a vac sealed bag.
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hughver

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Re: Bottom Round Jerky
« Reply #12 on: April 26, 2021, 10:21:40 AM »

That's kind of what I was thinking, I also flip half way through and like it pliable.
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Re: Bottom Round Jerky
« Reply #13 on: April 26, 2021, 07:48:50 PM »

Many years ago I marinated jerky with everything you can imagine. I never thought it was great, just good. I now only dry cure, I slice it about 3/8” and trim the big fat areas although I don’t go crazy. We then put it in a big oval tupperware container and season it.  We turn it upside down in about a day or two and reaseason it, let it sit a day or two and repeat, flip again and reaseason and let it sit a day or two. Fire up and smoke it at 160-170. We rotate every 1/2 hour, top to bottom and front to back for usually about 6-7 hours. We like it pliable and cross grain.
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BigDave83

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Re: Bottom Round Jerky
« Reply #14 on: April 26, 2021, 09:00:02 PM »

Many years ago I marinated jerky with everything you can imagine. I never thought it was great, just good. I now only dry cure, I slice it about 3/8” and trim the big fat areas although I don’t go crazy. We then put it in a big oval tupperware container and season it.  We turn it upside down in about a day or two and reaseason it, let it sit a day or two and repeat, flip again and reaseason and let it sit a day or two. Fire up and smoke it at 160-170. We rotate every 1/2 hour, top to bottom and front to back for usually about 6-7 hours. We like it pliable and cross grain.

I will container thing.

 I usually slice then, then lay on a larger sheet pan season, layer, season, layer. Then when (notice I did not say If) I have seasoning/cure mix left I layer into a container with lid like below. just adding seasoning as i go to use it up. Then I just sit it in the fridge for a few days.

 I like that when I am laying it out on the racks it is already flat and not all folded over and twisted around each other.

https://smile.amazon.com/Cambro-36PP190-Third-Size-Translucent-Food/dp/B004D1XJ0A/ref=sr_1_246?_encoding=UTF8&crid=1LWXG542LPHJV&dchild=1&keywords=cambro+food+storage+containers&qid=1619484754&sprefix=cambro%2Caps%2C185&sr=8-246
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