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What
is Jerky?
This
product is a nutrient-dense meat that has been made lightweight by
drying. A pound of meat or poultry weighs about four ounces after being
made into jerky. Because most of the moisture is removed, it is shelf
stable – can be stored without refrigeration –
making it a handy food for backpackers and others who don’t
have access to refrigerators.
Jerky is a food known at least since ancient Egypt. Humans made jerky
from animal meat that was too big to eat all at once, such as bear,
buffalo, or whales. North American Indians mixed ground dried meat with
dried fruit or suet to make "pemmican." "Biltong" is dried meat or game
used in many African countries. Our word "jerky" came from the Spanish
word "charque."
How Can Drying Meat Make it Safe?
Drying
is the world’s oldest and most common method of food
preservation. Canning technology is less than 200 years old and
freezing became practical only during this century when electricity
became more and more available to people. Drying technology is both
simple and readily available to most of the world’s culture.
The scientific principal of preserving food by drying is that by
removing moisture, enzymes cannot efficiently contact or react with the
food. Whether these enzymes are bacterial, fungal, or naturally
occurring autolytic enzymes from the raw food, preventing this
enzymatic action preserves the food from biological action.
What are the Types of Food Drying?
There
are several types of food drying. Two types of natural drying
– sun drying and "adibatic" (shade) drying – occur
in open air. Adibatic drying occurs without heat. Solar drying
sometimes takes place in a special container that catches and captures
the sun’s heat. These types of drying are used mainly for
fruits such as apricots, tomatoes, and grapes (to make raisins).
Drying from an artificial heat source is done by placing food in either
a warm oven or a food dehydrator. The main components of an electric
food dehydrator include:
* A source of heat;
* Air flow to circulate the dry air;
* Trays to hold the food during the drying process
* Mesh or leather sheets to dry certain types of foods.
Why is Temperature Important When Making Jerky?
Illnesses
due to Salmonella and E. coli O157:H7 from homemade jerky raise
questions about the safety of traditional drying methods for making
beef and venison jerky. The USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline’s
current recommendation for making jerky safely is to heat meat to 160
°F before the dehydrating process.
This
step assures that any bacteria present will be destroyed by wet heat.
But most dehydrator instructions do not include this step, and a
dehydrator may not reach temperatures high enough to heat meat to 160
°F.
After heating to 160 °F, maintaining a constant dehydrator
temperature of 130 to 140 °F during the drying process is
important because:
the process must be fast enough to dry food before it spoils and it
must remove enough water that microorganisms are unable to grow.
Why is it a Food Safety Concern to Dry Meat
Without First Heating it to 160 °F?
The
danger in dehydrating meat and poultry without cooking it to a safe
temperature first is that the appliance will not heat the meat to 160
°F – a temperature at which bacteria are destroyed
– before it dries. After drying, bacteria become much more
heat resistant.
Within a dehydrator or low-temperature oven, evaporating moisture
absorbs most of the heat. Thus, the meat itself does not begin to rise
in temperature until most of the moisture has evaporated. Therefore,
when the dried meat temperature finally begins to rise, the bacteria
have become more heat resistant and are more likely to survive. If
these surviving bacteria are pathogenic, they can cause foodborne
illness to those consuming the jerky.
What Research Findings Exist on the Safety of
Jerky?
There
have been several scientific studies of meat dehydrating and lab tests
on jerky samples by the following professionals: Judy Harrison,
Cooperative Extension Service, University of Georgia; Mark Harrison,
the Center for Food Safety and Quality Enhancement, Department of Food
Science and Technology, University of Georgia; Richard A. Holley, Food
Research Institute, Agriculture Canada, in Ontario; and William Keene
of the Oregon Health Division. In studies, the meat dehydrated included
slices of beef from the round, loin, or flank; corned beef slices; and
ground beef formed in jerky presses. Keene examined homemade venison
jerky which infected 11 people with E. coli O157:H7.
In a related work, factors affecting the heat resistance of E. coli
O157:H7 was the subject of an April 1998 piece by J. Kauer et al.,
Letters of Applied Bacteriology, Vol. 26, No. 4, page 325.
In the jerky studies, some samples showed total bacterial destruction
and other samples showed some bacterial survival – especially
the jerky made with ground beef. Further experiments with
lab-inoculated venison showed that pathogenic E. coli could survive
drying times of up to 10 hours and temperatures of up to 145 °F.
A recent study by the Harrisons and Ruth Ann Rose, also with the
University of Georgia, was published in the January 1998 Journal of
Food Protection, Vol. 61, No. 1. The authors analyzed ground beef jerky
made with a commercial beef jerky spice mixture with and without a
curing mix containing salt and sodium nitrite.
Half of the ground beef was inoculated with E. coli O157:H7 before
making it into jerky strips and dehydrating it. The authors found that
in both the heated and unheated samples, the jerky made with the curing
mix had greater destruction of bacteria than jerky made without it. The
jerky made with the mix and heated before dehydrating had the highest
destruction rate of bacteria.
They concluded, "For ground beef jerky prepared at home,
safety concerns related to E. coli O157:H7 are minimized if the meat is
precooked to 160 °F prior to drying."
What are the USDA Meat and Poultry
Hotline’s Recommendations for Making Homemade Jerky?
Research
findings support what the Hotline has been recommending to callers.
Additionally, safe handling and preparation methods must always be
used, including:
Always wash hands thoroughly with soap and water
before and after working with meat products.
Use clean equipment and utensils.
Keep meat and poultry refrigerated at 40 °F or slightly below;
use or freeze ground beef and poultry within 2 days; whole red meats,
within 3 to 5 days.
Defrost frozen meat in the refrigerator, not on the kitchen counter.
Marinate meat in the refrigerator. Don’t save marinade to
re-use. Marinades are used to tenderize and flavor the jerky before
dehydrating it.
Steam or roast meat and poultry to 160 °F as measured with a
meat thermometer before dehydrating it.
Dry meats in a food dehydrator that has an adjustable temperature dial
and will maintain a temperature of at least 130 to 140 °F
throughout the drying process.
Are There Special Considerations for Wild Game
Jerky?
Yes,
there are other special considerations when making homemade jerky from
venison or other wild game. According to Keene and his co-authors,
"Venison can be heavily contaminated with fecal bacteria –
the degree varying with the hunter’s skill, wound location,
and other factors. While fresh beef is usually rapidly chilled, deer
carcasses are typically held at ambient temperatures, potentially
allowing bacteria multiplication."
Is Commercially Made Jerky Safe?
Yes,
the process is monitored in federally inspected plants by inspectors of
the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and
Inspection Service. Products may be cured or uncured, dried, and may be
smoked or unsmoked, air or oven dried. The following terms
may be on processed jerky products:
"Beef Jerky" – produced from a single piece of beef.
"Beef Jerky Chunked and Formed" – produced from chunks of
meat that are molded and formed, then cut into strips.
"Beef Jerky Ground and Formed or Chopped and Formed" –
produced from ground or chopped meat, molded and cut into strips. Beef
Jerky containing binders or extenders must show true product name
(e.g., "Beef and Soy Protein Concentrate Jerky, Ground and Formed").
"Species (or Kind) Jerky Sausage" – the product has been
chopped and may be dried at any stage of the process, and it is stuffed
into casings.
What is the Safe Storage Time for Jerky?
Commercially packaged jerky can be kept 12
months; home-dried jerky can be stored 1 to 2 months.
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