Tuesday, November 29, 2011

The History of Beef Jerky

!±8± The History of Beef Jerky

Jerky was first introduced by the South American (Peru) native tribe called the Quechua (part of the ancient Inca Empire) in 1550. The product (Ch'arki), was boned and defatted meat (deer, elk, or buffalo) cut into slices and rubbed with salt. This meat was rolled up in the animal's hide for 10-12 hours and then sun dried or smoked over fires.

In South America, the Native Americans ate sun-dried venison and buffalo called tassajo, which was made with strips of meat dipped in maize flour, sun and wind dried, and then tightly rolled up into balls. North American Cree Indians mixed berries and suet (fat) with pounded cooked meat and pressed into concentrated small cakes to make pemmican.

Biltong came from pioneering South African forefathers who sun dried meat while traveling across the African subcontinent. Folklore has it that African tribesmen would place strips of venison under the saddles of their horses to tenderize and spice the meat! Seasoning became a blend of vinegar, salt, sugar, coriander and other spices.

The Indians and early settlers dried meat primarily from deer, elk or buffalo using salt, whatever spices they had and sun drying. As the Spanish arrived, the name evolved to charqui. Most travelers preferred to pound the charqui between large stones and boil it in water before eating. During ocean exploration and colonization, the Spanish sailors stocked the pacific islands with goats. What couldn't be eaten would then be cut into strips and hung in their ships to air dry. When the Spanish Conquistadors invaded the Americas, they were surprised to see the natives of North America drying meat as well. Soon, the natives adopted the Spanish term, Charqui, only adding their accent; the word "jerky" first came to be.

North American Pioneers would first dry meat by hanging it on the outside of their covered wagon sun drying (2-3 days). Another method was to build a scaffold over a slow fire and smoke the strips. While the heat and smoke would complete the process in half a day, the smoking method required a stopover; it wasn't long before awareness for disease and germs became prevalent and smoking became the norm.

Today jerky is made from thin strips of virtually any meat or from ground or chopped and formed meat. Manufacturers spice and dehydrate the product; some introduce smoke or using liquid smoke for flavoring.


The History of Beef Jerky

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Friday, November 25, 2011

Easy Mexican Recipe: Chile Rellenos

!±8± Easy Mexican Recipe: Chile Rellenos

Chile Rellenos is a traditional Mexican dish that originated in Puebla. The term literally means stuffed chili and is typically made from fresh poblano peppers. In place of a poblano pepper, a Hatch green chili, pasilla, jalapeno chili pepper, Ahaheim, or ancho chili can be used. The dish is usually made by battering a skinless pepper and stuffing it with picadillo meat or cheese. The stuffed pepper is then covered with a red sauce. Picadillo meat can be made of diced pork, nuts, and raisins or seasoned with canella. The pepper is covered with corn masa flour or an egg batter before frying.

During Lent, beef, pork, and poultry are avoided by Catholics on Ash Wednesday, Holy Thursday, Fridays and Good Friday. Because of this, chile rellenos can be made stuffed with tuna, cheese, separated maize grains, other seeds, sliced vegetables or a mixture of all of these.

How To Roast, Peel And Seed Poblano Chiles

In order to prepare chile rellenos, the peppers need to be roasted, peeled, and seeded. In order to roast the peppers, place them on a broiler pan and place in oven. Broil peppers until the skins are charred or covered with black blisters. Be sure to turn them occasionally. Place chilies in resealable plastic bag and seal the bag. Let the chilies stand for 10 minutes. Remove from bag and remove peels. Be extra careful not to break the skins. To remove the seeds, make a vertical cut in each chili and remove the small cluster of seeds attached to the base of the chili.

Chiles Rellenos With Sweet Picadillo

This recipe uses poblano chilies which can usually be found in your grocery store. This recipe serves 6 people with a pepper each. The picadillo features a mixture of ground beef, raisins, and almonds. You can prepare these chile rellenos in advance, if needed, by preparing as directed and refrigerating up to 24 hours. When you get ready to serve, pop them in the oven covered for 20 minutes or until heated all the way through.

This dish can be topped with sour cream, shredded cheese, and pico de galo. Guacamole makes a great side for this delicious meal. Ground chicken, turkey, or pork can be substituted in place of ground beef. Low fat sour cream can be used in place of regular sour cream to cut down on calories and fat.

What You Need:

1 ½ pound lean ground beef 2 tablespoons zesty Italian salad dressing 1 8-ounce can of tomato sauce ½ cup toasted slivered almonds ¼ cup raisins 6 large roasted, peeled, seeded, and deveined poblano chilies ½ cup sour cream

How To Make It:

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In a large skillet, brown meat and salad dressing while draining if necessary.

Stir in tomato sauce and bring to a boil. Stir in nuts and raisins. Simmer on medium-low heat for 10 minutes or until there is not any liquid remaining. Stir occasionally.

Spoon meat mixture into chilies and place in a shallow baking dish. Cover dish with foil and bake for 10 minutes or until heated through.

Serve topped with sour cream.


Easy Mexican Recipe: Chile Rellenos

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

ground beef hasty compound paleo

ground beef jerky recipe paleo Best rated paleo recipe book with over 370 great recipes. Recipes are easy to follow and fast to make. See more at Site in video. paleo diet recipes ground beef the paleo diet by loren cordain phd paleo banana pancakes recipe paleo greens dietary supplement...

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Friday, November 18, 2011

Jerky Seasoning Recipes - Taste Wonderful on Beef, Deer and BBQ

!±8± Jerky Seasoning Recipes - Taste Wonderful on Beef, Deer and BBQ

According to cooking practice and books seasoning is the process through which the flavor of food is imparted and improved. The seasoning process makes use of herbs, spices and condiments. Actually, all these things are referred to as "seasonings" quite frequently. Yet, some books in the field of gastronomy make a difference between seasoning and flavoring, insisting that seasoning includes a larger or smaller amount of salt added to food in the preparation process. According to these books, salt is used to draw water out, to magnify a natural flavor of a food, either strengthening or making the flavor more delicate.

Kosher salt is usually used to tenderize the meat and improve its flavor. Other seasonings - basil, cumin, black or white pepper - lend some of their flavor to the food; and if the dish is well designed it must combine seasonings that complement each other. In cooking and, especially in preparing the meat for cooking, seasoning plays a very important part. Let us just consider jerky seasoning, for example. Jerky seasoning is treating and improving or enhancing the flavor of the meat that was previously cut into long strips and either dried or smoked.

When discussing jerky seasoning, we must keep in mind that jerky is made from almost any kind of meat, which means we encounter a huge variety of recipes or, at least, variations of a number of jerky seasoning recipes. If you want to find new jerky seasoning recipes, you can either search the net or look through cookery books. You will find, as I said, beef, lamb, venison, pork or other jerky seasoning recipes. Besides, you will find jerky seasoning recipes coming from different areas on earth. The good thing about the jerky seasoning recipes you will find on the net are usually accompanied by instructions on how to do the whole job, from making the jerky to making the jerky seasoning.

Here are a few examples of jerky seasoning mixes recipes.

Mild Mexican jerky seasoning Recipe

1 teaspoon of salt
1/2 a teaspoon of crushed oregano
1 teaspoon of paprika
1 of chili powder
1 teaspoon of pepper
1 teaspoon of garlic powder

Middle Eastern jerky seasoning Recipe

1 teaspoon of turmeric
1 teaspoon of chili powder
1 teaspoon of ground ginger
1 teaspoon of salt
1 teaspoon of coriander
1/8 teaspoon of pepper
2/8 teaspoon of ground cumin

Fiesta jerky seasoning Recipe

1 teaspoon of salt
1 of onion powder
1 of garlic powder
1 tablespoon of chili powder
1 teaspoon of pepper
1 teaspoon ground cumin

You can also buy packets of jerky seasoning from stores. No matter what area each jerky seasoning recipe comes from, it consists mainly of the same ingredients, with some changes. Anyway, jerky was first introduced by the South American native tribe, the Quechua, who wee originally part of the ancient Inca empire, some time around 1550.


Jerky Seasoning Recipes - Taste Wonderful on Beef, Deer and BBQ

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Sunday, November 13, 2011

Little Red Dot Kitchen Natural BBQ Pork Jerky 8 x 4 Ounce Packages (8 Packs)

!±8±Little Red Dot Kitchen Natural BBQ Pork Jerky 8 x 4 Ounce Packages (8 Packs)

Brand : Little Red Dot Kitchen
Rate :
Price : $49.95
Post Date : Nov 13, 2011 05:30:20
Usually ships in 1-2 business days



A well balance of smoky BBQ flavor, sweetness, saltiness, juiciness, thickness, texture and that special something that keeps the mouth watering. Meat are carefully selected, and marinated with unique southeast asian sauces and spices from all over the world. Perfect hiking snack, and pairs wonderfully with wine and beer.

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Friday, November 11, 2011

Nesco American Harvest FD-61WHC Snackmaster Express Food Dehydrator All-In-One Kit with Jerky Gun

!±8± Nesco American Harvest FD-61WHC Snackmaster Express Food Dehydrator All-In-One Kit with Jerky Gun


Rate : | Price : $59.50 | Post Date : Nov 11, 2011 06:00:25
Usually ships in 24 hours

The FD-61WHC Snackmaster Express All-In-One kit has a top mounted fan. Easily dries fruit, vegetables and jerky quickly and evenly. Dries food in hours not days. Comes with 5 trays and jerky gun. Unit disassembles easily and all parts are dishwasher safe except the power head. The Opaque Vita-Save exterior helps block harmful lights which destroys nutritional content of food being dehydrated. The Patented fan flow radial air action forces air down the center of the unit and horizontally across each tray for fast, even-drying. No need to rotate.

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