[Sca-cooks] Meat Jerky
Johnna Holloway
johnnae at mac.com
Mon Jul 5 03:59:57 PDT 2010
In the Encyclopedia of Food & Culture in the entry Meat, Smoked
In South America, long strips of dried meat are called charqui, which
has come into English as "jerky" as the name for a snack made from
beef or turkey.
http://www.enotes.com/food-encyclopedia/meat-smoked
Under Canada: Native Peoples
The Plains Peoples
The Plains Peoples (Blackfoot, Blood, Peigan, Gros Ventre, Cree,
Assiniboine, Sioux, and Sarcee [Tsuu T'ina]) followed buffalo
migrations. snipped Jerky was prepared by sundrying strips of meat,
which were pounded almost into a powder and then mixed with buffalo
fat and berries to make pemmican. Stored in a buffalo skin, it
remained edible for years, and early European settlers and fur traders
depended upon it.
http://www.enotes.com/food-encyclopedia/canada-2
Under Preserving and then under Drying
Drying occurs naturally with food left in the sun, or on the vine,
like beans, or grapes. Some foods, like apples and tomatoes, are
generally cut into smaller pieces for drying, a practice which allows
the moisture to uniformly evaporate. Herbs are frequently dried whole
and on the stem. Low humidity, heat, and air circulation are important
so that mold does not occur. Meats and fish can be dried to the point
of extreme desiccation, resulting in a product usually called jerky.
http://www.enotes.com/food-encyclopedia/preserving
I checked the Oxford Reference set:
jerky, jerked beef South American dried meat. See biltong; charqui.
How to cite this entry:
"jerky, jerked beef" A Dictionary of Food and Nutrition. Ed. David A.
Bender.
OED says jerky noun
ad. American Sp. charqui, charque (Pg. xarque), from native Peruvian
ccharqui:
Jerked beef.
1890 in Cent. Dict. 1893 E. COUES Lewis & Clark I. 31 The word as a
verb is now generally spelled jerk, and jerked meat is known as jerky.
Charqui which is linked to this entry says:
[Quichua (Peruvian) ccharqui dried slice of flesh or hung beef. The
corruption jerkin occurs in Captain J. Smith a 1612, and jerk vb. in
Anson a 1748.]
Beef prepared for keeping by cutting into thin slices and drying
in the wind and sun; ‘jerked’ beef (the latter being a corruption of
this word).
1760-72 tr. Juan & Ulloa's Voy. II. VIII. ix. 271 [Chili]..supplies
[Peru] with wheat..besides sole leather..Grassa, Charqui, and neat
tongues. 1845 DARWIN Voy. Nat. xii. (1873) 260 The miners are allowed
a little charqui.
Jerk as a verb
[Corrupted from American Sp. charque-ar in same sense, f. charque,
charqui, ad. Quichua (Peruvian) ccharqui ‘dried flesh, unsalted, in
long strips’. The verb in Quichua was ccharquini ‘to prepare dried
meat, to jerk’, whence perh. the early cognate JERKIN n.3 The word is
now used in all parts of Spanish America, and was app. found by
English navigators in Spanish use in the W. Indies. (See Skeat, Trans.
Philol. Soc. 1885, 94.)]
trans. To cure (meat, esp. beef) by cutting it into long thin
slices and drying it in the sun.
1707 SLOANE Jamaica I. p. xvi, They [the wild hogs] are shot,..cut
open, the bones taken out, and the flesh gash'd on the inside into the
skin, filled with salt, and exposed to the sun, which is called
Jirking. 1748 Anson's Voy. III. ii. 305 He..was sent here with twenty-
two Indians to jerk beef.
Johnnae
On Jul 5, 2010, at 12:52 AM, Terry Decker wrote:
> To the best of my knowledge, dried and smoked meats pre-date the
> Jews. Drying meats and cooking begin in the Middle Paleolithic
> between 30,000 and 300,00 yers ago. There is some evidence to
> suggest that the practice is at least 110,000 years old. The Jewish
> people trace their roots to the Biblical patriarchs about 4,000
> years ago with Judaism becoming established within the millenia
> following. I don't think one can blame the Jews for jerky.
>
> Bear
>
>> I have come into some controversy about meat jerky. My latest is
>> that it is of Jewish origin???
>> Suey
>
> _
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