I'm writing this as I'm doing it, so i dont have a finished product yet, but I've seen it done online so i dont have any doubts it will work.
Shopping list:
20" Box Fan
3 20" Cotton Based AC filters
2 24" Bungee Chords
Teriyaki Sauce
Soy Sauce
Pepper
Natures Seasoning
Garlic Salt
1lb Thin sliced Beef Top Round
1lb Beef stir fry
Optional** Meat Cure
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For the meat, i bought 2 kinds. I've never done this so i wanted to test 2 different kinds of meats.
the first kind of meat that i bought was boneless stir fry beef. I figured it was thinl enough and precut into bite size pieces so why not.
The second kind of steak i bought was boneless top round that was think sliced. Again, convenience of being thinly sliced already. You dont want anything too thick because it wont dry out fast enough.
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One probably could place a smoking pot in front of the fan with some wet wood chips. Maybe one of those heavy iron smoke chip gizmos with a slotted lid set on a hot plate on a low/smoulder setting. If you keep the smoke far enough away so that the fan does not draw against the chips and fan them to flame that should work. Might have to "shield" it from side drafts and funnel it towards the fan.
www.theruralindependent.com/forum/index.php
The deal with commercial dehydrators (this info courtesy of Alton Brown) is that they HAVE to go to 170, because they don't have the air flow capability to dry the items. Dry is about air flow, not heat. Hence the utility of this setup.
Specialization is for insects
http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/recipes/recipe/0,,FOOD_9936_31151,00.html?rsrc=search
His dried watermelon was much better.
Here's a wikipedia take on jerky
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerky_(food)