5/27/09 | Beef Steak Nuggets
[ Currently Eating: Beans ]

Once upon a time, there was a group of people called the Denver Nuggets. They partook in a sporting activity where the objective was to repeatedly throw an air-filled rubber sphere into a peach basket with the bottom cut out. At the same time, another group of people called the Los Angeles Lakers would try and stop them from throwing the sphere into the peach basket. In fact, they would try and steal the sphere and then, bouncing it along the floor, would run toward their OWN personal peach basket. They would try and loft the sphere into that peach basket. This, of course, was a very exciting activity and billions of other people watched these groups of people try and throw the sphere into their peach baskets.
This is not their story.
However, these ARE Beef Steak NUGGETS that you see above.
I was originally trying to use a joke about Chicken McNuggets as a segue, but it just didn’t fly. Get it? Fly?
Yes, I am a very bad joke/review writer subsisting on dollar store food.
To tell you the truth, these Beef Steak Nuggets (and apparently they are “Original”, because no one has ever made dried cubes of beef jerky before) have caught my eye more than once in the dollar store. But I’ve always resisted the temptation to get them, because I have a sort of “non-dried meat” rule from these discount stores. The last time I was there, however, I accidentally knocked one of the packages off it’s clip in the aisle header.
I took it as a sign.
Note to dollar store owners: you should make sure all the clips fastening these packages to the hangers are loose beyond belief, because when people knock them off they usually pick them up and might possibly buy them.
Or not.

This is a small flat 1.5 ounce package of dried beef jerky cubes. I have to admit I was a little confused at the product description on the back, which states they’re “smoked over mesquite wood”. However, the ingredients state “smoke flavor powder” and even the front of the package says “natural smoke flavor added”. I’m not sure how they can say they’re smoked over mesquite wood, unless maybe they light a little twig of mesquite kindling underneath just so that they can say it on the package. Or maybe I’m just crazy and reading too much conspiracy theory into it.
As with all dried meat products, the price per weight is tremendously expensive as is to be expected. Even with a dollar store item like this, there are exactly 10 cubes of beef in the 1.5 oz. foil pack. Interestingly, it’s claimed on the front that there is “50% more free”. I’m thinking, geez you mean to tell me that normally there are only FIVE nuggets in a pack?
It’s sorta weird how the package makes the beef cubes look “wet”, when in fact they’re dry like normal beef jerky. This is actually what gave me great hesitation in the first place - the beef in the picture looked like wet stew beef. Or Alpo. You take your pick.
I was also very interested to see a small note at the bottom which said “Attention: to enhance freshness and taste, this product is packed with an oxygen absorber packet inside. This packet contains harmless non-toxic minerals, but should not be eaten.”
There was no such absorber packet in mine.
Not that I was THAT disappointed. I wasn’t going to try eating the non-toxic minerals, but hey, you never know.

As for overall smell and taste - I was rather disappointed. The meat had an extremely processed smell to it, but if you’ve had mass produced beef jerky products before, you know what I’m talking about. The smoky smell was not strong at all - maybe they should put more of that powder in.
In my opinion, the spices were weak. They tended toward the very sweet. Now, I know America has this fascination with sweet food, but please, keep it out of my beef jerky. This almost tasted like teriyaki beef. If you’ve had asian beef jerky before, it tasted like that, but even sweeter in my opinion. Too much brown sugar here. Besides the horrible MSG aftertaste floating in my mouth, I did notice an afterglow of black pepper powder, which was more pleasant.
The texture of the beef nuggets was rather tender. I think they’re keeping in mind the toothless generations (older folks and babies) when they made these. It does say they’re “enjoyed by Moms, Dads, and Kids alike”. They’re equal opportunity beef steak nugget producers. Me, I like a beef jerky that’s so tough it threatens to rip your teeth out of your gums when you try and bite off a piece. I likes me a dried cow slab that fights back. The thicker pieces did have a bit more chew, but on the whole I was pretty disappointed.
In conclusion, I wouldn’t buy these again. I actually had to chuck about half of it into the can because I couldn’t stand the sweetness in them. But you’ll like these nuggets if you like sweet dried beef. Maybe you can take them to the next Nuggets peach basket game.
Price: $1.00 for 1.5 oz (10 pcs)
Found At: Dollar Store
Cheap Eats Score: 4/10






May 27th, 2009 at 3:01 pm
Thanks for the warning — I couldn’t get over how the picture on the package looks like dog food, as you said. Maybe that’s appealing to a certain segment of the jerky-buying public? Yuk!
By the way, 50 percent more doesn’t mean there were originally 5 in the package. That would be 100 percent more. 50 percent more means there were originally … 7.5? … in the bag. I think. Math was not my strong suit on the SATs.
May 28th, 2009 at 8:14 pm
What a goofy product description… “a great alternative to high fat fast food..” A fast food craving or jerky craving aren’t even on the same scale. Sooo not comparable.
“50% more” heheh. Silly product. Good job trying it
May 29th, 2009 at 1:22 am
Mirab USA makes those beef nuggets, and Mirab seems to make the worst beef jerky in the world. They make jerky for many discount store brands, including Dollar Tree, and a host of drug stores like Walgreens and Rite Aid. They have to make it really cheap, because those stores are competing fiercely on low pricing.
In fact, I’ll bet what you bought is actually priced cheaper than most dog treats.
May 29th, 2009 at 9:15 am
@julia - you’re completely correct - I wasn’t thinking when I said 5 nuggets. Math wasn’t my strong one on the SAT either =) In fact, I had what’s known as a reverse score (higher english than math) which is UNheard of for asian kids. I caught hell for that!
@skibs - yeah, I think some fast food might be a great alternative to these nuggets instead.
@steve - I didn’t know about Mirab. But I do know about the dog food companies competing directly against companies making food for human consumption in auctions. (I’m serious about that, happens all the time). You’re probably right.
June 3rd, 2009 at 3:54 pm
I loved your intro
June 29th, 2009 at 11:55 am
50% more would make the original 6.6666666 pieces. Half of that is 3.3333333, so adding 50% of the original count to it would equal 9.99999999.
Does that make sense? I’m not a mathemetician, I just live with one.
June 29th, 2009 at 1:15 pm
@mrpeepants - I loved your name
@tracylee - Even though my math skills are abyssmal, I’m very down with math people. I would very much like to acquire a finite ErdÅ‘s number but I don’t think I’ll ever be able to collaborative in writing a mathematical paper.