Is the Hamilton Beach 32100A hot enough for jerky?
Last reviewed July 2026.
The dial reaches the line — and USDA says the dial was never the whole question. Hamilton Beach publishes 100–160°F and sells the jerky use case directly. Like the Nesco Gardenmaster, the maximum setting is exactly the USDA meat number — so any real-world undershoot (testing routinely finds dials 5–15°F cool) lands the air below 160°F, and the meat below that. At $59.99 it is the cheapest ranked unit; the oven step costs nothing and is what actually reaches the number.
The facts on file
| Verdict | 160°F+ published — Published max at or above 160°F — the oven step still applies |
| Temperature | 100–160°F, digital thermostat |
| Build | 500W · 5 stackable trays — 4.2 sq ft published |
| The claim | “"…and even make beef jerky" — ceiling at exactly 160°F, the same zero-headroom shape as the Nesco” Amazon ↗ |
Sources — read them yourself
- Hamilton Beach — 32100A product page (100–160°F, 500W, price, jerky marketing)
- The Purposeful Pantry — testing dehydrator dial vs actual temperature
- USDA FSIS — Jerky (heat to 160°F before dehydrating)
How to read this
USDA's jerky guidance sets the numbers — 160°F for meat, 165°F for poultry — and explains why the dehydrator can't be trusted to hit them on its own: evaporating moisture absorbs the heat, so the meat stays cooler than the air until most of the drying is done. Independent dial testing routinely finds units running 5–15°F below their setting. The answer on every row is the same and costs nothing: the oven step, before or after drying. And remember the dial is not the food's temperature.
See every dehydrator we track, claim by claim → · the units marketed for jerky below the line →
Dehydrator Score indexes manufacturer-published temperature specs and marketing claims against the USDA jerky record, with attribution — we test nothing and give no safety advice. No dial setting substitutes for USDA's instruction: heat meat to 160°F (poultry 165°F) in an oven before dehydrating, or bake the finished jerky after — inside a dehydrator, evaporating moisture holds the meat below air temperature until it is already dry. If a maker publishes a spec or manual that changes a row, the page changes — the record wins.
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