Jack Link's Original Hickory Beef Jerky: 12g Protein per Ounce, Labelgrade B-

Labelgrade: B- 70 / 100 — Highest protein density we've graded — 43 g per 100 g, exceeding plain cooked chicken breast (31 g) because dehydration concentrates the meat. The Labelgrade is held back by extreme sodium (1929 mg per 100 g, or about 23% of the daily limit per ounce) and by the added sugar + brown sugar + MSG + maltodextrin + sodium nitrite formulation. Jerky's structural reality: high protein density + high sodium + cured-meat preservatives are baked into the category.

💪
Protein
100/100
🍬
Sugar
60/100
🧂
Sodium
25/100
📋
Ingredients
70/100
🌾
Fiber
30/100

The short answer

Jack Link’s Premium Cuts Original Hickory Smokehouse Beef Jerky delivers 12 g of protein in 80 calories per 1 oz (28 g) serving (USDA FDC 1852296) — about 43 g of protein per 100 g, the highest density we’ve graded. The Labelgrade is B- (70 / 100) despite the maxed-out protein density: extreme sodium (540 mg per ounce, 1929 mg per 100 g), 5 g of added sugar + brown sugar + MSG + maltodextrin + sodium nitrite drag the ingredient-quality and sodium scores down. Jerky’s structural reality.

Why this Labelgrade

DimensionGradeScoreWhy
Protein densityA+100 / 10043 g per 100 g — capped at 100 by the formula. Higher density than plain cooked chicken breast (31 g per 100 g) because dehydration concentrates the meat
Ingredient qualityB-70 / 10013 ingredients including sugar, brown sugar, maltodextrin (corn-syrup-adjacent), MSG, sodium nitrite (curing salt), sodium erythorbate (preservative). Beef is genuinely beef, but the additive count is meaningful
Sugar loadC60 / 1005 g per ounce (18 g per 100 g) — moderate per serving but high per 100 g, and all of it is added
Sodium loadF25 / 100540 mg per ounce; 1929 mg per 100 g. About 23% of the daily limit per serving and 82% per 100 g
FiberF30 / 1000 g, expected for a meat product
OverallB-70 / 100The category leader for shelf-stable lean protein, with sodium as the structural trade-off. Good in moderation (1-2 oz at a time), poor as a high-frequency protein staple

How it compares

ProductProtein per 100 gSodium per 100 gCalories per 100 gIngredients
Jack Link’s Beef Jerky (this product)43 g1929 mg28613
Plain cooked chicken breast31 g~75 mg1651
Tyson Chicken Nuggets15.6 g522 mg300~12
Premier Protein Vanilla Shake8.7 g67 mg46~30
Quest Protein Chips Sea Salt65.6 g594 mg3757

Jerky and Quest Protein Chips occupy the extreme protein-density tier. Jerky uses whole beef + curing; Quest Chips use milk and whey isolates. Both deliver more protein per gram than any other category. Sodium is the price of jerky’s preservation method; isolate-based snacks like Quest Chips have meaningfully lower sodium per 100 g.

Whole-food equivalent

One 1 oz (28 g) serving of Jack Link’s Beef Jerky (12 g protein) equals roughly:

In terms of dehydration ratio: 1 oz of jerky represents about 3 oz of fresh beef before drying. The protein doesn’t shrink during dehydration — only water does.

Scope

This page covers Jack Link’s Premium Cuts Beef Jerky Original Hickory Smokehouse in the 3.25 oz / 92 g package (UPC 017082700100, USDA FDC 1852296). Jack Link’s sells dozens of flavors (teriyaki, peppered, sweet & hot, sriracha, etc.) and multiple lines (Premium Cuts, Small Batch, Handcrafted, Original, Chicken Jerky, Pork Jerky). Per-serving protein is typically 10-13 g across the line; sodium varies from ~400 to ~700 mg depending on flavor and recipe. Always check the actual package label.

Ingredients (from the USDA Branded Foods entry)

Beef, water, sugar, less than 2% salt, brown sugar, maltodextrin, flavorings, monosodium glutamate, spices, smoke flavor, sodium erythorbate, citric acid, sodium nitrite.

Nutrition Facts
Nutrient Per Serving (1 oz (28 g))
Calories80
Protein12g
Total Fat1g
Saturated Fat0.5g
Trans Fat0g
Total Carbohydrates5g
Dietary Fiber0g
Total Sugars5g
Sodium540mg
Cholesterol30mg
Calcium20mg
Iron1.4mg
Potassium0mg
Scope: This page applies specifically to Jack Link's Premium Cuts Beef Jerky Original Hickory Smokehouse (3.25 oz (92 g)) · UPC 017082700100. Other sizes, flavors, or formulations may differ. Manufacturers periodically reformulate — always check the actual product label.

Where to buy

Links below are affiliate links. Buying through them may earn Labelgrade a commission at no extra cost to you. See our affiliate disclosure. The Labelgrade score is not affected by affiliate relationships — see methodology.

Search links are convenience links that may not land on the exact product variant we covered. Always verify the package label (size, UPC) before purchasing.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much protein is in Jack Link's Beef Jerky?

12 grams of protein per 1 oz (28 g) serving (USDA FDC 1852296) — about 43 g protein per 100 g, the highest density of any shelf-stable snack we've graded.

How many calories per ounce?

80 calories per 1 oz serving — exceptional for the protein delivered (6.7 calories per gram of protein, the most efficient ratio in our database).

How much sodium is in one ounce?

540 mg per 1 oz serving — about 23% of the FDA's 2300 mg daily sodium limit. Per 100 g (about 3.5 servings) that's nearly 1900 mg, or 82% of the daily limit. Sodium is the main caveat for jerky as a regular protein source.

Why is the sodium so high?

Sodium is structural to jerky-making. Curing meat (the salt-and-nitrite step) draws moisture out and inhibits bacterial growth, which is what gives jerky its shelf stability. You can't make traditional jerky with low sodium — modern 'reduced sodium' jerky still typically lands around 300-400 mg per ounce, vs 540 mg here.

Does it contain MSG?

Yes. Monosodium glutamate is listed in the ingredients as a flavor enhancer. MSG is FDA-recognized as safe but is one of the ingredients commonly avoided by minimal-processing diets.

Is the sugar added?

Yes. Both 'sugar' and 'brown sugar' are listed in the ingredients along with maltodextrin (a sugar-derived starch). The 5 g of sugar per ounce is all added.

Does it count as 'high in protein' under FDA rules?

Yes — 12 g per serving is 24% of the FDA 50 g Daily Value, above the 20% threshold for the 'high in protein' claim.

How does it compare to plain cooked chicken breast?

Per 100 g: jerky has 43 g protein vs chicken's 31 g — 39% more protein per gram of food. Per calorie: chicken is slightly more efficient (~5.3 cal/g protein vs jerky's 6.7). Per sodium: chicken is dramatically better (75 mg per 100 g vs jerky's 1929 mg). Jerky's value is shelf-stability and convenience; chicken's value is sodium and ingredient simplicity.

Why is the protein-density score capped at 100?

The Labelgrade formula caps each dimension at 100. Jack Link's raw density of 43 g per 100 g would score 114 / 100 by our formula (50 + density × 1.5); we cap at 100 / A+ because once you exceed plain cooked chicken breast, you've effectively maxed out the realistic ceiling for whole-food protein density.

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Last verified: 2026-05-27