To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Meat grinder

skyking

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 26, 2012
Messages
1,856
Location
Dallas & Tulsa
Well ,i'm already thinking about hunting season.Been wanting a meat grinder and dont know which kind to get .Hand or electric. Any suggestions?
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Toymeister

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 30, 2011
Messages
595
Location
North Florida
electric, no question. Meat grinders are sized by the grinding plate. I can't recall if they end in 2 or 0 but the sizes are something like 12, 22 or 32. The 12 is too small, you have to cut the meat too small for game processing. 22 is fine.

Hand crank are generally 12s such as the kitchen aid meat grinder attachment.
 

machine_punk

Well-known member
Joined
May 14, 2011
Messages
2,540
Location
Napa Valley, California
If you already have the large Kitchenaid mixer, you might consider their attachment for grinding meat. I've been using it to grind my own meat lately (buy a pork and beef roast and grind them down into a pork/beef mix for 'hamburger.')

You want the meat 'almost frozen' when you grind it (the warmer the meat is, the worse the results). I put the roasts in the freezer for a good hour before grinding.

M_P
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

BWS

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 3, 2006
Messages
923
Location
Mnts of Va
+1 on finding hand grinders at the flea mkt.I'd pick one up....then take your time looking for a deal on an electric one.
 

jjjrmx5

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 30, 2010
Messages
3,431
Location
Cincinnati, OH
Kitchen Aid and the sausage grinder attachment.

The bigger issue is the stuffing device.

I suggest the vertical drum stuffer with the top handle and front output stuffer tube.

I can't think of the mfgr off hand but well worth the money spent. Not cheap, but will last a lifetime. Some can be found used as well.
 

Outlawmws

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 9, 2011
Messages
39,277
Location
The Badlands
Unless you are doing an awful lot of meat, a hand grinder is perfectly fine. you are not likely to be doing the whole animal, (I'm thinking deer sized game here) and 5-10 lbs of meat through a hand grinder is nothing. Plus as mentioned, they are cheap second hand...

If you are going to make it all into sausage, that may be a different story.
 

Not Born Yesterday

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 8, 2012
Messages
99
Location
Oklahoma City, OK
I process a whole deer almost every deer season. Everything gets ground up except for the back strap. I use a Kitchen Aid mixer grinder attachment and sausage stuffer tube for packaging the ground meat into a plastic wild game wrapper. I must admit that it takes most of a day to process it with the Kitchen Aid but it works well and doing it once a year is tolerable.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom