Meat Grinders

   / Meat Grinders
  • Thread Starter
#11  
I am about to pull the trigger on the Cabelas heavy duty electric grinder recommended by mnbowhunter. The 50% off price sounds good to me. I know this isn't as heavy duty as the commercial grinders, but I think for my occasional use, it will work good.
 
   / Meat Grinders #12  
This is what I use:
P1010889.jpg


P1010888.jpg


The thing is probably 30 years old, grandpa gave it to me when he no longer had a need for it at 81, now he's 88. In the past three years alone it has done the burger off of 6 deer (enough for 3 years), before that I know I did about 12 with it in less than 10 years. Trust me your arm will wear out long before the machine does.
 
   / Meat Grinders #13  
We tried a hand grinder when we were kids. It works, but so do you! Dad gave it up mostly because he couldn't get us to spend much quality time with it.

I have one of these now:

p029507sq05.jpg



It is okay but the meat has to be very well trimmed. All fascia, ligament, etc removed and the meat has to be in small chunks. Its okay but still a lot of work if you plan on doing multiple deer each season. I've pretty much given up on it. We have a KitchenAide mixer but I think it would do about the same.

I want one of these:

p025603hz04.jpg


They run upwards of $600 but there are intermediate models around $350 and that's what I want. I want to be able to quickly take the meat off the bone, cut it in fair sized chunks and throw it in. Should have bought one years ago.
 
   / Meat Grinders #14  
We tried a hand grinder when we were kids. It works, but so do you! Dad gave it up mostly because he couldn't get us to spend much quality time with it

Your Dad was definitely different from ours, then. As long as he had the strength to swing a belt, he'd have never given up, and I'll guarantee you'd work until you simply could not move anymore. Our youngest daughter still has the old manual grinder we used when I was a kid.

We have a KitchenAide mixer but I think it would do about the same.

I'd be willing to bet you're right.
 
   / Meat Grinders #15  
Bird said:
Your Dad was definitely different from ours, then. As long as he had the strength to swing a belt, he'd have never given up, and I'll guarantee you'd work until you simply could not move anymore. Our youngest daughter still has the old manual grinder we used when I was a kid.

No, that sounds about like my Dad too. This time there was more to it than lazy kids. He kept having to take the thing apart to get it unclogged and we were yanking the breakfast room table all over the place because it was so hard to turn and the table clamp kept coming loose. :D
 
   / Meat Grinders #16  
We have a KitchenAide mixer but I think it would do about the same.



I'd be willing to bet you're right.

You would win the bet. My wife has the Kitchen Aide version and she has to trim out all of the ligaments, etc. as aforestated. It works well for some things, but we have given up on using it for multiple deer each season. It just takes too much time to trim it up beforehand. This year we had it ground at the local processing plant. .30 per pound wasn't too bad I guess.
 
   / Meat Grinders #17  
My husband a professional chef who did his training in charcutire in France swears by the manual meat grinders. He chills the meat, keeps it in a stainless steel bowl that sits in another bowl on ice. For him the main thing is to grind the meat without heating the meat, he is fanatical about that. He feels the hand grinders without the elctric motors keep the meat colder. Plus he is absoloutly fantatical about washing evertyhing down with bleach before you start. Everything msut be washed in bleach and then rinsed thoraghlly. All equipment must be spottless clean and bleached and rinsed, keep the whole process cold and this will prevent the meat from "turning" He nmakes all kinds of pates and sausage all with a hand eat grinder. Hopes this helps you.
 
   / Meat Grinders #18  
rox said:
My husband a professional chef who did his training in charcutire in France swears by the manual meat grinders.

Well, there's meat and then there is meat. Cuts of domestic pork and beef, neatly trimmed, are very easy to grind. A chunk of wild venison shoulder, not so neatly trimmed, is a whole other beast!

As for hiring out the grinding, that is getting more appealing everyday. We have a facility nearby where you can drop off the whole deer and get back ground and cubed meat for about $65. For extra they will do anything you want them to from summer sausage to steaks.

Lately I've been dressing the deer myself and then having them cube or ground it. I may just stick with this.
 
   / Meat Grinders #19  
I can easily tell that's there's a major difference in the uses my family had for a food grinder and what most of you are talking about. It seems that nearly all of the posts in this thread are talking about grinding raw meat, and in some cases, large quantities of it.

I've no doubt that Rox's husband has the right idea if you don't have too much to do at one time.

However, things were a little different for us when I was a kid. We slaughtered and dressed lots of chickens, but then they went to the "locker plant" in town to be frozen whole (a home freezer wasn't in our home until I was 18). We slaughtered our own calves and hogs, but they were skinned, gutted, and cut in half, then taken to the locker plant for them to finish the meat cutting, packaging, sausage making, meat grinding, and freezing. We also hunted squirrels, rabbits, bullfrogs, quail, doves, and meadowlarks to eat, but we didn't have any "big game" in our part of the country.

So I don't even remember grinding any raw meat. Many of you probably know that young chickens make good fryers, but an old hen or rooster would be too tough to chew. However, when cooked in a pressure cooker, they are tender enough to eat, and the cooked meat can be ground up to make chicken salad or to put in milk gravy. The same is true of jack rabbits. So, nearly all the meat ground up in our food grinder was cooked. Of course for chicken salad, or rabbit salad sandwich meat, we also ran hard boiled eggs and onion through the food grinder.

But even more than grinding meat, ours was used a great deal for fruit and vegetables. Every year, we peeled and cored lot of pears, which were then ground up in the food grinder, cooked down with sugar and crushed pineapple, and canned as "pear honey"; a fine preserve on biscuits or toast, or to spread between the layers of cakes, or as an ice cream topping.

Another use every summer was to grind up cabbage, onions, and green tomatoes, which, with other spices and seasonings were canned as "pickalilly"; a relish my parents loved with beans, but which I was never particularly fond of.

Of course, in later adult life, several of us men used to get together and make tamales. Of course, pork was the original tamale meat, but we boiled beef chuck roasts with chunks of onion and salt and pepper, then ground them up with a food grinder for the meat to use in our tamales. Fortunately for us, one of the guys had a good electric meat grinder, but I don't remember a brand or model.
 
   / Meat Grinders #20  
N80 said:
We tried a hand grinder when we were kids. It works, but so do you! Dad gave it up mostly because he couldn't get us to spend much quality time with it.

I have one of these now:

p029507sq05.jpg



It is okay but the meat has to be very well trimmed. All fascia, ligament, etc removed and the meat has to be in small chunks. Its okay but still a lot of work if you plan on doing multiple deer each season. I've pretty much given up on it. We have a KitchenAide mixer but I think it would do about the same.

I want one of these:

p025603hz04.jpg


They run upwards of $600 but there are intermediate models around $350 and that's what I want. I want to be able to quickly take the meat off the bone, cut it in fair sized chunks and throw it in. Should have bought one years ago.
George,
I mentioned in a previous post down the page that I have the Cabela's 1/2HP model of the one you pictured. If you are going to do multiple deer as we do here then thats the way to go. My 1/2 HP has never bogged down and works great. I figure that the money I saved by not paying a processor for 6 deer paid for my machine. My arms would have fallen off if I had to hand grind 3 or more deer a year. If you only get one a year then it takes a few more years to pay for itself.
 

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