Grinding deer meat, die size?

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chef k-dude

Master of the Pit
Original poster
Mar 11, 2015
1,195
1,102
Central Virginia
Dad already got an 8 point this season and we skinned, quartered and deboned it while still warm. It was 67 degrees yesterday here in Virginia, so no letting it hang for days. Nice deer, so clean, zero odor...which is kind of a disappointment lately, the deer we've got for the last several years are so mild, you cant taste any "deer"!

So I'm now tasked as usual (dad always had his butchered until he built and moved next door to me) with vac sealing the meat. Got about 50lbs off the bone to deal with. About half of that is destined for grinding. I may grind some of the roasts and larger pieces but for now will vac seal those and freeze in the interest of time.

I have always ground deer meat with the 3/16" die. I grind my burger meat from chuck using the 1/4" die for maximum texture, but with deer meat, there is always some connective tissue etc in the lesser cuts so I figure a smaller grind will make that stuff less noticeable, and it usually works. But, that finer grind texture easily identifies that it is deer in chili, etc..

That's all good, but I thought to ask the opinions and experience of others.

For those blessed with deer meat, how do you prefer to grind it?

I dont usually blend in any fat but just checked and my local country grocer sells both pork and beef fat on request. What are your thoughts on adding one of those fats?
 
I clean my deer meat really nice -very little connective tissue and run it once through 3/16 and then it’s good for chili, etc.

A buddy of mine gave me some ground elk and it had 10% beef tallow in it and it was wonderful. I may try to do that for some of my own ground deer.
 
I may have miss-typed on the connective tissue. I do cut away anything hard-ish, remove any fat and what silverskin that makes sense. There are some parts that are layered and impossible to remove the silver skin that I wont let go to waste. My ground deer is always good, no weird chewy stuff.

Thanks for the replies.
 
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Best deer burger I have ever made was around 80/20 (maybe 75/25) deer/beef brisket fat. Not sure on my die size but I normally do a double grind through what I call the medium die. I'm working on getting my hands on some ribeye fat trimmings from a local butcher shop/local cattle ranch.
 
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I may have miss-typed on the connective tissue. I do cut away anything hard-ish, remove any fat and what silverskin that makes sense. There are some parts that are layered and impossible to remove the silver skin that I wont let go to waste. My ground deer is always good, no weird chewy stuff.

Thanks for the replies.
The stuff that has a lot of tough connective tissue and tendons, we use as stew meat. Cook that down for 4-5 hours and it turns to gelatin much like what happens to a brisket. Makes for great flavor in a stew. This would be the shanks, some parts of the shoulder and neck...
 
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I grind my burger twice. First grind both meat and 20% beef fat is with a 3/8"plate. The meat is mixed in a meat lug to better distribute the fat, then through a 1/8" plate. Works for everything from burgers to tacos.
I do similar except I like 25% beef fat and start with the ½" plate...
 
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