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By "roasting your new mixer" can I assume you mean you have a Kitchen Aid or similar with a meat grinder attachment?
I had a $100 meat grinder that lasted for several years. I replaced it with one that was $72 at the time. It's not even available anymore. I've probably run 50-75lbs through it and it works well. I always freeze the parts because someone told me to years ago. I also partially freeze the chunks of meat I grind laid out on a sheet pan just till it starts getting firm to the pinch.
I also make falafel using the grinder and not concerned at all about cross contamination. Of course the falafel balls get deep fried so bacteria may be killed. I soak the parts in hot sudsy water and scrub with a brush/bottle brush, and sponge what I can, then rinse with the hottest water from my tap. I am very fastidious about cross contamination, sanitizing my work surface after handling meat before shifting to vegetables, etc. Hand washed grinder parts dont scare me in the least because I know "I" washed them. I was the accredited NSF guy at a company that made commercial kitchen equipment, I learned all about where "Herman the Vermin" likes to live! To each their own of course. My mother freezes stuff like pasta she's so paranoid bugs are going to take residence in the box!
I made a customized open-ported grinding blade for sausage stuffing because I wanted to stuff AFTER mixing. These grinders require you to grind the mixture straight in to the casing or you have to re-grind while your stuffing. I still didn't prefer how it worked so I bought the Gander Mountain branded 5 lb stuffer similar to this (seems like everything I have is no longer available!)
Works pretty good. I made a custom (retired multi-metal welder-fabricator here) shaft that would fit on the shape the crank handle fits on to, that also fits a cordless drill so when un-cranking to reload or finish and clean, then cranking back down for storage, is fast. I have the wife operate the hand crank when I'm stuffing so I can handle the casing at the output tube. I use it primarily for stuffing boudin these days.
I have an old version of this. I see the new ones come with a foot pedal.
For a 'cheapo' generic it sure will grind meat as fast as I can feed it. I probably paid around 100-120 for mine 10 or a dozen years ago.
The STX 3000 is probably the grinder for you in your price range. Make sure you maintain your blades/plates. I went this route and hated it, only to toss the grinder for a $500 dual grind and omg I can't believe how much a difference it made.
You could also stick with the KA grinder. I've personally abused mine by putting frozen chunks in there, and still the KA powered through it. I think as long as it's semi-frozen (not fully) and you cube the chunks well, you'll be fine using it forever.
So despite the truth (that the dishwashing fluid) ruins the chrome, it'll still work fine once you throw it in the dishwasher. So, for me, cleaning my KA grinder was a snap. After removing the coat via the dishwasher, just:
Clean immediately after use
Set your faucet to spray hot hot water.
Coat it in dishwashing soap
Spray everything off, quickly use a nylon brush on the threads
Leave out to try.
Only takes me a couple mins. I use the same approach for my dual grind.
This thread inspired me to look into Meat Grinders for WAY too long last night hahahaa. If I upgrade I think I'll be doing a Weston Butcher Series #8 for more money than I would like to spend but hey it would be good to go AND can use my existing grinding plates and blades so I at least have some parts.
After much looking I wanted to ensure I went with something that 1. had all metal gears, 2. didn't get hot easily, 3 was more reliable with some kind of customer service should I need it.
I passed over LEM basically because of all the reported heating up reports I didn't like and then secondly they are more expensive for really no more speed. I do like the customer service aspect but I don't want to have to stop processing 7-12 animals after hunting and freezing grinder parts, etc. The ease of use and time saving is so much more worth it to me than a little better customer service and higher overall cost :D
I passed over LEM basically because of all the reported heating up reports I didn't like and then secondly they are more expensive for really no more speed.
Oh darn, I'm really happy with my dual-grind, but I haven't done more than 10lbs or so at once. Sad to hear that it might overheat if I do more than that. It really has been a great grinder for me...
Oh darn, I'm really happy with my dual-grind, but I haven't done more than 10lbs or so at once. Sad to hear that it might overheat if I do more than that. It really has been a great grinder for me...
In regards to the Lem getting hot. I am pondering. How many actual grinder OEM manufactures are there that the known brands use. Case in point one of the smaller Cabela's grinders has a big bite auger. Some of meat grinders have dual grind like lem
Wow, you're right! Their cheaper grinders use plastic gears! That's crazy!
Fortunately, it does seem that the big-bite grinders don't use plastic gears. Still, it's odd to me to see any plastic gears in any grinder, even in their lower-end models...
When I first joined I thought the guys curing and making sausage were pretty out there but not anymore! NO WAY I will ever be without a dedicated grinder. I am making several sausages I cannot source locally and making WAY better stuff than storebought. Totally worth it IMO but it does take some experience. These are a big deal here and cannot be easily sourced. Brat burgers. Grind up a butt, mix with spices, grill, and like $1/lb... https://www.smokingmeatforums.com/t...h-coarse-grain-mustard-on-pretzel-bun.311151/
I run a LEM Big Bite #8 ($400 + shipping). Works great. It is considered to be a "commercial" grinder - albeit on the low end of the commercial spectrum. Quiet as a can opener and totally grinds the pounds I run through it semi-frozen. I typically run 10 to 20 pounds at a time for home use and sometimes up to 50 pounds when making a bunch of venison burger for a few friends at one time.
On the downside, once you have a dedicated grinder, a dedicated stuffer is soon to follow, as you get dragged down the rabbit hole of sausage making. It's a worthwhile trip, though.
Ha! Ain't that the truth! Though I did it the other way around. I tried the KA grinder and then picked up a dedicated stuffer since the KA was a PIA for stuffing. Next thing you know I needed a bigger grinder to keep up with my stuffer!
Well, now I need a bigger smoker since I'm beyond capacity for my Traeger and Bradley more often than not.
Ya need to relocate near me. You probably would have had cash to spare for the grinder. I do service and repairs for people at lower labor rates than the d(st)ealers. Tractors, ATVs, side by sides, outdoor power equipment, trailer wiring, trailer brakes, welding. I pretty much fix whatever.