You need to get a hobart buffalo chopper. That is what they are made for. Just let that puppy run until desired consistency is achieved. Problem is they are very pricey. Lucky for me I stumbled on a vintage one that needed some love. Picked it up for $175 and restored it. I primarily just use the grinder on it but the chopper makes fast work of jalapenos or pulled pork.I've made hot dogs out of deer/elk meat which requires emulsifying the meat to the consistency of cake batter. About 6x through the grinder. I start with damn near frozen cubes of meat and as the meat thaws I throw back in the freezer. You still end up having trouble getting it to pass through the grinder so instead of adding water ill drop in actual ice cubes. This has never been a problem for my 1/2HP grinder.
I'll have to check them out. thanks for the tip!You need to get a hobart buffalo chopper. That is what they are made for. Just let that puppy run until desired consistency is achieved. Problem is they are very pricey. Lucky for me I stumbled on a vintage one that needed some love. Picked it up for $175 and restored it. I primarily just use the grinder on it but the chopper makes fast work of jalapenos or pulled pork.
I'll have to check them out. thanks for the tip!
That's a good idea. Thanks for sharing.I have a lem #12 and struggled with the second grind the first couple times I used it. I finally found something that worked the last time:
I put the steel stuffing tube cf rom the bagging kit on the discharge for the first grind, and the first grind meat came out in a long tube. The diameter of that tube just perfectly fit down the throat, no tamper needed. The meat wasn't even that cold, but the tubes still seemed to get pulled right down by the auger.
This technique saved me a couple hours, and it didn't seem to matter if the first grind had been collected in organized logs or was a continuous tube piled in a huge bowl, both worked, but one was way less effort.