Folks keep saying grinder = burger, but I grind for sausage more than burger. Your meat processing world opens up so much when you start making your own sausage - not just your regular processor "venison links" or summer sausage, but any variety from around the world can be made well with venison cut with either pork or beef fat.
Literally life-changing and you'll get a lot more variety out of your game meat (rather than buying kielbasa, brats, chorizo, whatever from the store)
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I feel the same way. Everyone has their tastes, but there are so few butchers that make good tasting sausage or jerky. 95% of butchers out there make the same old bland, salty garbage that is only marginally better than from a gas station. There are butchers out there that have fantastic recipes, but they are few and far between. I would reason a guess that there is one, maybe two honestly good butchers per state.
Or you can just make it yourself. I've made plenty of things that weren't great when I was learning, but none of it was bad. Today I can make jerky and sausage that is right up there with the best of anyone. Plus as you say, you can then make other things that you can't buy like chorizo, pepperoni (honest aged pepperoni), etc.
When it comes to equipment, I took a much more minimalist approach than a lot of people. Growing up we had meat grinder that dad had connected to an electric motor. It is a serious unit, and the gearbox turned it slow, which was actually a good thing. We used that grinder for both grinding, and sausage stuffing. It wasn't until years later that I learned most people don't stuff with a grinder. That rig worked as good as anything I've tried.
When it came time for me to buy my own stuff, I opted for a very similar grinder, a chop-rite, however a slightly smaller #12. I had every intention hooking it to an electric motor, that is until I used it as it was. It turns out a good hand grinder with good blades is perfectly suitable just as it is. The key is that you have them secured, not just C-clamped to a bench. I have mine on a quick attach bracket I made which mates to a large beam in my basement. In January I ground up an elk with it in one go, and it was no challenge at all. I'm just not a fan of chose cheap China electric grinders like LEM. They are ok, but they are not built like a Chop Rite. On average I process at least 2 deer, and almost always something else like a bear, elk, and hopefully this year an antelope. I also grind up a lot of geese. I'd be willing to try a #32 Chop Rite grinder, but I have no intentions of changing mine anytime soon. I use both a 3/8" hole and a 3/16" hole plate.
For my sausage stuffer I went with the American made 5lb from The Sausage Maker. Despite saying it is a 5lb capacity, it easily holds 10 pounds of ground meat, and it seems to me to average closer to 12 pounds before its really full. I usually do two different sausage recipes per animal, and I've never done more than 20 pounds of sausage meat before. This size works just fine for me. I have no complaints about this machine. I have it on the same quick attach bracket setup as my grinder. I use one hand to crank, and the other to feed casing. A child can do it, it's not hard at all.
I do 100% of my game processing start to finish myself with no help. All I use is a buck 110 folding knife to gut and skin and quarter. A Buck open season boning knife to bone and cut up meat. A plastic table to work on, 3 of those Lem plastic bins, a chop-rite meat grinder, a TSM 5lb sausage stuffer, and a jerky cutting board with matching knife. I am also working on building a good smokehouse. Currently I've been smoking in my grill which works great, but the capacity is limited. Thats really the only bottleneck in my system. Those items are all that is needed for steaks/chops, stew meat, roasts, any kind of sausage or brat, any kind of jerky, pretty much anything you can think of. So yes, a meat grinder is necessary, only secondary to knife.