Vacuum sealing burger bags

Spoony

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Joined
Jul 22, 2022
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59
I was successful on my once and a lifetime bison hunt and now need to process an extraordinary amount of meat. I have typically vacuum sealed my grind, with great results, but am looking to speed up the process using burger bags. I want to keep the grind a maximum of 2 years without any hint of freezer burn. I have never used burger bags and am skeptical.

Has anyone vacuum sealed burger bags? Or will the grind last 2 years in a burger bag using hog rings or tape seal rather than a heat seal?

Thanks!
 

knehrke

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Joined
May 12, 2024
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11
I usually vacuum seal my burger, but I had a processor put some bacon burger into his own bags rather than giving it to me in bulk, so I actually sealed the tubes themselves using a large bag. Overkill? Probably. Bacon burger doesn't last too long anyway...
 

fishslap

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Jan 8, 2017
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Longmont, CO
I vac seal my burger with pork fat mixed in in either 20 or 40 pound batches (1# bags using 8” roll of material to make the bags). I flatten the bags after sealing. I only grind a batch during butchering if I’m almost out of burger. Otherwise, I vac seal the well trimmed and cubed chunks in 5-8# bags for future grind, or whatever size you want. I get the larger vac bag rolls for this. Then, I periodically partially thaw these out and grind with pork fat to make my next batch.

I started doing this because i got tired of grinding after I already hunted, field dressed, packed out, and butchered a whole elk, etc. alone. I also didn’t always have the high quality pork fat on hand at the time (game changer on my burger). I use a regular LEM vac sealer. Burgers are great and spreads the labor out. Never had an issue.
 
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Joined
Jul 20, 2014
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1,172
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Kirtland, NM
Your burger will last a long time in the plastic hb bags. I add bacon to my wild game burger and finished some up recently from 2017. Don’t use the hog ring method. Use the tape machine and squeeze the air out, twist the bag tight, tape it. I’ve done hb this way for myself and commercially for 3 decades.
 

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Joined
Apr 14, 2019
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Location
Fort Myers , FL
I started using the bags after decades of using vac pak bags. I use the tape sealer. I have kept burger for years. Once froze you have to be careful tossing them around as they are thinner than vac bags. I have never had any spoilage but I am careful to get all the air out of the bag. I have no intention of going back to vac paking grind and bulk sausage I make as well. Just to easy to fill the bags with my grinder , twist them up and tape them.
 

strousek

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Sep 28, 2017
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319
Location
Colorado
This is Gospel. 8X10, 5 mil bags flattend out and frozen. They stack perfectly in the right sized Amazon box.
This right here could not be more true! 8x10 bags in your chamber sealer. You can load them however full you want up to 2 lbs. of burger. Flatten them out after you seal them. They stack great in the freezer on the shelves or like NRA mentioned fit in boxes inside regular sized boxes so they don't slide around after freezing. Another huge pro is they thaw fast and evenly when you want to pull some out last minute. I do all my bulk sausage this way as well anymore.

For those of you here that don't have a vacuum chamber sealer yet... don't ever wait on that purchase. Best tool for processing there is.
 

KsRancher

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Joined
Jun 6, 2018
Messages
690
Put me in the camp of the regular ground meat bags. No problems with burger being just fine for 2yrs. It's just too cheap and fast to do for me to try another way
 
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