Ive seen that LEM and Meat have a dual grind tube. Does coarse and then fine both in the same pass through the tube. Seen a few other reviews that say it sure saves some time. The 2nd always seems to take so much longer for me.
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Anyone use a dual grind meat grinder
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I'm curious what the advantage would be to that set up. I used to always run mine through the course plate and then back through the fine because that's how I was taught when I was young. About 8-10 years back I started running it through the fine alone and I honestly can't tell any difference.
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Originally posted by Pineywoods View PostI'm curious what the advantage would be to that set up. I used to always run mine through the course plate and then back through the fine because that's how I was taught when I was young. About 8-10 years back I started running it through the fine alone and I honestly can't tell any difference.Last edited by CWendling; 10-09-2024, 12:46 PM.
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Originally posted by CWendling View Post
The advantage is you only run it through the grinder once and it comes out a fine grind. Ive also considered just running through the fine plate as well. The issue ive found....the way i do it...is i run still mostly frozen chunks through the course. Then if i dont throw that back in the freezer for a bit it comes out kinda as a mush through the fine plate
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Originally posted by CWendling View Postmy grinder is a 12, so im not sure it would run frozen through the fine plate as well as a larger. Maybe ill give it a shot this year and see. I ran some through the coarse plate twice last year. I havent been able to tell the difference with that and it was a little faster
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I use large plate with the spices added. Next if adding liquid put it on meat, let rest a few minutes to get into mixture then run through smaller plate. Many commercial kitchens do this as the spice and V.P. or soy sticks to the meat, then water or broth gets with the protein in the meat not just spice. The meat gets sticky because the protein hangs on to anything and it does slow grinding down a little.
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Originally posted by Smart View PostIf you want hotdog sausage like Ekrich or Earl Campbells then you will like the fine grind.....I'd rather be in control of my plate size for sausage, chili, and burger grind etc than do everything fine.
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Originally posted by Pineywoods View PostI'm curious what the advantage would be to that set up. I used to always run mine through the course plate and then back through the fine because that's how I was taught when I was young. About 8-10 years back I started running it through the fine alone and I honestly can't tell any difference.
There’s that East Texas native intelligence we hear so much about!
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Originally posted by Smart View PostIf you want hotdog sausage like Ekrich or Earl Campbells then you will like the fine grind.....I'd rather be in control of my plate size for sausage, chili, and burger grind etc than do everything fine.
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Originally posted by M16 View Post
No such thing as hot dog sausage. If it’s fine ground it ain’t sausage. It’s s**t in a casing.
For us link sausage is one grind only …medium (7) or coarser
Burger is two grinds….coarse and fine. A dual grinder would be a hamburger or breakfast sausage only grinderLast edited by Smart; 10-10-2024, 06:38 AM.
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