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We had one that attached to our old mixer that worked OK..
but I preferred the hand grinder that use to be my grand parents. I've pulled the handle of the old style bench mount for over sixty years, it still works just fine. They need a solid counter to mount on that todays modern counters don't have which may be a problem, I do our grinding on a solid work bench, most the time before I clean up from butchering. The device has no seals but most meats grind without much mess though if your making pault or other ground food with liver, needs a drip tray under the handle on the floor too as it will drip blood out the back end by the handle. I use the wood masher from our sieve to shove the food down instead of my fingers but you can whittle something out from a 1 1/2" closest dowel or the like. I've ground potatoes, onions, squash and other vegetables too making relish, pault, soup and other things with them. Besides hamburger, we've made tons of sausage from beef, deer, elk, rabbit, and chicken. These grinders are cast iron rugged, no electricity, no plastic to break, one giant nut in the front and a large thumb screw on the handle and all comes apart, easy to clean, unbreakable and last for centuries if reasonable care is taken not to let it rust, even then, it usually can be fixed with a little vinegar and steel wool..
Mine looks close to this 1760482738718.png Some of the modern ones shown here look interesting, Personally, if you aren't making a bunch in one sitting, I'd stick with the manual ones you can pass on to your kids.
 
If you have the KitchenAid mixer that has the crank vertical adjustment, then KitchenAid has a plastic and metal grinder, or there's an aftermarket that's all metal. Supposedly, the tip up mixer isn't powerful enough.
 
Still have one of the hand crank ones here but have not used it in a long time. Long ago bought one for the Wife's stand mixer. Kitchenaid. When I make up some its 10-15 pounds at a time. Really easy with the power. The stand alone electric would I have to guess be China made unless you got into some high end one. For a few pounds at a time the hand crank does work just fine. There is only a few moving parts on either. When done I just take it apart and put it all in dish washer.
 
Which mixer did you have and what didn't you like?
Probably a dozen years ago, I got the attachment for wife's mixer (red Kitchen aid does dough for bread weighs a ton) that has a motor I figured could auger in a fence post hole. Oddly didnt grind well for me, bound up, I figured it was power (at the time).


For wee amounts the hand crank works. For doing a deer or elk grind pile I wouldn't trade my LEM.
 
I've got a LEM #12 I think. It's got a 3/4 HP motor; time is money.
Good taste. I am running a LEM #22. Zero regrets on the money spent after the first time I used it. Do you happen to have/run the meat mixer attachment for yours? I am thinking about getting one as the batches of sausage I am making keep getting bigger as more family and friends want in.
 
Good taste. I am running a LEM #22. Zero regrets on the money spent after the first time I used it. Do you happen to have/run the meat mixer attachment for yours? I am thinking about getting one as the batches of sausage I am making keep getting bigger as more family and friends want in.
I just heard about that attachment. I honestly went with the 3/4 HP to cut down on time. It takes longer to clean than it does to make the sausage.
 
Still have one of the hand crank ones here but have not used it in a long time. Long ago bought one for the Wife's stand mixer. Kitchenaid. When I make up some its 10-15 pounds at a time. Really easy with the power. The stand alone electric would I have to guess be China made unless you got into some high end one. For a few pounds at a time the hand crank does work just fine. There is only a few moving parts on either. When done I just take it apart and put it all in dish washer.
I have a USA made KitchenAid stand mixer, and we have the grinder attachment. Works a treat.

My wife moved here 20 years ago, and back then we couldn't readily find ground pork in the local grocery stores, so for years we'd grind our own, couple pounds at a time.

Last few years ground pork is available pretty much every grocery store, so don't use it anymore.

I believe the main reason we bought the KitchenAid was because I heard that they were no longer going to be made in the USA.
 
I worked with the kitchen aid and grinder attachment for years. It works (slowly) and does a (so-so) adequate job. It doesn't have the power to do a good job on semi frozen meat or fat.

I finally bought a real meat grinder and the difference in speed, grind quality and convenience was immediately obvious. So much faster and no more smeared protein or fat. Wanted to make good quality cased and uncased fresh and fermented sausages. That starts with a good grind of semi frozen meat and fat.

I would look at plate size, horsepower and weight. Weight is the enemy if you have to move it...and few of us have a dedicated meat cutting/processing area where we can leave equipment.
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I made a very good and not so good decision with my grinder. Size 32 plate and 1.5 or 2.0 hp motor. Wonderful speed and power. The damn thing weighs 75 pounds.

You get a 12 or 18 plate with 3/4hp and you should be styling.

More is better.....except the weight.

I would never go back to the kitchen aid even for small jobs....but the pasta roller attachment is very nice.
 

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