Grind it your way! 🍔
The LEMProducts #8 Countertop Meat Grinder is a powerful 575-watt electric grinder designed for occasional use, capable of processing 2-3 pounds of meat per minute. Made from durable aluminum, it includes essential accessories and offers a one-year warranty with lifetime customer support.
Item Dimensions L x W x H | 14.17"L x 6.89"W x 13.78"H |
Item Weight | 11.25 Pounds |
Style Name | Meat Grinder |
Color | Silver |
Specific Uses For Product | Grinding, Sausage-making, Burgers, Pet food |
Recommended Uses For Product | Home |
Capacity | 2 Pounds |
Wattage | 575 watts |
Material Type | Aluminum |
M**)
Heavy duty prosumer product at price point.
Let me start this review with an engineers rant about about choice of material vs design. People in the market for a grinder worry far too much about metal vs plastic gears. First of, neither all plastics nor metals are created equal. For example, in many applications quality nylon, poly carbonate or whatever is vastly supperior to mystery chinese cast metal. Secondly, as long as design and dimensioning is appropriate for the material choice, even a weak material will work for the intended purpose.I've had my grinder for several years now. Its processed well over 20 big game animals, much of it poorly trimmed sinewy meat and well over freezing temperature (worst case scenario for a grinder). The output is perfect and the rest of our processing line is nowhere near able to keep up with it.Looking at this device its quite clear it was produced by a designer that makes professional meat grinders for a living who was tasked to make a more affordable unit that would only produce maybe a thousand pounds of meat a season rather than a thousand pounds of meat a day at a professional locker. It uses nylon gears, cheap aluminum cast for the housing and screw and only quality stainless where it really matters: the knife and the plate. The motor is an ancient twentieth century brushed design that stinks of ozone when fired up. Everything is ridiculously overbuilt and there is no way anything will strip on a properly manufactured and assembled device. It is big and clunky, super noisy, and the parts, while super easy to clean manually, are not dish washer safe, but for seasonal use i feel the savings are totally worth it over a pro-grade device.On a final note, the most common problem with any grinder is clogging due to sinew build-up around the knife. This can happen due to poor knife/plate alignment or because they've become dull, but will quickly be an issue even on a quality device with sharp edges if not assembled right. A grinder cuts by shearing the material between the knife edge and the holes in the plate, similar to a scissor, and just a like a scissor the fit between mating surfaces needs to be tight. As such, when tightening down the aluminum head, don't be shy. There is a happy medium, but better a little on the tight side - practice makes perfect :)
S**K
Quality item if you don't overload it.
For a home user, I don't need a mega grinder but I worried about a small one not being able to do what I wanted. This little guy is a real trooper and quality item. I chill the parts and tray and the meat prior to grinding. I bought an external foot switch for it which I HIGHLY recommend. If you feed it gently, and chill your meat to just above freezing, it's awsome. I've made hot and mild Italian sausage. breakfast sausage, ground beef for burgers, meat loaf and spaghetti sauce. And ground pork for meatballs. I won't buy ground beef again.Mar 24 2022 update2 months in and I love this item. I've probably done about 25 lbs of meat thus far. I've made pork breakfast sausage using the Con Yeager seasoning from Rural King, perfect. Made Hot Italian pork sausage with Con Yeager seasoning from RK. I've made the Hot and mild It Sausage, we like the hot. Made lots of beef mixes for burgers. Brisket, sirloin, chuck mostly. Home made meat browns better, tastes better and I (IMHO) can cook it a little bit rarer and feel safe as I know there is no offal in it. I've used my ground meat and pork in my bolognese sauce and it improves an already great dish (Anne Burrell's recipe online).A few recommendations:1. You MUST keep the meat and machine cold. Pre cool the grinder parts in the freezer, I put the meat tray in the fridge to prevent sticking. Your meat MUST be VERY cold, almost frozen or partially frozen but not solid frozen.2. Cut meat into 1-1/2 inch cubes or strips. Cubes will keep long strings of gristle wrapping around the grinder shaft.3. I HIGHLY RECOMMEND the foot switch. Only use the grinder in bursts so it won't overheat. See here at Amazon https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07VSF64RM/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1. I have NEVER had to use the "Reverse" button on the grinder. It's worked great.4. I HIGHLY RECOMMEND the sharpener here, https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B078WFX5BF/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1. Sharpening the blade and milling the plate flat allow the machine to work much easier.5. After each batch, unwrap any tendon or gristle wrapped around the shaft and throw it away, it'll only be a small amount if you trimmed your beef well.6. For my pork sausages, I use Sams Club pork shoulder steaks at about $2.50 a pound or less. You lose a little bit cleaning off the bone and any tendon, but just about perfect fat ratio without mixing meats.If I keep my meat cold, my blades sharp and don't overload with gristle, I expect this machine will last a long time and grind hundreds of pounds of meat. I recommend this product highly.
S**!
Delicious Short Rib Burgers
After years of reading recipes that called for grinding my own beef for juicy hamburgers, I finally broke down and bought a meat grinder. I spent a long time comparing manual vs. electric, a dedicated appliance vs. an attachment for a kitchen stand mixer, etc. I have another manual crank kitchen device for making pasta - which, while rewarding, is a massive time sink. My kitchen is also small, so having to buy a stand mixer (which I'd personally have no use for, since I don't do any baking), and associated attachments just seemed like a waste of money. So I happened upon LEM, whose products as a whole have received great praise in the meat grinding community. I was originally going to opt for the 1158, but then I stumbled upon this gem, which is apparently a newer, more compact model. Works perfectly for me, since I'd probably grind my own burgers maybe 12 times a year (and maybe a few pounds at most, per run), it fits perfectly in my already overstuffed pantry, and it's easy to take apart and clean.I have zero experience with meat grinders before this one - and for my uses, I can't imagine I'd need anything else. At this price point, if you're really into making burgers (building a better big mac with short rib, anyone?), it's really a no brainer.It can be loud, but no louder than any other kitchen appliance. I do recommend you order the silicone spray for storing the cutting blade to prevent rusting.
S**E
A little workhorse for the price, perfect for the "occasional" butcher!
Worked perfectly for the grinding portion of the deer I got this season. I no longer have to worry about burning out my wife's KitchenAid mixer!
TrustPilot
2 个月前
1天前