Scott Smith
TVWBB Pro
Is it possible that sometimes meat gets sold as 75/25 when it would actually qualify as 80/20 or 85/15 or perhaps actually works out as 78/22? I could see a retailer taking the price per pound hit for a variety of reasons.
How do you store the fat trimmings until you use them? I would love to use some of my brisket fat but don't grind burger too often.Yeah, I don't bother buying ground beef anymore. For the most part anyway. We have a small store here in our village and if I tell them I want ground chuck, he will pull a chuck roast out of the case and grind it on the spot for me. Otherwise I buy beef I want to use and do my own. Also when I buy a whole strip loin I trim it out and use the trimmings to make some excellent ground beef. Fat content? Who know. The more the better though![]()
I have been rendering my fat trimmings for tallow, but, if I was going to save them to grind later for burger or sausage, I'd just vacuum seal them and pop 'em in the freezer. Works great for my pork back fat that I keep on hand for sausage.How do you store the fat trimmings until you use them? I would love to use some of my brisket fat but don't grind burger too often.
I've got to get some of that 85/20. You're getting 5% extra for free!Most of the large major grocery stores with an in-house meat department get the bulk of their ground meats in about 11lb crayovaced tubes which comes very coarsely pre-ground only once and labeled by the meat packing house as 85/15 , 85/20 etc...
I haven't graduated to grinding my own yet, but The Missus and I have taken to buying fractional cattle, and I will fight anyone who says that the grind we get from the processor isn't head and shoulders above anything I could get at even a boutique grocery store. As an added bonus, it's only four bucks a pound, even with the grinding fee on top of processing.Love me some 5,000 cow ground scraps, NOT!
Do yourself the pleasure and grind a chuck roast for burgers and experience the difference of ground beef versus ground scraps the butchers sell. It’s worlds apart from anything in the pre pack case most stores sell. Chuck is around 70/30 to 75/25, Costco Prime is my reference point here.
and you can render some and fridge the render. makes a great fire starter when placed on garbage mail to light a chimney or coals in char baskets. literally stopped buying canola oil which i was using on old napkins to light the coal chimney.How do you store the fat trimmings until you use them? I would love to use some of my brisket fat but don't grind burger too often.
that's a very smart way to get quality beef. i've looked into it but decided to not store frozen beef as we don't eat beef as much as we used to. so we buy at costco the few cuts we need in a year. for burgers, i do do some blends as they're really good for a higher end burger, again, usually from costco meat department.I haven't graduated to grinding my own yet, but The Missus and I have taken to buying fractional cattle, and I will fight anyone who says that the grind we get from the processor isn't head and shoulders above anything I could get at even a boutique grocery store. As an added bonus, it's only four bucks a pound, even with the grinding fee on top of processing.
Our rancher is my wife’s sister’s husband, but you’re spot on - knowing the path your food took to get to your plate is critical to getting good quality.hopefully you can meet your local rancher who's raising your cattle. it's nice to know the people in your ecosystem. we do similar with winemakers. we like to know the people whose products we enjoy.
I doubt you could ever wear out the KA. You could wear out or break the attachment but the actual machine? I have yet to see one actually "worn out"Barb and I have been grinding our own beef now for a few years now and that to us it is the only way to go. We 90% of the time do chuck roast with some added brisket fat for the burger grind only.
We were using our KA with a grinding attachment, very slow but worked okay. I just recently bought a dedicated meat grinder and it's so much faster than the KA, it will grind 10 pounds in about 10 minuets. Decide I would rather have to replace a $80 meat grinder every couple of years vs. a $500 KA mixer.
That may be true, you're the experienced one, not me. I know it's almost 40 years old and has had a lot of hard use. At Christmas time for well over 30 years it made over 100 dozen cookies, and many loafs of bread.I doubt you could ever wear out the KA. You could wear out or break the attachment but the actual machine? I have yet to see one actually "worn out"