BLeeber wrote:Okay, of recent, I have really begun cooking/bbqing more after buying my first book, How to Grill by Steven Raichlen. It really showed me what I was doing wrong on the grill...which made grilling more of a chore for me instead of enjoyable. I've done ribs, chicken and steaks with much success over the past 4 months and have loved doing it. Here's my question...
1. A smoker (electric or charcoal). Or could my gas grill suffice with wood chips in foil? Is there that big of a difference? Use the money for something else?
There are people who do well smoking on their gas grills, but I find that something is missing. I use a wide variety of grilling techniques on my Weber kettle, but grills are designed for grilling, and smokers are generally designed for smoking. I have a separate smoker just for (mostly hot) smoking. I would like to add a smoker better designed for cold smoking.
Since you are just starting out, I'd recommend going inexpensive until you have some experience and a better idea of what you want in a smoker. The key to good smoked food is you. There are guys who have won awards at Memphis in May making barbecue on inexpensive bullet-type smokers. I suggest you consider a bullet-type smoker, sometimes called a water smoker. You can learn about smoking without spending several hundred dollars, and who knows? You may find that's all you need. They come in electric and charcoal models. Some people are fine with electric smokers. I prefer to use wood and charcoal for smoking. Either are available for less than $100 at Bass Pro Shops. Consider the Smoke'n Grill Charcoal Smoker or the Brinkmann Electric. Prices jump after that.
2. A meat grinder for burger and sausage. I have a nice food processor which can grind meat. Although I've heard you can over grind and turn meat into mush with a food processor. I'm sure it takes practice but have heard of many who do it. Again, save the money for something else...making the food processor suffice?
People make do with what they've got. Meat minced in a food processor is minced unevenly unless you work at it. Some of it will be mush, some will be just right, and some won't be minced very well. Some folks are ok with that. A kitchen food processor is only meant to handle relatively small quantities. If you wanted to do a 10-lb batch of sausage, it would take you quite awhile to mince all of that to a consistent size in a food processor. On the other hand, if you were to run the same amount through a purpose-designed meat grinder, you could make relatively short work of it and end up with a consistent, predictable product.
Again, if you are just starting out with sausagemaking, I'd suggest getting a manual grinder. The Kitchen Aid meat grinder attachment is fine for grinding a couple of pounds, but you risk burning up even their "heavy duty" motor if you think you are going to grind large batches. I'd suggest picking up a used #10 grinder until you know whether making sausage is for you. A 3/16" plate, and a 3/8" plate are fine to start with, and even if you don't continue with sausagemaking, they will serve well for chili-grind and burger. I've routinely done up to 15lb batches with a hand grinder. If you hunt and intend to process a whole deer, or a whole pig or hog, then you need a more powerful, electric grinder. To start, you might consider the L.E.M. #10 hand grinder for less than $40 at Bass Pro. I've had an old, used Porkert #10 in heavy-tinned cast-iron, for years. Stainless is nice, but twice the cost.
One thing a Kitchen Aid is good for is mixing sausage and working the batch before stuffing. Unless you are doing large batches, you don't need a dedicated sausage mixer.
3. A sausage stuffer and set up, casings, etc. to make sausages. This is a big interest for me. I'm not sure of the difficultly of it though.
Whatever you do, do NOT try to stuff sausage using your Kitchen Aid meat grinder attachment with stuffing funnels attached. It's much easier to stuff if your stuffer funnel is close to your worksurface, and not elevated like on a Kitchen Aid. Of course, you make do with what you've got, and if that's what you've got, you can make it work. It's just more of a hassle.
If you get a manual grinder, some people do great attaching a stuffing funnel to the grinder and grinding straight into the casing. I prefer a separate stuffer. A 5lb vertical or horizontal stuffer will do very well. Consider the vertical stuffer from Northern Tool. This is one place I do not suggest going with a less-expensive 3lb cast-iron horn stuffer. The piston doesn't seal well and clean-up can be more difficult than it has to be. At Bass Pro, consider the L.E.M. 5lb vertical stuffer over the L.E.M. 3lb cast-iron stuffer.
Anyway, those are my thoughts on your options.