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Commercial meat mixers for butcher shops, sausage producers, and foodservice kitchens

Meat Mixers

A commercial meat mixer is a heavy-duty machine that blends ground meat with seasonings, fats, and binders before sausage stuffing, burger forming, or bulk prep. Butcher shops, sausage producers, delis, and catering kitchens use them to keep ingredients evenly distributed across large batches. The same equipment is also called a commercial meat mixer machine, electric meat mixer, meat mixer grinder, or industrial meat mixer.

The right commercial meat mixer depends on three things: daily batch volume, operation type, and footprint. Manual non-tilting units handle small batches and need no electrical service. Electric tilting mixers handle mid to high volume and unload through a tipping bowl. Mixer-grinder combination machines grind and mix in one pass for single-station workflows.

Every commercial meat mixer in this collection is built for daily commercial use with stainless steel construction and motors sized for foodservice workloads. Common configurations, buying guidance, and frequent buyer questions follow below.

  • Pro-Cut KMG-32 Mixer Grinder, 7.5 HP, 220V, 3 Phase

    Original price $11,079.00 - Original price $11,079.00
    Original price
    $11,079.00
    $11,079.00 - $11,079.00
    Current price $11,079.00

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    The Pro-Cut KMG-32 meat grinder is the most efficienct meat grinder in its class,. The KMG-32 meat grinder mixes and grinds up in the same equipmen...

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    Original price $11,079.00 - Original price $11,079.00
    Original price
    $11,079.00
    $11,079.00 - $11,079.00
    Current price $11,079.00

Common Types and Configurations

  • Electric tilting meat mixer: Power-driven mixer with a tipping bowl that empties batches quickly. The standard format for mid- to high-volume operations producing 50 to 180 pounds per batch.
  • Manual non-tilting meat mixer: Hand-operated mixer for small batches around 17 pounds. No electrical service required, suited to small butcher shops and back-of-house testing.
  • Floor model with pulse switch and safety lid: Larger commercial unit that sits on a dedicated floor station. The pulse switch protects the motor under heavy load, and the safety lid blocks operation when open.
  • Forward-and-reverse mixing paddle: Two-direction paddle that pushes ingredients into and out of the corners of the bowl. Reduces dead spots and produces a more uniform mix across the batch.
  • Mixer-grinder combination unit: A single machine that grinds and mixes in one pass. Suited to operations that want to consolidate stations and run higher volume per shift.
  • Stainless steel paddle and bowl: Food-contact components in stainless steel for sanitation, easy cleaning, and corrosion resistance during daily wash-down.

What to Look at Before You Buy

  • Daily batch volume: Match capacity to peak shifts. Our catalog runs from 17 pounds for manual units up to 180 pounds for floor-model electrics. Size for your busiest day, not your average.
  • Manual vs electric: Manual mixers cost less and need no electrical service but limit batch size and tire out operators on long shifts. Electric mixers handle higher volume and reduce hand fatigue.
  • Motor horsepower and voltage: Catalog units run from 1.5 HP through 7.5 HP. Smaller units run on 120V single-phase. Higher-output mixers and mixer-grinders need 220V single-phase or three-phase service.
  • Tilting bowl vs non-tilting: Tilting bowls empty quickly into a hopper or pan and reduce operator lifting. Non-tilting units cost less and have fewer moving parts but require scooping out by hand.
  • Bowl capacity and footprint: Larger bowls mean fewer refills but need more counter or floor space. Confirm the unit fits the station and the kitchen's electrical service before ordering.
  • Safety features: Look for a lid interlock that stops the paddle when the lid opens. Higher-horsepower units should also have a pulse switch to manage motor surge under heavy load.
  • Cleaning access: Removable paddle and easy-clear bowl drain matter for daily sanitation. Stainless steel construction throughout the food-contact zone is the standard.

Frequently Asked Questions

What size commercial meat mixer do I need?

Match the mixer capacity to your peak batch volume. Operations producing up to 20 pounds per batch suit a manual non-tilting mixer at the 17-pound range. Mid-volume butcher shops and delis running 50 to 100 pounds per batch need a 1.5 HP electric mixer. High-volume sausage and burger production at 100 to 180 pounds per batch needs a 3 HP electric tilting unit. Mixer-grinder combinations at 7.5 HP handle the highest throughput when you also need grinding in the same pass.

What is the difference between a meat mixer and a meat grinder?

A commercial meat mixer blends already-ground meat with seasonings, fats, and binders using a rotating paddle. It does not grind whole muscle. A meat grinder cuts whole or trimmed muscle into ground meat using a worm screw and plates. Operations that produce sausage, burgers, or seasoned ground products usually need both. A mixer-grinder combination unit runs both functions in one machine for shops that want to consolidate workflow.

How do I choose between a manual and electric commercial meat mixer?

Choose a manual meat mixer when batch sizes stay under 20 pounds and the kitchen wants to avoid running new electrical service. Choose an electric meat mixer when batches run 50 pounds or more, when staff mix multiple batches per shift, or when consistency across batches matters. Electric tilting bowls also reduce operator strain since the bowl empties without lifting.

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