Making Burger what went wrong?

When you put the ground meat in the freezer between grinding and packaging, are you covering it? I wonder if it’s getting freezer burnt at the -10 with all the surface area induced from grinding.

This is 91/9 elk burger that’s been in the freezer since 2022. I don’t do anything special to refreeze meat throughout the process - the meat was semi frozen through the grinder for the first grind and was still painfully cold to mix at the end of the multiple grinds and staging.
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When you put the ground meat in the freezer between grinding and packaging, are you covering it? I wonder if it’s getting freezer burnt at the -10 with all the surface area induced from grinding.

This is 91/9 elk burger that’s been in the freezer since 2022. I don’t do anything special to refreeze meat throughout the process - the meat was semi frozen through the grinder for the first grind and was still painfully cold to mix at the end of the multiple grinds and staging.
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2 more years and that'll be a delicacy. Damn I'm hungry
 
You mentioned that the burger is a little mushy looking as well. My guess is your meat kinda got ground to a pulp when it was being forced from the plate with the larger holes through the smaller holes all on one grind. Hopefully you stopped before you ground all of your burger. Does your grinder allow you to use just one plate, or at least two plates with the same sized holes?
 
You haven't really explained the two days of initial cooling? Any chance that the meat semi-spoiled due to lack of air movement? Was it all packed together?
 
I’ve been twice grinding through the largest hole grinder plate with 10-15% beef fat for over a decade for all my burger. The meat is pretty much always frozen and thawed twice before eating when all is said and done. I’ve had nothing but excellent results with flavor and consistency. Personally not a fan of burger meat through the small plate.
 
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