When our tester Camryn put the KitchenAid Cordless 5 Cup Food Chopper through its paces, it truly converted her to cordless food processing. 'Suddenly I could make sauces and dips while standing outside with the grill, and move around the kitchen with complete freedom,' she says.Ĭamryn used this five-cup food processor for blitzing up onions, carrots, tomato sauce, guacamole, and even to make a delicious aioli using the mayonnaise attachment. Why you should buy it: Cordless = portable lightweight handy for small jobs. Our Ninja Professional Plus Food Processor review has more details 'If you frequently process large batches of food, you may be better off with a high-end model like the Cuisinart Custom 14 (below), which has a huge 14-cup capacity, or if you want something more compact, the Nutribullet 7-Cup Food Processor (above) has a fairly small footprint,' she says. Overall, Camryn was impressed with the versatility and high quality of the Ninja, especially considering the price. She found it less effective on hard ingredients, however. Other features Camryn loved include its lightweight, locking lid for safety and the quad chopping blade, which doesn't simply slice what's at the bottom of the bowl. It can chop, puree, dough, and dice, and has a reversible disc for slicing, too. Our tester Camryn found it particularly good at shredding vegetables and used the double-layered dough blades to make cookie dough, which, she reports, came together a lot quicker than many of the best stand mixers (though she did have to scrape down the sides of the cooking bowl). The Ninja Professional 9-Cup Food Processor has a range of intelligent programs and handy attachments, all for under $100. Why you should buy it: Great entry level easy to use affordable. Our Breville Sous Chef 12 Food Processor review has more details The biggest downside? It's big, which may make storage tricky if your space is small. I especially love the adjustable slicing disc and multiple chute sizes, which make it extremely versatile.' 'It screams quality,' Camryn says. 'While it costs a cool $300, it outperformed many other models that I’ve tested, delivering consistent results with minimal effort. Worth noting: the chute is very wide, so you can turn food on its side and slice in different sizes, ideal for julienning the shredding disc is also reversible, and the slicing disc is fully adjustable with 0.3mm to 8.0mm in size – overkill for some, perhaps, but if you take great pride presentation, it's a brilliant feature. The very powerful motor breezes through chopping larger and more dense items, and Camryn found it delivers some of the most consistent results of all the machines she tested. The Breville BFP660SIL Sous Chef has the standard 12-cup capacity we see in many of the best food processors. Our tester Camryn found the controls very intuitive, and was able to get started as soon as she took it out of the box. Why you should buy it: huge capacity excellent, consistently good results. Our Nutribullet 7-Cup Food Processor review has more details As with a lot of Nutribullet products, it comes with a comprehensive recipe book that is great to get you started using the machine. At just six pounds, the Nutribullet 7-Cup Food Processor is also very lightweight – a need to know if you are not storing it on the countertop.Ĭamryn also found it easy to clean: most of the removable parts are dishwasher-safe and the plastic is BPA-free. This is important to note since food processors that don't allow for in-bowl storage take up more valuable storage space. 'After weeks of testing, I think it’s an ideal everyday food processor for any household,' she reports.ĭespite this huge selection, the attachments can be easily stored in the bowl – other than one disc, which doesn't fit inside. There are three speeds: low, high, and pulse, and Camryn used all to make everything from shakes to the dough. If it's a versatile food processor you're looking to use on a daily basis, the NutriBullet NBP50100 7-Cup Food Processor is it, thanks to its do-it-all attachments, which include a dough hook, a chopping blade, two reversible slicing and shredding discs (one thick, one thin), and a spiralizing insert, which our tester Camryn was particularly impressed with: it was very easy to get set up and produced long spirals of carrot and potato. Why you should buy it: Versatile in-bowl storage lightweight.
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