![]() We also scoured editorial reviews from sources like America's Test Kitchen and Consumer Reports and read many customer reviews. For this guide, we brought Matt Shook, founder of Juiceland, into our test kitchen to get his hands-on opinion, and we interviewed superfood chef Julie Morris, who uses both a full-size and personal blender for home and work. ![]() I've been cooking professionally for almost 20 years, and I've been testing blenders and hand blenders at Wirecutter for three years. The stainless steel housing and sleeker design will look good on your countertop, and the travel lid has the largest opening of all the blenders we tested for easier drinking. The Breville blends thick mixtures easily without straining. The Boss To Go blended kale the finest, and berry seeds were the smallest of all our picks. The Breville Boss To Go offers smoother blending, sleeker design, and a better travel lid than our top pick. But it's built to last and a solid performer if you don't mind slightly thinner smoothies. Compared to the NutriBullet and Breville Boss To Go, smoothies from the Tribest are thinner due to the extra liquid needed to get a consistent blend. Although the Tribest isn't the most powerful machine on paper-it has a weaker motor and the smallest cups of all our picks-it blends really well for most food prep tasks you'd need it for. We like the Tribest PB-150 because it's durable and offers the smallest footprint of all our picks. ![]() If you regularly buy a smoothie on your way to the office or class, the NutriBullet Pro will pay for itself within a month. The blending quality is on par with midrange full-sized blenders without the bulk of a large machine. The powerful motor didn't strain blending thick mixtures, and it pureed tough kale and frozen fruit into a satisfying drinkable consistency. The NutriBullet won us over with its blending abilities, ease of use, and price. We pureed almost 25 pounds of frozen fruit, hearty kale, fibrous ginger, gooey peanut butter, and sticky dates into thick smoothies to come to this conclusion. Read the full article here.Īfter spending 20 hours researching two dozen personal blenders and testing ten models with an expert in our test kitchen, we think the NutriBullet Pro 900 Series offers the best balance of power, simplicity, convenience, and price for most people. When readers choose to buy Wirecutter's independently chosen editorial picks, it may earn affiliate commissions that support its work. If you are going to wash by hand, you may need a brush if you have larger hands, as getting all the way into those tall, narrow cups might be a challenge.This post was done in partnership with Wirecutter, reviews for the real world. The cups, lids and blade assembly are all top-rack dishwasher safe. But since this isn’t the personal blender’s primary function, this is still a great value. We didn’t love making nut butter in this one the result was less evenly ground than some other models, and scraping it out of those long, narrow cups was a hassle. The cups are tall and narrow, so they’ll fit in a car’s cupholder. Adding to the value part: The Ninja comes with 3 20-ounce cups, with 2 ready-to-drink lids and 1 storage lid, so everyone gets a smoothie to go. It manages to do all that with a relatively small footprint the base is only 7 inches tall and 4½ inches wide. It boasts a 900-watt motor, so it blended up smoothies with fresh and frozen fruit with ease, and crushed ice without a hitch (and all without any odor, too). Also, this model is hand-wash only, though the wide shape makes getting into the cup to clean it out pretty simple.įor a combo of good power and versatility, plus great value, this is the one. But this shape can be harder to grip for small hands, and the cup won’t fit in most car cupholders. The wide mouth makes adding ingredients easy, and it’s also easier to remove thick items like nut butter from this type of cup. One thing to note: The thick Tritan plastic 3-cup-capacity cup is wider and squatter than most other models. It comes with a storage lid and a drinking lid the latter also has a drinking cap with an adjustable carry loop. If for some reason the blender won’t start, color-coded lights indicate why (e.g., amber flashing lights mean the motor is overloaded a flashing red light means the contents are too hot to safely blend). The Beast made quick work of smoothies with both fresh and frozen fruit, blended ice into slush with just a few pulses, and made a good batch of nut butter without breaking a sweat (and without any metallic blender smell, thanks to internal sensors that prevent overheating). But it isn’t just good looks that won our favor its powerful 1,000-watt motor delivers. ![]() With its unusual hourglass-shaped design, this blender is eye-catching right out of the box.
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