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Cuisinart Food Processor Sale



ReviewEquipped with an extra-large feed tube, a little feed tube, a dough blade, and slicing and shredding discs, this 600-watt, 11-cup, full-size feed processor provides all the power, versatility, and capacity necessitated by any household. The motor mechanically adjusts the speed to make sure proper consistency when mixing doughs. Cooks experienced with Cuisinart feed processors will welcome the new feed tube and pusher assembly, which is easy to use and conveniently located at the machine’s front. At 4-1/4 inches by 2-3/4 inches, the big oval feed tube accommodates whole fruits and vegetables. The small, cylindrical tube is located inside the pusher assemblage and has it is own hollow pusher, which removes with a twist. On the bottom of the little pusher is a pinhole for dribbling oil into the bowl while making mayonnaise.

The Lexan work bowl is nearly shatterproof and impervious to heat or cold. There’s the intimate stainless-steel chopping blade and a dough blade. Stainless-steel slicing (4 mm) and shredding discs, a plastic spatula shaped for the work bowl, a recipe booklet, and an instruction video showing basic use, tips, techniques, and preparation of a good deal of recipes from the booklet finish the package. (Existing Cuisinart blades and discs also fit this machine.) Cuisinart warranties the motor versus defects for 10 years and the remaining constituents for three years. –Fred Brack

Cuisinart Food Processor Sale

Cuisinart Food Processor Sale Image

Cuisinart Food Processor Sale

Cuisinart Food Processor Sale Picture

Cuisinart Food Processor Sale

Cuisinart Food Processor Sale Photo

Cuisinart Food Processor Sale

Cuisinart Food Processor Sale Pic


Most helpful client reviews

327 of 348 people found the following review helpful.
5Cuisinart stole my heart from Kitchenaid!!
By Karen H
I’m a Kitchenaid kind of girl, so when my husband astonished me with the Cuisinart Food Processor, I was faced with rather the quandry. I started out to exploration both the Cuisinart 2011 and the Kitchenaid 760. The reviews pointed somewhat towards the Kitchenaid so I figured I’d swap mine for it. I visited a local store to compare them in person and was so disappointed to realize that the Cuisinart fits together more securely and smoothly. In denial I stared at the blades for rather a lot of time. Finally I had to confess to myself that the Cuisinart ones were heavier. They felt better and looked more solid. Oh how I tried to convince myself that the Kitchenaid was better. But I just didn’t like how the top on the Kitchenaid snapped into place. It’s not as smooth. The KA comes with more tools. Surely I’d end up with the Kitchenaid.

I went home and joined the online Kitchenaid Conversation Forum. Who does this? It’s a group of people who post back and forth when it comes to their devotion to Kitchenaid. I begged Kitchenaid Rita to support me back on the righteous path.

Then I started using my Cuisianrt to test it out. I tried not to love it. I just couldn’t aid myself. It’s so commodious to use. I started to think that the extra KA bowls might begin to get on my nerves–always taking them in and out. I’ve made all kinds of things in my feed processor. I made pizza dough. I can’t believe I’ve been kneading by hand all these years. I made sweet potato chips; I made hummus and salsa… the list grows each day.

I genuinely use it all the time. And, it would be very much like me not to use it if it were at all hard to assemble or clean.

OK, there you have it. A perfectionist’s testamonial and admittance of betrayal. I do love my new Cuisinart 2011, and I feel guilty for ever having doubted it. And just last night my new TOB-165 Cuisinart Toaster Oven arrived. Review on that soon…

143 of 159 persons found the following review helpful.
1Underpowered, leaky, I’m returning this bomb
By Michael Carmel
I like good design, lots of features and industrial strength, so when I saw this “full-featured” graceful processor with extras well beneath $… new, I brought it home and tested it with my favored Italian batter bread recipe from Bernard Clayton’s authorized bread book. This bread takes 35 minutes of kneading with my powerful Kenwood Major mixer, but the Kenwood mixer walks around the counter as it slams the doughball, so I looked forward to Clayton’s 7-minute Cuisinart kneading time. The light batter lifted up the blade and permitted seepage all around the bowl before I reached 2/3 of the claimed 6-cups of flour capacity. It looked like “the blob” was back and in regards to to eat Seattle. service operator at Cuisinart left me on hold for 10 minutes while she “went to get a blade,” then disconnected me. Second half-hour call got me an operator who wouldn’t hang up. She got the blade, confirmed that it does not “snap in place” as the basi operator claimed,told me I had to use only Cuisinart bread recipes. This machine is only 570 watts — info missing on the box — and mine stopped with only 5 cups of flour and 2 cups of water — well underneath the 6-cups of flour claimed capacity. Clayton offers adjusted recipes for feed processors, but apparently he hadn’t tested this “gem.” If you want to do respective breads, forget the Cuisinart 2011. If you want to cool your heels while your incompletely mixed bread is rising, undertake Cuisinart’s 800 number. Your wish will be granted, but your bread, it will not be so good.

47 of 50 persons found the following review helpful.
4This is a outstanding machine!
By M. Katzovitz
This feed processor does it all, and it does it fast. Clean up is ultra-easy, as all the elements are dishwasher safe. Missed 5 stars because the safety mechanism seems awkward when working with it, and the bowl doesn’t seem to hold as much as the box claims. A new feature is the bread blade and bread button. I have tried this and it does a beauteous good occupation of kneading. I have not had to contact client service, which seems to be a mutual complaint with other users.

See all 59 client reviews…