Food Processors Made By Cuisinart And Hamilton Beach
A food processor can do anything a blender can do, plus a lot more. Learn about major designs and brands such as Cuisinart food processors, Kitchen Aid, Hamilton Beach and more as well as mini and baby food processors.
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High Speed Performance Beyond Blenders. A food processor is a powerful, high-speed motor that, with accessories that let you configure it for tasks that you cannot do with a blender.
Getting Speed And Efficiency In Food Prep. With a food processor you can slice, grate, chop, grind, and blend much faster than you can accomplish the same tasks with hand tools, although perhaps with less personal satisfaction.
Even Making Your Bread Dough. A food processor can also knead bread dough at high speed. This last capability is counterintuitive to anyone who has ever kneaded dough by hand, and great care must be taken to ensure that the dough doesn't get too warm. However, for a small dough, a food processor does a better job than even the best kitchen mixer.
Hamilton Food Processors
Hamilton Beach food processors are popular with cooks who seek the convenience and fast operation of the food processor over endless cutting board knife work. When you have a lot of volume to process for a big party or a recipe that really requires uniform cutting, as with julienne vegetables, you should reach with confidence to your Hamilton Beach or Kitchen Aid food processor.
Horseradish And Other Veggies Prep. Hamilton Beach is also indispensable for processing fresh horseradish (use it outdoors for this, on a heavy duty extension cord). How anyone ever grated large amounts of horseradish by hand is an ineffable mystery of the universe.
Rights Sizes And Set Up. Look for a big mouth food processor, offering easy assembly and disassembly of optional accessories, a wide enough selection of blades for your needs, and easy cleanup.
Cuisinart Food Processor Biography : Yankee Ingenuity
Where Cuisinart Originated. Carl G. Sontheimer (1914-1983), an MIT-trained engineer had spent his boyhood in France and developed a love of fine food there. Searching for a new project in 1971 after selling his engineering business, Sontheimer attended a trade show in France. There he saw a large commercial food processor that he thought he could adapt for home use. He licensed the technology, spent a year developing a consumer product, and introduced the Cuisinart food processor in the US in 1973.