![]() Nutri Ninja technology provides smooth, nutrient-rich beverages filled with vitamins & fiber. Get a silky smooth cool cup of goodness made entirely from whole fruits, vegetables, and ice cubes. With the high-quality stainless steel blades, crush ice and frozen fruit in seconds! The dough hook allows you to effortlessly mix pizza and bread dough, while the dough paddle is perfect for making delicious cookie doughs! Nutrient & Vitamin Extraction provides a better tasting, more nutritious kind of beverage. Blast ice into snow in seconds and blend your favorite ingredients into delicious sauces, dips and smoothies! This Ninja food processor handles all of your blending and dough making needs. Crush ice into snow, blend delicious drinks, process fresh ingredients evenly, juice whole fruits and vegetables, and knead dough! Total Crushing Technology delivers unbeatable professional power with blades that pulverize and crush through ice, whole fruits and vegetables in seconds. With 550 watts of power, Pulse Technology provides consistent evenly processed & blended ingredients every time. For more on how the Blendtec stacks up against the Vitamix 5200, read our article about testing the two blenders head-to-head.The Ninja Kitchen System Pulse gives you the power and convenience to live a healthy lifestyle by combining Ninja blade technology with single-serve blending cups, a processor bowl and easy-to-use attachments for all your kitchen needs. But we think a blender that’s this expensive should perform well at more than just those two tasks. It’s a great blender if you want something that looks slick on your counter and can make amazingly smooth mixed drinks and smoothies. We do think this particular model is quite beautiful, with a sleek black, illuminated base. It failed to make peanut butter (a tamper would have helped), and the preset speed for soup was frightening, with hot liquid flying wildly around the jar. Although in our tests the Designer 675 killed it in making smoothies and blended drinks, its lack of a tamper limits its usefulness. Despite Blendtec’s clever (if at times mildly sinister) video marketing campaign of blending everything from rake handles to iPhones, we’ve found its blenders wanting (we also tested the Total model in 2012). Will the Blendtec Designer 675 blend? Yes, but not as well as our top picks. You can’t expect that level of performance from dirt-cheap blenders, which is probably why most of them come with only one-year limited warranties. ![]() ![]() ![]() Vitamix, Oster, and Cleanblend models all come with warranties of five to seven years, and-at least for Vitamix machines-we’ve read plenty of owner reviews saying the blender lasts much longer. It’s a lot of stress to put on a little machine.” This is why a long warranty is important, especially if you’re paying a lot for a blender. If you make it do something difficult every day, a lot of them burn out. As Lisa McManus, executive editor in charge of equipment testing at Cook’s Illustrated and Cook’s Country magazines, told our writer Seamus Bellamy in an interview for our 2012 guide, “Blenders have a really hard job to do in that little space. But it’s not impossible for even higher-end blenders to encounter burnout. The most common complaint we’ve found about cheap blenders is that their motors burn out easily and their jars crack or leak. ![]()
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