Monday, May 28, 2007

New Blender!


Last week, we got a new blender - a Blendtec Total Blender. Since Yvette started her weight loss program, we've gone through 4 blenders or so. Making multiple shakes every morning wears out your typical bargain basement blender in 6 months or less. We're hoping that the new blender lasts us a whole lot longer. It had better last a long time, it was nearly 10 times as expensive as the last blender we bought.

The Total Blender is based on Blendtec's commercial blenders (my local Starbucks uses Blendtec blenders). It's got a 1500 watt motor, as compared to the 300-600 watt motors in a typical home blender. It's got a very solid square blender jar, and a scary-looking set of ultra-sharp blades. Instead of a set of speed buttons that are labeled with wacky labels like "frappe" and "fold", it's got buttons naming what food you're making - "milkshake", "soup", "smoothie". Each button initiates an automatic program which speeds up or slows down as necessary to perfectly mix whatever you're making. It even stops automatically at the end of the program. Nifty!

So how well does it work? It's incredibly powerful - it crushes ice without even slowing down. It's also very loud at full speed. The instructions that came with the blender were minimal, but it did come with a pretty big cookbook. Apparently, the motor is strong enough to actually grind flour, make peanut butter from whole nuts, etc. On the "soup" setting, the friction of the blending actually makes the soup hot! For simple stuff, like the aforementioned diet shakes, it does the job about twice as fast as our old blender. The jar is super easy to clean, and doesn't seem like it'll get food stuck under the blades like our old blender tended to.

There is one downside that I've identified so far. Have you ever had a blender accident, where an overloaded blender popped the top off and splashed stuff everywhere? Try to imagine what it looks like when that happens with a blender that's 4 times as powerful. This is particularly problematic with hot liquids - the fast start of the blender throws the hot liquid up in the jar, which causes the air in the jar to expand and jet out the top. I think of it as Mount Blendtec erupting. Cleaning shake mix off the ceiling isn't very much fun.

I think I've got the technique dialed in now. I do wish they'd implement a slightly softer start for the low-speed settings, though. All in all, it's definitely a massive improvement over our old, tired blender. I'm going to try some of the recipes from the cookbook. That should help familiarize me with the various cycles. Besides, it's just plain fun to use - it'll blend darn near anything. Speaking of which, if you haven't seen it, check out Blendtec's Will It Blend? for amusing demos of the blender in action.

2 comments:

She Fights Like a Girl said...

Rarely have I seen a company so joyfully demonstrate the misuse of their product. Anyway, good thing you have a long and storied history of cleaning messes off of ceilings.

Mark Bessey said...

Yeah, that would make an interesting blog post:
"On the experience of cleaning various messes off of ceilings"

Subcategories could include:
1. Diet Shakes
2. Pasta sauce
3. Chocolate
4. Peanut Butter
5. Concentrated acids
6. Motor oil
7. Ballpoint pen ink
...