Help me pick out a food processor

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Hi Scott-- I have a KA stand mixer, too, but I like the speed of the food processor for kneading, so I almost always opt for it. I use the mixer for really heavy doughs, like whole wheat or multigrain.

As for the 'dough' button on Cuisinart, your guess is as good as mine. I thought it would knead and rest in cycles or maybe the speed would be slower, but honestly, I can't see or hear ANY difference whatsoever. I'm thinking maybe it allows the motor to run a little longer before it automatically shuts down due to overload, but that's pure speculation.

Does anyone else have this machine, and does your 'dough' feature do something different than the normal setting? If so, maybe my 'dough' setting doesn't work correctly.
 
The manual only says to "press the dough button". It doesn't say a word about how the dough setting differs from the regular setting. Whenever I make bread dough, I dutifully press the dough button, but it doesn't seem to alter the motor speed or anything else.
 
I have the Cuisinart machine that has the "dough" button-Don't notice a diffrence in speed either.The Cuisinarts have induction motors.Sorry-All along I thought Magimix was French.Anyway sound like very nice quality machines.Oh--for you Kenwood mixer fans-Kenwood has a food processor attachment that you can set on top of the machines front power takeoff.I'll have to try to find a link to it-was sold for awhile in the Chef's Choice catalogs.
 
Which to buy

If you put the two button square based Cuisinart and the Kitchenaid processors in a sack and shake them up, their performance is so similar it is near impossible to pick a clear winner.

Pick up the phone and call 800 Cuisinart and then 800 Kitchenaid and see the big DIFFERENCE! Cuisinart could give a sh!t and Kitchenaid will fall over backwards and do anything they can to accomodate you.

Kelly

The dough cover for the Cuisinart is the best feature they make. I seldom used the annoyingly hard to use and clean feed tube.
 
Kitchenaid Processors

Hey ppl

The French made versions were made by Magimix check the link and look at the Le mini plus models- the larger ones are different tho. Robot Coupe is the "Catering" part of Magimix- very early domestic machines were branded as such as well. Also their processors are still French made !

 
mixfinder-- I like the flat lid for the Cuisinart, too. There's no reason to use feed-tube lid unless you're shredding/slicing. I find about 95% of my food processor use doesn't involve shredding/slicing. I prefer a knife for most slicing jobs, anyway.
 
I have used the flat cover as well-don't think it will fit the newer machines though.wish they would introduce a flat lid for the newer series machines.I also agree on Conair taking over both Cuisinart and Waring-Conairs cheapness is showing up on Waring and Cusinart machines-If you must get a new Waring blender-get a commercial one-beleive me its worth the extra money.
 
Dough button on Cuisinarts

I have the 11-cup Cuisinart with the dough button. To be honest, the only thing I think this machine does well is to knead dough and it's basically why I did not return it. When you knead dough with this button active, if you listen carefully, you can hear the motor changing speed slightly to keep the dough consistency right. If you've used other food processors, you'll realize that machines that keep the speed constant will mix the dough and knead it differently -- it's hard to explain, but with the Cuisinart it just mixes and then, when it turns into a ball it goes smoothly around and around.

The downside is that I compare it to my old food processor (a Braun Multipratic) -- what a difference! The Braun would do everything better than the Cuisinart, except knead dough. It's over 10 years old, so the plastic parts are giving up.

One of the things I like in the Braun is that the motor is to the side, so it doesn't heat the contents being processed *and* it has a more logical interlock that lets you have a *real* feed tube that you can use to process large pieces of food -- with the Cuisinart I have to cut everything so it fits the feed tube because of the stupid interlock so the motor is in the "pretty" position under the bowl. The space is saves is not worth it, given that I could process things better and faster with the Braun: take plunger out, insert food, turn it on and apply plunger when food is entirely in the feed tube, with the Cuisinart (and similar designs) you have to process the food by hand by cutting the items into neat 4-inch-tall pieces so they'll fit into the feed tube and let the machine turn on.

Another thing I hate about the Cuisinart is that it takes so much storage space because it needs about 12 discs or so to do less than my Braun could -- each disc can only do one thing, which is to slice or shred one thickness. My Braun had a carrier disc with a space for inserts -- with just a few small inserts you can do an awful lot because the carrier disc lets you adjust the thickness of the cut, so you only need one insert to do the job of many: for example, one insert can cut from 0.5 to 7 (or was it 9?) mm slices, another one can cut potatoes for very thin shoe-string fries to very thick fries etc. Another thing I liked better about the Braun is that the motor had multiple speeds, which I used all the time to obtain different sizes/textures for the food being processed. And it had a mini-bowl for when you were processing small amounts like parsley.

The thing I can see that the Cuisinart seems better is that it looks and feels sturdier. The nice practical plastic carrier disc and inserts in the Braun were precisely what broke over the years. Wouldn't you know it, the parts were very expensive years ago, so I didn't deal at that time -- now they are just impossible to find, after someone (Gillette, I think?) bought Braun in US.

Oh well. Another lesson learned. And really, I think that sometimes form must follow function: the food processors with the bowl on top of the motor with the stupid interlock running all the way from the motor to the feed tube really are a pain in the neck, they make you do a lot of the work. Processors with the motor beside the bowl tend to be easier to use, in my opinion.
 
Blade inserts

Those were the things I HATED about Braun processors.The pesky blade inserts on the plastic disc.I got so frustrated with them I threww them out.Like the disc blades of later Brauns and Cusinarts.In another forum I had a Braun Multipurpose machine that could be a mixer,food processor,or blender chopper.The disc blades on it didn't use inserts.There were three disc blades-fine slice and shred,coarse slice and shred.you would use the one side to slice the other to shred.the Cusinart discs I feel are better quality-an actual knife type blade welded to their slicing discs.The one on the braun was merely sharpned-no blade.The third disc was a variable thickness slicing disc.You could vary the thickness of the slices.didn't use it much.Come to think of it the machine also had a French Fry cutter blade disc.Maybe I didn't have the "knack" of using the inserts-the few times I tried them they wouldn't always stay on the main disc when the machine was started or when you were cutting with it.I had the inserts on a much older Braun machine-gave it away at some point-the unit did make a good chopper type processor though.I haven't tried processors on dough-use a mixer for that.
 
braun

The Brauns up to the mid-90s had outstanding cutting disks along with a cheaper line of "pressed" and sharpened. Today, their stuff is just as expensive as it always was, but you are paying for the name and not the quality.
Sadly.
Have asked my European friends the last few days - everyone says they have dibs in on their "Oma's" Brauns and Cuisinarts...in other words, nothing built in the last 10 years...
 
Why are all the wonderful old-line European manufacturers selling out to these cheap-ass places? I thought stupid stuff like that only happened in the states.
 
That may be so, Louis,

but at least on this side of the puddle, Braun quailty has dropped like the proverbial rock.

I had to try three Braun stick/immersion blenders to get one that worked more than a week.

Lawrence/Maytagbear
 
If you want a good stick or immersion blender-get a Bamix.These are good machines for immersion blenders.They also have interchangeable blades for various mixing-blending jobs.And the machine is very quiet when its running.

 
Lawrence, I must admit I never used a newer Braun stick blender, but the older ones I have are pretty good.

The Bamix blenders are indeed quite versatile and also very silent. My older one only has a 100 Watt motor which is actually pretty pathetic. You have to wait for a while to let it achieve it's speed. The newer ones are 140/150 Watts (110V) or 200 Watts (230V) but that is still not very much compared to other brands sold overhere (400 - 600 Watts).
 

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