KitchenAid KHB100OB Hand Blender, Onyx Black
KitchenAid KHB100OB Hand Blender, Onyx Black
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List Price: $69.99 Sale Price: $48.00 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours Eligible For Free Shipping
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Product Description
This immersion blender provides efficient powerful blending at any speed. Its motor is designed for quiet, long-life operation and thoroughly blends both hot and cold foods. The stainless steel blending attachment features a splashguard with air slots to increase flow during blending. Unlike plastic attachments, it won't stain when you work with tomatoes, curries, and berries. Its 8" length allows you to blend in deep pots or pitchers. You'll find this an extremely handy tool for pureeing soups, vegetables, baby food, and beverages.
Details
- Immersion hand blender with powerful, quiet motor for blending, mixing, whipping, and more
- Durable snap-in attachment with stainless-steel blade and protective stainless-steel splashguard
- 8-inch immersion; variable speed-control dial; one-touch "on/off" power button; ergonomic, non-slip grip
- Dishwasher-safe attachments and accessories; 3-cup blending beaker and sealing lid included
- Measures 17 by 3 by 6 inches; 1-year, hassle-free, replacement warranty
Tagged with: Black • blender • Hand • hand blender • immersion blender • KHB100OB • kitchenaid • Onyx • small kitchen appliance
Filed under: Kitchenaid hand blender
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Rating
June 25, 2004: I have had a Braun handblender for many years (10 years?), and was pleased with its performance, until it finally lost its spunk last week. I bought this product yesterday as a replacement, and I must say I am very pleasantly surprised! This was a HUGE step up! I would even say that this is a professional quality gadget! (It is certainly styled to look the part!)
My favorite thing to make with my handblender is hummus – a mediterranean chick pea dip – and last night I made some the smooooothest hummus I ever made! This is in part because of the 9 speeds available on this model. I started out with lower speeds and then worked my way up to the top one. This is a large handblender, but it was comfortable and easy to use – lightweight even, and sure has a LOT of power. As with most of these products, it was a little difficult to clean the blades, but not a problem. (Really, the best way to clean it is to “blend” a cup of soapy water!)
There other models of this that come with attachments – that might be nice in the future, if I want to whip or chop using the attachments – but this basic model with the blender and the cup are all I need for most anything, and worth the price tag for the POWER you get from this brand! It’s true what they say – KitchenAid ROCKS!
UPDATE: yikes! I was blending bread into breadcrumbs (not toasted, silly me) and it got doughy and really thick and blew the fuse. If anyone knows how to fix that, please comment. I stand by my earlier glowing review – this incident was my fault!
Rating
You really can’t go wrong with KitchenAid. Form and Function must be their mantra. I use this for sorbet, soups and other instances where a food processor is inconvenient. In fact, I’ve put my black and decker blender into storage – with the handblender who needs it. You have the very convenient control of the angle. Gone are the days of stick a knife in the blender to get everything blended.
The speed control is perfect and the blender is precise enough that you can partially blend items easily. Clean up is a snap and the lower half separates from the motor half. Like my KitchenAid mixer, I get the feeling that I’m going to have this tool for life.
Rating
Like the previous reviewer, I owned a Braun for over 20 yrs. The Braun still works beautifully but I thought I’d like one stronger. I love the KitchenAid quality so I picked KitchenAid. I bought the cobalt blue for $20 including the rebate, so it’s a steal. When it arrived, I made some salsa. Thinking it would chop like my Braun, I turned it to speed 9. 5 seconds later, everything was liquidfied. Including the onions! Learned my lesson. Don’t make salsa on speed 9. Other than my own fault for underestimating this tool, it’s GREAT!! Especially for making smoothie and whipping cream. (I bought the whisk attachement) A definite must tool in the kitchen. I just wish Amazon had the black one on sale when I purchased the blue.
One thing I’d like to add is, KitchenAid customer service is excellent. They didn’t make me pay for shipping a defective stand mixer back to them. In addition, since they were out of the model I had, they upgraded my 5 qt mixer to a 6 qt professional. That was a 150$ upgrade. I just called them on a stand blender I bought, and they were willing to send out a replacing immediately before retreiving the other one, once again, shipping label would be included. However, after toying with the blender, turned out it was my fault. The stand blender was perfectly fine.
Rating
Like some other reviewers have mentioned, this is a huge step up from the old one-speed stick mixer I’d previously used. Let me count the ways. First, it offers way more speeds than I’ve seen on any other kitchen appliance (9!?). Second, the detachable element is a big bonus for cleaning. Third, it feels much sturdier and stronger than my old plastic model, and fourth, the price was unbeatable.
Rating
Amazing! We love soup and with this tool we make soup all the time with less mess and no transferring from pot to blender and back to pot. The motor is powerful enough to puree asparagus, squash, Beans and even chickpeas for hummus.
Rating
For those of you have have never had one, these immersion blenders are quite handy. They are easy to clean, and convenient to use. They also don’t take up much space; I keep my KitchenAid unit on the counter, and store the beaker in the cupboard where I keep glasses, with the blender attachment inside. It’s no fuss at all if you want to mix just a single drink. While a traditional blender is more versatile, if I had a choice of only one I’d go with the hand blender as being the most useful on a day to day basis.
This is the second immersion blender I have owned. I like this one quite a bit; it is powerful, but quiet. I’m not sure whether having 9 speeds is so important, I find I either use speed setting 1 or 9. Maybe they should make custom units that go all the way to 11.
One concern with a device like this is marrying a powerful motor to a removeable attachment. My first device (an Oster) chewed itself to bits, leaving metal shavings in my food (good thing I checked). The KitchenAid unit’s attachment has a good positive lock design which makes this improbable. A safety interock would have been better. The metal shaft of the blending attachment is driven by a hard plastic socket with slim splines. This means in the unlikely event of anything ending up in your food, you’ll have tiny bits of fractured plastic, not desirable of course, but preferable to long, razor sharp metal shavings. The socket looks like it could be replaced if necessary, but given the price most people would opt for replacing the entire unit over having it serviced.
One thing would be nice is if the guard around the actual blades was plastic instead of metal. Then it could be used directly inside nonstick saucepans for pureeing soup.
Conclusion: a safety interlock and plastic blender shield would improve this product, but overall it is well made, quiet and safe. Few things are made to last these days, but given how useful this device is, its a safe bet you will get your money’s worth.
Rating
In my first use of the Hand Blender I made pumpkin, apple soup. I own a blender and a food processor which were suggested in the recipe to puree the ingredients. I was amazed at how quickly the hand blender worked without the mess of transfering small amounts of soup at a time to another appliance to do the job. Instead I did it all in my stock pot.
Rating
The last time I used a “stick blender” was back in the 80s when the Braun version first hit the consumer market and the infomercials started pitching that “Venturri Ring” garbage on TV. I almost never used my Braun as it was essentially worthless for most tasks, but I’ve seen so many people recommend similar looking gadgets recently I couldn’t resist nabbing this one when it was on sale for $29.
Suffice to say, this thing has a lot more power than the models of 20 years ago, and it’s built like a tank to boot. I haven’t had a reason to turn it up past 5 on the speed dial so far, as even that is just way too much power for most tasks.
My one gripe is that there’s no way to lock the power button down while in use. I understand that this is probably for safety reasons, but it takes quite a bit of force to trip the switch, and my wrist starts getting tired pretty quickly. I can’t imagine what anyone with tendonitis or arthritis would go through trying to use this thing. I also have no clue why they bothered throwing in the cheap little plastic cup thing. Anyone who’s in the market for an immersion blender probably already has some kind of vessel to do their blending in, but there it is.
Rating
I wish I had this sooner. I make shakes EVERY day, and the process of cleaning all the parts of the typical blender was driving me crazy. If you figure 5 minutes to take apart, clean and put back together those things, every day, I was losing 2 1/2 hours of my life each month making my morning drink! With this blender, I blend my drink, pop the blade shaft off, rinse it under the sink, and I’m done with the drink and cleaning in about a minute!
The main purpose of this blender for me is, as I said, my breakfast drinks. I’m sure it does a great job mashing through tomatoes and fruits and whatnot for soups and milkshakes (I’ve used it once for a milkshake, and it could make one so thick I could turn the glass upside down). The 9-speed high setting is so powerful you have to hold on to your glass because it’ll spin 100rpms! I’ve found that the 1-3 settings are perfect for blending bananas, with the higher setting reserved for really thick items, like nearing the end of making your thick milkshakes.
The product itself is heavy for its size, but not that heavy to be uncomfortable. I can imagine it being a burden if you were holding it for 5-10 minutes at a time, but when it takes 1-2 minutes to mash potatoes or blend your soup, you shouldn’t have to complain much. The sturdiness and heft really gave it a quality I didn’t expect from such a low-price appliance.
This blender comes apart at the middle by pressing in 2 release knobs. There is one main power switch that you need to hold down (for safety reasons) to keep active. This is the only complaint you may have on this product. I’m an average-size man and don’t have a problem with using this, but I could imagine a petite woman (or someone with arthritis) having trouble holding down the power button for long periods of time.
I paid $25 for this, but I would have been happy paying $50. A great steal for me, but a great product at either price. If you’re in the market for an immersion blender, you won’t regret this purchase.
Rating
This gadget isn’t Cooks Illustrated’s #1 choice for hand blenders for no reason: it’s powerful, has adjustable speeds, and, perhaps best of all, it detaches for easy cleaning. Great for soups, plus the cup it ships with is perfect for single-servings of smoothies. I wouldn’t bother with any other immersion blender.