

Since the outer diameter of the blade is under 2.5 inches, you can fit the Hand Blender in most cups, mugs, pots, and pans. With most hand blenders, you can fill a jar with warm soapy water to clean the attachments easily, but this wasn’t enough. The blender attachment is quite domed and it’s really hard to get in there to clean stuff out. I will make a note here on that though that the sticky sauce got pretty stuck up in the immersion cup. Similarly on a thick peanut sauce, it did a great job without me having to endlessly whisk my sauce. When I used it on an herby dressing, it created a nice smooth finished product. You can use it for making hummus or reintegrating peanut butter. When it comes to the main blending attachment, it can be used to mix or blend soups, milkshakes, smoothies, dressings and other liquids.

I will say this dial configuration means you can’t really adjust the speed while it’s in use you need one hand to operate it and the other to hold your bowl or beaker, so it’s not really possible. The top of the unit has a dial to determine the blending speed. The handgrip has two buttons, a simple power on/off button, and a turbo button for higher-speed operations. The mixer is about 16 inches in height with the blending attachment on. Let’s take a look at what you get and how the parts work… Immersion blender I was interested in this hand blender because it’s very well-rated for the price, with very few negatives from buyers. The power cord for the unit is six feet long, so you should be able to use it wherever you need it within your kitchen. This hand blender is corded and needs to be plugged in to operate. The accessories consist a beaker that can hold about a liter but you can really only fill it partway to avoid splashing.
