Love this machine, so quiet - easy to use and more importantly so easy to clean.
Same price at HN and TGG
Love this machine, so quiet - easy to use and more importantly so easy to clean.
Same price at HN and TGG
doubt it
Now that'd be something
Just as well as it does walnut oil :P
Nope it doesn't do sugar cane. It's a really great juicer but it's only suited to softer ingredients such as celery, apples oranges etc.
No, it can't. It even struggles with apples or carrots and wastes quite a bit. It's only really good for softer fruits like oranges (if peeled first). I bought one and returned it the next day.
Say… What happens if you put an orange into a sugar cane machine? Does it work just as well as one would think?
Also $179 at GoodGuys and HN. At GG can get an extra $5 off as a price match….so I guess same as the Visa $5 off with Amazon
less $40 if you can get a code for TGG
what code, can you please tell?
Not as good as the The Juice Loosener. It's whisper quiet.
Tempting to try
Is it all plastic?
Yes - a few metal bits here and there but predominantly plastic
Purchased it a week ago. Overall, it’s a good juicer. A couple of cons: it’s all plastic, and you have to cut everything into really small pieces which is somewhat annoying.
True · silence
(aside from the screams of the fruit as you squeeze the life out of them)
Serious note - Any recommendations for a properly heavy duty manual (or otherwise) juicer, for not too much money?
simple rotary juicers are really good and give you healthy pulp you often miss out on with autos if you're mainly looking at citrus
also cheap and easy to clean
@0jay: the person i'm buying for is very strong and very careless.
he had one of these…
https://www.amazon.com.au/Breville-Citrus-Brushed-Stainless-…
…and managed to break the handle at the joint (some pin got bent or lost or something)
Would prefer something like this, instead of the purely manual twist things. Do you know of anything similar? Mayb e I'll just get another of these and see what happens.
@andresampras: i think that the breville you linked to might look like a good idea but it's introducing a huge potential for excessive stress at the joint if the person applied too much weight (as your friend has discovered).
you can get similar designs that require the fruit to be applied by hand which minimises the possibility of overdoing it just by virtue of the fact that the fruit rind would disintegrate before the mechanism would break
there are all kinds of variation on this design
Environmental Protection
trust us… we're from the marketing dpt
Can it do sugar cane