Gearing up or already in the swing of special holiday food making? Kate's had this Cuisinart Mini Prep Processor for a year and loves it: perfect for chopping onions, making fresh salsa and tapenades, and even serving as a spice grinder. The bowl holds up to 21 oz., but it's small enough that Kate keeps it on the back ledge of her stove, poised for action at all times. It's on sale at Kohls.com for $29.49. Maybe it's time to buy yourself a Christmas gift?










This is my go-to bridal shower present, particularly when the registries only have things like spatulas and sets of china left. It's the most useful thing I got when I got married, for sure. It does a great job on small batches of sauces, too, as well as onions and chocolate and such.
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Anyone have any experience with using one of these abroad or have a second to read what it says about electrics on the sticker near the power cord? My partner and I are stocking up on kitchen items in the US before my company pays for a move to the UK. Thanks...
view rebandvic's profile
how eerie! I just decided today to get this as a christmas gift for my mother-in-law. Does anyone know the difference between this model and the one with a more rounded base?
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Be careful grinding spices -- we ground cumin seed and managed to scratch the plastic container pretty well. Still works fine, it's just uglier.
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I don't think there's much real difference, Selena. I have the one with the rounded base and really like it.
view anadequatenovel's profile
Ascetics aside, my understanding is that the newer Mini-Prep Plus Processor (DLC-2A) is a significant improvement over the older model. It has a slightly stronger motor 250w (vs 220w). This is an informative review noting other improvements - http://tinyurl.com/28gv3p
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I went over to Cooks Illustrated to do some more research. According to Cooks, the KitchenAid Chef's Chopper Mini Food Processor (KFC3100) is the way to go. It got the best recommendation in a head to head test against 7 other models including both Cuisinarts.
view southernwayfarer's profile
thanks southernwayfarer... gotta get the best for MIL, ya know...
view selena's profile
rebandvic- the tag's been removed on ours, but the base reads "12V 60 Hz 250W." Does that help you at all? How can you tell what will work with a converter over there?
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Thanks for checking that Kate. I am not sure what that means for my purposes but I will do some more research.
Usually, if an appliance says something like 100-240 volts or 120-220 it means that you just need an passive adapter to change the physical shape of the plug. Most laptops and digital cameras fall into this category.
Things like hairdryers and toasters get trickier and often require a step down converter which makes sure that the larger amount of power coming out of a European outlet doesn't damage the device. Also step down converters are not such a good solution for the long run as they can cause fires and things...
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