![]() ![]() This could have been sieved.Ĭultish reputation. Protein shake: On the eye – all berry skin traces are gone – and to taste, it’s the smoothest yet. It has a slight texture, but it is uniform and very fine. Apart from the very occasional giveaway speck of cucumber skin, this could be an avocado smoothie. Green juice: I can drink this! We can all drink this. It includes 20 pages where you can write about your “journey”. The “life coach”-style user guide and recipe book feature so many jubilant couples I wonder if there’s some sort of tie-in to. It comes with a spare 500ml cup and a 680ml. The blades are far bigger than any other so far, which is only fitting because this is “the all new, revolutionary Extractor Blade”. It’s weighty and solid, with a lovely texture, as if it’s clad in vanillin crystals. Photograph: Linda Nylindįirst impressions: It shouts at me: “STOP THROWING DISEASE-FIGHTING NUTRITION DOWN THE DRAIN!” It looks like the Gherkin. It’s lightweight too, so a good option for travelling chefs and those who take their blenders on holiday – a growing breed. Who is this for? This is a great, compact gadget. There’s still a touch of graininess, but it’s enjoyable. Consulting the instructions, I move the machine like a cocktail shaker and the harder ingredients are crushed. Protein shake: The blades have whittled several of the almonds into balls. Green juice: Definitely the best yet, but still not quite good enough when you’re putting in kale stalks. Its sizeable recipe booklet is written like a comic and is quite an enjoyable read. What it doesn’t have is a drink-through lid it’s either a cup, or it’s totally capped, disastrous for in-car slurping. Notably, there’s an extra blade, a flat one with two prongs for milling. There are too many gizmos – where would you store them all? There’s another dome-shaped cup, and four additional cups with Olympic ring-coloured rims, black lids with and without holes. It looks very similar, though the plastic part on top is more reminiscent of a time capsule than a water bottle or blender. Photograph: Linda Nylindįirst impressions: The predecessor to the Nutribullet (by the same manufacturers). I have no doubt that this is an excellent juice extractor but as a personal blender, it’s not up to much.ġ/5 4 Magic Bullet £44.99, .uk Who is this for? People who are less het-up about getting their fibre and juice in one hit. Apparently my own digestive tract is totally incapable of breaking them up (according to the Nutri-bible) so I’ve wasted an expensive ingredient. The nutrition is locked firmly inside my hemp seeds. Protein shake: I feel a bit like Goldilocks drinking Daddy Bear’s oat-fortified protein shake through the giant beaker lid. Otherwise, just tufts of ginger and a decent-sized bit of apple. Green juice: While the previous two were grass cuttings on the palate, this is grass cuttings on the eye. There’s only one attachable beaker and it’s a whopping 750ml the drink-through beaker lid is comically oversized too. ![]() Mornings require simple one-button actions. It has three speed settings, which is all wrong. Photograph: Linda Nylindįirst impressions: Looks like a normal blender masquerading as a personal blender. You really can’t go wrong, if you can afford it □ It does seem silly to run $799 Magic Bullet with my $299 Final Cut Pro X, but that is what filmmaking has come to these days, and you do indeed get what you pay for when it comes to Magic Bullet.Three speed settings. (Above image credit: Red Giant – Magic Bullet Mojo screenshot)Īll in all, Red Giant’s Magic Bullet Suite 12.0 is definitely a top notch collection of tools.
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