![]() I’m not convinced, with all the various pieces, that this is more space-efficient than a separate appliance, and it’s certainly not as powerful as a dedicated juicer. Was this my user error or the machine? I’m not sure. Looking through the manual for guidance, I found a note advising that the spout should be pushed in (“open”) for low-pulp juices this helped, but the juice was still pretty pulpy. I did this, and it caused a clog so major I had to stop midway through juicing, disassemble, clean, and reassemble before continuing. ![]() The quick-start manual tells you to pull the juicer’s pulp spout out before juicing this is, somewhat counterintuitively, the “closed” position (pushing the spout in is “open”). That’s sort of where the efficiency stopped, unfortunately: The blade seemed to struggle with the combination of textures I fed it-leafy, fibrous, and long celery dense and fibrous ginger juicy, skin-on apple and super-ripe, pulpy pineapple. The juicer attachment (which you can also use for making apple or tomato sauce) comes in a big box, and unpacking it, you’ll find as I did that there are lots of bits and pieces: basket inserts for your preferred pulp level, a two-in-one plunger system for pushing your fruit down the feed tube, an auger/blade combo that breaks up fruit and grinds it against your chosen basket insert, pitchers for catching juice and pulp… It was all a little intimidating coming out of the box, but it assembled efficiently and compactly. ![]() ![]() This might have been the attachment I was most excited to try-I love a fancy juice, and there’s something so appealing about making one at home. ![]()
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