Jan 06, 2024
The 4 Best Food Processors in 2023
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A food processor helps you chop vegetables, grind meat, shred cheese, and perform other usually time-consuming tasks in seconds. You can also use these fantastic appliances to make mayonnaise and pesto that far surpass — and cost less than — what you'd get at the store.
While testing 7 food processors, I sliced 7 pounds of potatoes, grated a pound of parmesan, made seven batches of basil pesto, ground 10 pounds of beef, shredded 4 pounds of mozzarella cheese, emulsified eight batches of mayonnaise, mixed and kneaded seven batches of pizza dough, and chopped 7 pounds of onion, a pound of celery, and 2 pounds of carrots.
In addition to our top picks, we cover other models we tested, our testing methodology, and common FAQs at the end of the guide.
Learn more about how Insider Reviews tests and researches kitchen products.
Best food processor overall: Breville Sous Chef 16 Pro Food Processor - See at BrevilleIn addition to coming with lots of useful extras, the Breville Sous Chef 16 Pro Food Processor has a powerful motor that makes quick work of most tasks and a large feed tube, so you don't always have to precut ingredients.
Best budget food processor: Hamilton Beach Food Processor - See at AmazonFor under $60, the Hamilton Beach Food Processor is simple to use and clean and features a helpful tool for scraping the sides of the bowl without stopping.
Best blender food processor combo: Vitamix 12-Cup Food Processor Attachment - See at Williams SonomaIf you own an Ascent or Venturist series Vitamix blender or are thinking of buying one, the Vitamix 12-Cup Food Processor Attachment is your best bet with its exceptional performance and ease of use.
Best food processor for dough: Cuisinart 14-Cup Food Processor - See at Home DepotThe Cuisinart 14-Cup Food Processor was the best at making pizza dough, pesto, and shredded mozzarella in our tests, and it operates quietly.
In addition to coming with lots of useful extras, the Breville Sous Chef 16 Pro Food Processor has a powerful motor that makes quick work of most tasks and a large feed tube, so you don't always have to precut ingredients.
Pros: Easy to use, operates quietly, dishwasher-safe, long warranty, excellent blade placement, quick-start pulse, large feed tube, many useful accessories that fit in storage case, outstanding job of emulsifying mayo and grinding beef, powerful motor
Cons: Didn't knead dough well, pulse comes to a slow stop, shredding discs are hard to clean
The large-capacity Breville Sous Chef 16 Pro Food Processor (model BFP800XL) comes with a separate storage case to organize the many attachments. My favorite attachment is the variable slicing disc that has 24 width settings. I also like the 2.5-cup mini bowl and blade that are perfect for smaller jobs.
The Breville BFP800XL is simple to use, and the only food test the Breville Sous Chef didn't do well in was mixing and kneading dough, though it was still usable. The processor's emulsifying attachment made the best mayonnaise.
The Sous Chef was also one of the best at grinding beef, slicing potatoes, and making pesto. It did a good job of chopping mirepoix but left a few large chunks of carrot and celery. Uniformity was also an issue when shredding mozzarella.
The Breville was one of the quietest processors at about 67 decibels, quieter than a shower. Its S-blade came the closest to the sides and bottom of the bowl, allowing it to reach contents easily. All of the Sous Chef elements aside from the base are top-rack dishwasher-safe.
After three months of everyday use, the Sous Chef has essentially become my sous chef as I transition to a healthier, home-cooked diet. I've emulsified countless batches of mayo with great results each time, quickly julienned zucchini and cucumber for a cold Thai salad, pulverized nuts for sugar-free nut butter, and performed several other tasks efficiently.
Read our full review of the Breville Sous Chef 16 Pro Food Processor.
For under $60, the Hamilton Beach Food Processor is simple to use and clean and features a helpful tool for scraping the sides of the bowl without stopping.
Pros: Easy to use and clean, grinds beef well, comes with a helpful bowl scraper, easy to store, quick-starting pulse
Cons: Operates loudly, failed at making mayonnaise, poor job of shredding cheese
The Hamilton Beach Food Processor (model 70730) was the cheapest model we tested, and while its performance was noticeably inferior to our other picks, it performed admirably for a sub-$60 processor. One unique feature was a scraper that sits in the bowl and operates using a lever on the lid. It lets you free ingredients stuck to the sides without stopping the unit.
Operating the Hamilton Beach processor is simple. It did a great job grinding beef, but it struggled shredding mozzarella, producing a mix of shreds and chunks. It also failed to emulsify the mayonnaise. The appliance did an okay job of processing pesto, potatoes, dough, and the carrot, onion, and celery mix.
This processor was the loudest we tested at 98.5 decibels, almost as loud as a chainsaw. On the plus side, the pulse starts at a high speed when you turn the knob. And the chopping blade comes close to the sides of the bowl, though there's a wide gap between the blade and the bowl's bottom. All components are dishwasher-safe and can be stored in the bowl when not in use.
If you own an Ascent or Venturist series Vitamix blender or are thinking of buying one, the Vitamix 12-Cup Food Processor Attachment is your best bet with its exceptional performance and ease of use.
Pros: Easy to clean and use, large feed tube, comes with disc storage case, 3-year warranty, outstanding job slicing potatoes, passed other food processing tests, great blade placement
Cons: Loud operation, pulse starts and stops slowly, may not fit under above-counter cabinets, only compatible with five Vitamix blender bases
The Vitamix 12-Cup Food Processor Attachment works with Ascent and Venturist motor bases (sold separately), so you can upgrade an already-great Vitamix blender to be an outstanding food processor. The Vitamix attachment was the best at slicing potatoes producing consistent slices in a split second. And, thanks to its large feed tube, the potatoes required minimal pre-cutting.
The attachment's weakest performance was shredding cheese. The results were not very uniform, and I had to stop and free up chunks that jammed the disc. Yet, with the pesto, ground beef, mirepoix, dough, and mayo, it produced consistent, quality results. One factor that likely helped with performance was the excellent placement of the S-blade that comes within 1.5 millimeters of the sides and 3 millimeters of the bottom of the bowl.
The Vitamix 12-Cup Food Processor Attachment was loud at 86.9 decibels, similar to a noisy restaurant. Also, when pressing the pulse button, the processor took a beat to ramp up to high speed and slowly twirled to a stop when I released the button. Clean-up was a snap since all of the components are dishwasher-safe. Even when I washed them by hand, the debris came off easily.
The Cuisinart 14-Cup Food Processor was the best at making pizza dough, pesto, and shredded mozzarella in our tests, and it operates quietly.
Pros: Best at shredding mozzarella, making pesto, and mixing pizza dough, outstanding at grinding meat, quietest model we tested, large blade does a good job of reaching the sides of the bowl, fast-reacting pulse button
Cons: Easy to accidentally put the lid on wrong, left some big chunks of carrot when making mirepoix, hard to clean debris from discs
The Cuisinart 14-Cup Food Processor (model DFP-14BCNY) was the best at mixing smooth and uniform pizza dough in our tests. The processor doesn't come with a dough blade, but according to Nicki Sizemore, the author of "The Food Processor Family Cookbook," dough blades are pointless anyway. She has used both the dough blade and the traditional S-blade to make pizza and pie dough with this processor, and there was no difference in performance.
The Cuisinart food processor is Sizemore's favorite, and at $200 less than our top pick, you may want to consider this over the Breville. The Cuisinart was the best at shredding mozzarella and making pesto, excelled at grinding beef, and did well slicing potatoes and emulsifying mayo. The only food test it struggled with was chopping mirepoix. It diced up most of the ingredients, but left behind some larger chunks of carrots.
The Cuisinart 14-cup food processor operated the quietest in our tests at just 58.8 decibels, quieter than a normal conversation.
It only has two buttons: on and off/pulse. The pulse function started and stopped faster than any other unit. We also liked that the S-blade gets close to the sides, making it hard for ingredients to avoid its reach.
However, the Cuisinart just wasn't as easy to use or to clean as the Breville. The lid has a counterintuitive fit with the feed tube at the back of the machine, the shredding discs trapped debris, and the accessories don't store easily with the unit.
We tested seven food processors for this guide. These are the ones that missed the cut.
What we don't recommend and why:
Magiccos 7 in 1 Food Processor : The Magiccos food processor was easy to clean by hand and in the dishwasher, and it was one of the best at shredding mozzarella. But, those are the only two positives. It comes with many attachments, including a juicer, but no way to store them easily. It was one of the worst at making dough, chopping mirepoix, and slicing potatoes. The pulse wasn't responsive, and the blades didn't come very close to the sides or bottom of the bowl.
Ninja Professional Plus Food Processor, Model BN601 : Ninja blenders and processors have a unique four-blade system that's supposed to make quick work of ingredients. It did a good job of grinding beef and chopping mirepoix vegetables. However, it's hard to clean the sharp blades by hand without coming into contact with them. They're dishwasher safe, but machine washing will dull the blades faster. The unit also had a tiny feed tube, poor blade reach, and didn't do well pureeing pesto, shredding cheese, or slicing potatoes.
Ninja Foodi Power Blender & Processor System, Model SS351: This is just a blender masquerading as a food processor. There's no slicing blade or shredding disc. It wasn't good at chopping, leaving lots of large chunks untouched. And, as with other Ninjas, you're going to have a hard time cleaning the blades by hand without cutting yourself.
Here are the main attributes we look for and how we test them:
Ease of use: When testing the food processors, I focused on what made setting up and using each unit complicated or straightforward. I looked for specific characteristics: a heavy base, whether the base stayed put or slid around, if it was easy to see the contents, and if the base, bowl, and attachments could be stored together effortlessly.
Food processing: I processed the following foods and noted how uniform the results were on a scale of 1 (virtually no uniformity) to 5 (perfectly uniform):
Here are the test results for our top picks:
Food Item
Breville Sous Chef
Hamilton Beach
Vitamix Attachment
Cuisinart 14-Cup
Pesto
4
3.5
4
4.5
Ground beef
5
5
4.5
5
Shredded cheese
3.5
2.5
3.5
4
Chopped vegetables
4
3.5
4
3
Sliced potatoes
4.5
4.5
5
4.5
Pizza dough
3.5
4.5
4.5
5
Mayonnaise
5
1
4.5
4.5
Noise: I held a sound meter 2 feet from the food processor as it ran at high speed. All but two of the units registered over 85 decibels. The Cuisinart and Breville units were the only two that didn't drown out my speakers as I listened to an audiobook.
Pulse speed: Some tasks require a pulse function that starts and stops quickly to achieve uniform results. I pressed the pulse and observed whether the blade immediately hit top speeds or ramped up. I also looked at how quickly it slowed down. The Cuisinart did the best at starting and stopping, while the Vitamix attachment was the worst.
Blade position: The blades need to be able to reach as much of the bowl's interior as possible, so you don't end up with big, unprocessed pieces. Using pennies, I measured how close the blades got to the sides and bottom of the bowl. A penny is approximately 1.5 millimeters thick. Armed with this information and five cents, I measured the positioning of the blades.
Cleaning: One of the main reasons people shy away from food processors is that they don't want to clean them afterward. I washed all of the food processors in the dishwasher (top rack only) and by hand and assessed how easy the process was.
Nicki Sizemore, the author of "The Food Processor Family Cookbook," said the main difference is the food processor's wider bowl which allows ingredients to circulate easily without the use of liquid. It's also easier to scrape food out of the bowl.
Sizemore recommends simpler food processors. Look for a sturdy work bowl with a heavy base to keep the unit in place. Also, you want a sizeable, sharp S-blade. Don't be wooed by extra attachments since they don't add much to the unit's functioning.
The food processors we recommend cost between $55 and $400. We noticed that the more expensive models tended to perform better and operate quieter in our testing. So, if you can afford it, we recommend budgeting at least $200.
If you're tired of chopping, dicing, slicing, shredding, or mincing ingredients by hand, a food processor may be worth it. It can also grind meat, emulsify ingredients, and knead dough. A good processor can even replace your blender and mixer.
Since you don't want to be caught with a food processor that's too small for the task you're performing, it's better to go with a larger model. In our testing, a 10-cup capacity was large enough for most jobs.
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Here are the best food processors: Best food processor overall: Best budget food processor: Best blender food processor combo: Best food processor for dough In addition to coming with lots of useful extras, the Breville Sous Chef 16 Pro Food Processor has a powerful motor that makes quick work of most tasks and a large feed tube, so you don't always have to precut ingredients. Accessories: Bowl capacity: Liquid maximum: Weight of base: Dimensions: Feed tube size: Motor power: Dishwasher-safe: Warranty: Pros: Cons: Read our full review of the Breville Sous Chef 16 Pro Food Processor For under $60, the Hamilton Beach Food Processor is simple to use and clean and features a helpful tool for scraping the sides of the bowl without stopping. Accessories: Bowl capacity: Weight of base: Dimensions: Feed tube size: Motor power: Dishwasher-safe: Warranty: Pros: Cons: If you own an Ascent or Venturist series Vitamix blender or are thinking of buying one, the Vitamix 12-Cup Food Processor Attachment is your best bet with its exceptional performance and ease of use. Accessories: Bowl capacity: Liquid maximum: Dimensions: Feed tube size: Dishwasher-safe: Warranty: Pros: Cons: The Cuisinart 14-Cup Food Processor was the best at making pizza dough, pesto, and shredded mozzarella in our tests, and it operates quietly. Accessories: Bowl capacity: Liquid maximum: Weight of base: Dimensions: Feed tube size: Motor power: Dishwasher-safe: Warranty: Pros: Cons: What we don't recommend and why: Magiccos 7 in 1 Food Processor : Ninja Professional Plus Food Processor, Model BN601 : Ninja Foodi Power Blender & Processor System, Model SS351: Here are the main attributes we look for and how we test them: Ease of use: Food processing: Here are the test results for our top picks: Food Item Breville Sous Chef Hamilton Beach Vitamix Attachment Cuisinart 14-Cup Pesto Ground beef Shredded cheese Chopped vegetables Sliced potatoes Pizza dough Mayonnaise Noise: Pulse speed: Blade position: Cleaning: What's the difference between a food processor and a blender? What should you look for when shopping for a food processor? How much should I spend on a food processor? Is it worth buying a food processor? What size food processor is best?