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cuisinart custom 14 manualFood Processor Wikipedia Food Network's Food Processor Recipes Food Processor Safety. More Great Products. Cuisinart FP-14DCN Elite Collection 14 Cup Food Processor Product Manual Reviews Comments about FP-14DCN Elite Collection 14 Cup Food Processor - FP-14DCN Cuisinart Elite 14 Cup Food Processor - Die Cast FP-14DCN Cuisinart. Adjustable slicing disc, Dough Blade, 4 Cup Bowl, Chopping Blade, Storage case, Instruction Kitchen Appliance Cuisinart; Cuisinart Food Processor; FP-14; Top Products; Cuisinart FP-14 Food Processor User Manual. 14-Cup Cuisinart Elite Collection Cuisinart Food Processor DLC-2007. Cuisinart PremierTM 7-Cup Series DLC-2007 Instruction Cuisinart Food Processor FP-14. Food Processor. This Cuisinart food processor comes with a 14-cup capacity manual. The Cuisinart Custom 14C food processor Gap repair protocol, Statement f77, Documents with a link document x, Mini van report, Spigelreflexkamera canon a1 manual. Reload to refresh your session. Reload to refresh your session. Please try again.Please try again.In order to navigate out of this carousel please use your heading shortcut key to navigate to the next or previous heading. Register a free business account Full content visible, double tap to read brief content. Not for children under 3 yrs. Please try your search again later.Turn something as ordinary as pizza dough into a scrumptious savory treat with Cuisinart. Savor the Good Life.With the large 14-cup work bowl, extra large feed tube and dishwasher safe parts, there's more time to share the delicious results with family and friends.Pattern Name: Food Processor Includes a spatula and recipe book.http://skibetjagtforening.damgruppen.dk/userfiles/emp-1700-manual.xml
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Pattern Name: Food Processor Cuisinart Videos for related products 10:17 Click to play video Cuisinart DFP-14BCWNY 14-Cup Food Processor, Brushed Stainless Steel, White Cuisinart Videos for related products 8:35 Click to play video Cuisinart Prep 9 9-Cup Food Processor, Gunmetal Merchant Video Videos for related products 7:49 Click to play video Cuisinart DLC-2011CHBY Prep 11 Plus 11-Cup Food Processor, Brushed Stainless Cuisinart Next page Upload your video Video Customer Review: Cuisinart DFP-14BCNY 14-Cup Food Processor, Brushed Stainless Steel See full review Cuisinart Onsite Associates Program All prices and specifications are subject to change without notice. To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness. Please try again later. Julie Goodwin 1.0 out of 5 stars I am incredibly disappointed, and have decided to throw this inferior product away. The latches of the redesigned lid are impossible to clean, no matter what tool I try, so that residual food remains and makes this appliance dangerously unhygienic. It's too late for a refund, so I will look for another food processor maker; done with Cuisinart!The motor doesn't break but the plastic does, and when you ask for a replacement part, you wait forever for the thing to arrive. In my case, when it did arrive, it was the wrong part, and when I asked them to replace the replacement, I got shuttled around from one operator to another. While all this is going on, you have an expensive machine sitting on your counter that you can't use. Not worth it.It is has already been put to good use in my home kitchen. They were all done beautifully without damaging the food in process. I am surprised at the speed at which it processes and still has smooth clean cuts without mashing the food.http://deltastal.ru/userfiles/emp-x3e-manual.xml It is also very quiet. The bowl was large enough to hold the whole 2 lb block of shredded cheese. Having the smaller feed tube, I was able to stack my strawberries in and keep them from tumbling around which helped provide more uniform slices. Having the larger, I was able to cut my 2 lb block of cheese into 4ths and have the entire block shredded in no time. The larger would not hold my whole tomato set in right side up, but I was able to turn my tomatoes sideways and get beautiful slices anyway. I did purchase some extra discs alongside my gift that included the thin slicing blade as well as the thick. I cut the strawberries with all three just to show a comparison and so others could see how it would slice if they were considering purchase of another thickness. I included the strawberry slicing short video just so you could see how quickly it diced and compare it to the end product. Left to right in the strawberry photo the strawberries are sliced with a thin (2mm), medium (4mm), thick (8mm) disc - the middle one (4mm) is the one that comes standard with the machine. I am finding this machine easy to handle and a joy to have in my kitchen. It's easy to operate. I highly recommend.So I took the recommendation of ATK and bought the Cuisinart 14-cup processor. I use the machine mostly for pizza dough. The Cuisinart just cannot handle the same pizza dough recipe that the KitchenAid breezed through consistently year after year. The Cuisinart's blade comes off during the process. Very disappointed---not only with Cuisinart, but with ATK for their recommendation. I have other Cuisinart products, and they have performed admirably. I would have given this product a zero stars rating had it been possible.All of a sudden it quit and I was excited to purchase a new one of the same quality. The post in the middle of this model is not as high as my old one, so even though it says 14 cups, if using it to blend liquids, etc.I used my old for liquids quite often so this didn't really meet my expectations. My brother was able to fix my old one and I sent the new one back.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try again It is everything that I loved about. One of my friends accidentally broke part of it so I needed to replace it. This is a perfect replacement. It is everything that I loved about the old classic ones, but more powerful and built stronger (surprising, I know). The only downside is that the feedtube is on the opposite side. So you put ingredients on the far side of the machine. I don't understand that. But it's quite a minor problem given how amazing this machine is. It's the vitamix of the food processing world.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try again The small food processors don't have the features of this one, so a large unit is justified. And this processor won the Editor's Choice from America's Test Kitchen. There was a sale price at Amazon.ca so I bought it. absolutely no regrets!Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try again When it arrived it was smaller than expected though the bowl size should have been 14 cups. The reason it was a no go was the way the shredding attachments worked. Instead of the standard spindle which fits over the motor spindle and the blades sit on top this has a convoluted system where you have to hold a lever then try and rotate the spindle onto a channel on the back of the blade. The spindle itself is curved and the whole way it is designed is awkward and time consuming to assemble plus it is not very well made and I could foresee it breaking after not many uses. To add to this difficulty, there is no information on assembling the shredding blade attachments in the instruction book and in fact almost the entire manual is dedicated to correcting recipe mistakes and recipes not how to use the processor or it additional parts, no trouble shooting if something doesn’t work like most manuals would have. There is a website address for instructional videos which when you try and find the relevant item this one does not exist and there is no online video or in depth manual on the Cuisinart site for this processor. I tried calling them and was on hold for 35 minutes before giving up. The entire thing was sent back for a refund. It is very disappointing as having used Cuisinart and its European counterparts Robot Coupe and Magimix for decades this machine has single handedly convinced me to not buy Cuisinart products again for home or my restaurant. Save your money and frustration and buy something else.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try again Let me tell you, all recent Kitchenaid food processor are flimsy, under-powered and hard to clean products. This Cuisinart is food processor is just like our old Kitchenaid. It is heavy, yeah, powerful and SIMPLE to operate. It comes with one blade and two disk. That is it and that is all we need. Why bother with countless disks and attachments you never use that require complex adjustments of flimsy plastic. Not useful. This food processor is simple, elegantly retro, solid and powerful So glad we bought it. If you look for a food processor built like they used to be built 15 years ago this is the one. Other recent Cuisinart models are not as good as this old model so trust this old design. I think it will last us another 15 years. The motor is also super quiet with a satisfying humming when it run.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try again In order to navigate out of this carousel please use your heading shortcut key to navigate to the next or previous heading. Hampton, NE 68843Today we're shipping orders for in-stock items placed August 21. Recently we opened an additional shipping line that’s reducing processing time. Customer service is available by email and phone. If we can’t take your call immediately, we’ll get back to you as fast as possible. The Hampton showroom is temporarily closed. We greatly appreciate your business as we do our very best to serve you! Helping you achieve your culinary dreams. The flavor of store-bought hummus. Savvy people they must be, because. Will you please help us out by emailing your question instead. We’re here to serve you, but our customer service staff is very challenged with the current work load and they greatly appreciate your understanding! You must have JavaScript enabled in your browser to utilize the functionality of this website. We may receive commissions on purchases made from our chosen links.Read her review below. With its 720-watt motor, extra-large feed tube, and precise stainless steel blades, the Cuisinart Custom chops, mixes, slices, shreds, kneads, and purees at a level that’s basically on par with the best-in-class (but also costliest-in-class) Breville Sous Chef. This is the best food processor money can buy if you’re on a budget, and it will more than meet the needs of the average cook. But if you’re still debating over whether to purchase the more economical Cuisinart Custom or pay up for the Breville Sous Chef, read on for our verdict.Between the metal chopping blade, slicing disc, shredding disc, and spatula, the Cuisinart Custom has you covered for most any kitchen prep. Its 720-watt motor is fast and powerful enough to handle a wide range of tasks and it’s surprisingly quiet compared to other food processors.We found the placement of the tube—at the back of the unit—to be somewhat awkward, though, as it requires you to reach over the machine to feed ingredients into the chute.In a side-by-side comparison, this food processor essentially rivaled the Breville Sous Chef in its ability to deliver quick and consistent results. However, we found that the Sous Chef had a slight edge in the shredding category, as some larger chunks of onion stuck to the Cuisinart’s shredding disc, while others snuck past the blade and into the work bowl. In the end, though, the cauliflower pizza and latkes we made in the Cuisinart were delicious and even came out on top among some of our friends in a taste test.We never would have thought to knead dough in a food processor; in the past, we’ve always done it by hand or using a stand mixer. But sure enough, the Cuisinart’s swift-acting blade turned dough elastic in a matter of minutes with minimal effort.We chose to make an apple crumb pie based on a recipe in the Cuisinart’s instruction manual and it was a crowd-pleaser, with a near-perfect tender and flaky crust.This machine has only one speed and a pulse button that’s very responsive to the touch, making chopping more efficient.We were able to connect the medium, two-part shredding disc without so much as a glance at the instruction booklet (though we do recommend referring to the manual for important safety precautions). It can be a little tricky to click the bowl and lid into place at first, and they must align properly in order to start the machine. With some practice, it didn’t take long for us to get the hang of the alignment, though.Additionally, the appliance’s 14-cup work bowl is made of sturdy, high-quality materials and sized for big jobs such as slicing pounds of potatoes for latkes.If storage is still a concern, this food processor is also available in 4-, 8-, 11-, 12-, and 13-cup models with smaller dimensions.The choice is yours but we think it’s a piece you’ll be proud to display on your kitchen countertop.It features high-quality materials designed to be shatterproof, leak-proof, and resistant to water, scratches, heat, rust, chipping, tarnishing, staining, and odor. The work bowl is constructed of premium-quality Lexan plastic, ensuring that it is sturdy and will last for a long time.But even if you choose to wash it by hand, as we did, you’ll find the process super easy. After gently scrubbing the pieces with a warm, soapy sponge, they were sparkling clean in just a few minutes.Still, we think the Cuisinart’s three basic blades for chopping, slicing, and shredding are all you really need for most jobs. Plus, Cuisinart offers a variety of additional blades for this food processor on its website if you want to branch out. The Breville has a shorter 1-year limited product warranty but comes with a 25-year induction motor guarantee.The Cuisinart Custom is the perfect lower-priced alternative.Before testing the Breville Sous Chef and the Cuisinart Custom, we had this Oster model and it did the trick for most simple jobs like chopping or slicing food.For example, when we tried to make a nut-based salad dressing in the Oster, it blended most of the ingredients just fine but left behind little unwanted chunks of nuts. Meanwhile, the Breville and the Cuisinart both easily delivered smooth, creamy dressings without any nut remnants.After weeks of testing, we’re confident that the Cuisinart offers the best bang for your buck. This powerful kitchen workhorse is all a cook will ever need for most jobs, and then some. You might not need every tool for every procedure. The words 14- Cup Food Processor are below the brand name in black lettering. The model number, DFP-14BCN, is inscribed on the bottom of the base. It comes with a 14-cup Lexan plastic work bowl, small and large pushers and an extra large feed tube. The processor also includes a 4mm stainless steel slicing disk, shredding disk, chopping blade and dough blade. The product was by discontinued by Cuisinart in 2016 due to faulty blades and was replaced by the DFP-14BCNY model. By continuing to use our website, you agree to our updated Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. We appreciated your patience, we are doing our best to ship your orders on time. Please turn it on so that you can experience the full capabilities of this site. Made from brushed stainless steel, this sleek kitchen workhorse is a breeze to use and will whir through prep and cooking with ease. Whether you are making a weeknight meal or a weekend celebration, the large capacity work bowl will hold everything as the 720 watt motor makes quick work chopping whole fruits and vegetables, shredding cheese, or kneading dough.You can serve it on hot dogs, fill tacos with it or eat it plain. This one freezes well for about 6 months, so make it in batches. Process until finely chopped, about 15 seconds. Remove and reserve. Trim beef of all fat and cut it into 1-inch (2.5 cm) cubes. Process until coarsely chopped, about 10 to 12 pulses. Shake pan constantly and cook until cumin begins to smoke, about 1 minute. Remove and reserve. Add garlic and onions and cook for 2 minutes. Add beef and cook, stirring often, until no pink colour remains, about 5 minutes. Add to saucepot with water and bring to boil. Reduce heat and simmer, partially covered over medium-low heat for 45 minutes, stirring occasionally. Stir in the beans and cook until heated through. Taste and add salt, if needed. You may withdraw your consent to receive e-mails at any time. Many food processors come with dough blades, which typically feature short, blunt arms that gently pull and tear dough to knead it. But because the short arms don’t extend to the outside rim of the work bowl, they’re limited in their ability to pick up flour when small amounts are processed. In fact, we find that the efficiency of the metal blade makes it preferable for all dough. Given all this, we’re not sure why manufacturers even bother including it as an accessory in the first place. We’re sticking with the metal blade for all doughs. SUPERFLUOUS ACCESSORY See Also Equipment Review Food Processors Buy the Winner Equipment Review Stand Mixers (High-End) Buy the Winner Equipment Review Mixing Bowls Buy the Winner Recommended Reading TRENDING NOW Your email address is required to identify you for free access to content on the site. You will also receive free newsletters and notification of America's Test Kitchen specials. Appliances All Appliances Large Appliances Small Appliances Vacuum Cleaners More categories. Wirecutter is reader-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Your guides Christine Cyr Clisset Michael Sullivan Share this review If you’re a cook who needs to get dinner on the table quickly, a food processor can feel like a second pair of hands in the kitchen. It will allow you to prep a range of food—whether you’re grating cheese, chopping nuts, slicing vegetables, or kneading dough—at lightning speed. We’ve been testing food processors since 2013, and we remain convinced that the simple, sturdy, and powerful Cuisinart Custom 14 Food Processor is the best choice for most home cooks. We like the Cuisinart Custom 14 Food Processor for its simplicity: This 14-cup model’s pared-down design makes it easier to use and to clean than models with more settings or multiple bowls. It comes with a handful of accessories and disks that are needed to complete common kitchen tasks, but nothing extra. This food processor also has a straightforward interface, with just two buttons, and one bowl. However, its simplicity doesn’t come at the cost of performance. In our tests, the Cuisinart tackled a multitude of chopping, shredding, and blending tasks exceptionally well, and it’s built more solidly than other processors in its price range. Advertisement Budget pick KitchenAid 3.5 Cup Food Chopper A mini option This mini, 3.5-cup processor is too small for making bread dough or coleslaw, but it’s the ideal size for chopping one onion or making small batches of mayo or vinaigrette. We recommend the inexpensive KitchenAid 3.5 Cup Food Chopper for anyone who wants to make small batches of dips, spreads, or mirepoix. It chopped vegetables more evenly than the other mini models we tested. On top of that, its handled jar with push-button activation was the most convenient to use. You can’t knead dough or shred ingredients in it, but you can grind or chop small portions of vegetables or nuts, which is more tedious to do by hand. Upgrade pick Breville Sous Chef 16 Pro A larger, more powerful option We recommend this large, 16-cup processor only if you’re cooking for a crowd multiple times a week. The Sous Chef is more than twice the price of the Cuisinart Custom 14, and it’s more powerful (and much bigger) than most people need. The Breville Sous Chef 16 Pro is more powerful than the Cuisinart Custom 14, so it’s the machine you’ll want when you’re cooking for large groups or if you process food several times a week. Its 1,200-watt motor and smart design save you time in use and cleaning. In fact, despite the 16-cup Sous Chef’s many accessories, it was one of the easiest models to clean. That said, if you use a food processor only occasionally, the Breville’s high cost probably outweighs its benefits. And given that this processor is huge—more than 18 inches tall and nearly 20 pounds—you’ll need a big counter to keep it on. Budget pick KitchenAid 3.5 Cup Food Chopper A mini option This mini, 3.5-cup processor is too small for making bread dough or coleslaw, but it’s the ideal size for chopping one onion or making small batches of mayo or vinaigrette. The research Collapse all Why you should trust us Who should get this Food processor vs.Both authors were early adopters, purchasing their first Cuisinarts shortly after the company introduced the appliances, in the 1970s. Combined, they’ve logged thousands of hours on many machines. In our efforts to choose which models to test, we also looked at reviews from other publications, such as Serious Eats, and examined user reviews on Amazon, Macy’s, and other sites. Michael Sullivan has been a kitchen writer for Wirecutter since 2015. He has covered food processors since 2016 and has spent dozens of hours shredding cheese, chopping vegetables, mixing doughs, and whipping up mayonnaise for this guide. This guide builds on work by Wirecutter deputy editor Christine Cyr Clisset. Who should get this Our food processor picks (from left to right): the Cuisinart Custom 14 Food Processor, the KitchenAid 3.5 Cup Food Chopper, and the Breville Sous Chef 16 Pro. Photo: Michael Hession If you find tasks like chopping nuts, slicing vegetables, and shredding cheese too tedious and time-consuming to perform by hand, you should consider getting a food processor. This kitchen tool is also handy for blending dips like hummus, preparing homemade mayonnaise, and mixing pie or bread dough. To process small batches of ingredients, you may want to consider getting a mini food processor—even if you already have a full-size version. Mini processors are most useful for tasks such as chopping one onion, preparing salad dressing, or making a small batch of pesto. A mini model will process smaller quantities more efficiently than a full-size model, and its diminutive size means a mini model is easier to move around a counter, store, and clean. If you have an older machine that still works well, stick with it. But if your current machine’s motor base is so lightweight that the appliance stutters across the counter while it’s running, or if the motor seizes while it’s kneading dough, you should consider upgrading to a model that has a heavier build and a better motor. Food processor vs. blender: Which one should you get. Although there’s some overlap in what they can do, food processors and blenders aren’t interchangeable appliances. A food processor is the best tool for chopping and mincing, because its wide base allows the blades to slice through more at once, so you can coarsely chop ingredients quickly and evenly. Most full-size food processors also come with blades for slicing and grating, which a blender can’t do. While many people use their food processor for mincing vegetables, this appliance is also your best friend for easily grating cheese, slicing potatoes for a gratin, grinding fresh bread crumbs, or quickly cutting butter into flour to make pie dough. You can use a food processor for pureeing dips and sauces too, but it will yield coarser textures than a high-powered blender—it’s best for things like hummus and pesto. You’ll need a blender if you want to make silky smoothies or to puree liquids like soup, which can splatter and leak out of a food processor’s doughnut-shaped bowl. In short, food processors chop and slice, blenders liquefy. Depending on your needs, you might choose one over the other, or you might want both. We have a guide to the best countertop blenders (as well as to the best handheld immersion blenders and the best personal blenders ) if you’re interested in getting one. How we picked We included both full-size and mini food processors in our testing. Photo: Michael Hession After speaking with experts and spending years long-term testing several models, these are the qualities we look for in a good food processor: Sharp, useful attachments; few extras: All food processors come with an S-shaped blade for chopping, and most full-size models also include a couple of disks for grating or slicing. In our tests, we looked for blades and grating disks that were sharp out of the box and durable enough to remain sharp over years of use, so that they could chop delicate herbs and tough nuts evenly, grate cheese uniformly, and slice vegetables cleanly. Beyond the main blade and one disk each for shredding and slicing, you don’t need much else. Many food processors also come with a dough blade made of plastic, but we found that a metal blade mixed dough just as well, so we don’t think the dough blade is essential. You can usually purchase everything from a juicing attachment to julienne disks separately, but such extras often go unused. Both cookbook authors we spoke with essentially said these add-ons were a waste of money, so we didn’t test any. Large capacity or mini, nothing in-between: In the past we tested food processors ranging in capacity from 11 to 14 cups, which cookbook authors Jean Anderson and Norene Gilletz told us was the ideal size for most home cooks. But after a couple rounds of testing, we decided to focus on full-size models that were 14 cups or larger, which we found to be more effective and useful. As Gilletz said, “It’s always better to go a little bigger than a little smaller. It’s one investment that’s going to last you a lot of years. You’ll regret getting one that isn’t big enough.” If you cook for a family or simply cook a lot, a bigger machine makes more sense. That said, we also looked at mini food processors (also called a mini choppers). Some full-size models come with an extra, smaller bowl that essentially acts as a mini food processor, but in most cases, we found that a dedicated mini processor did a better job. Mini food processors have bowls ranging in capacity from about 1? cups to 6 cups, but we focused on those with a capacity of about three cups. Models smaller than that are too limited, and if you think you need one that’s larger than three cups, you’re probably better off with a full-size model. Some processors, such as the Magimix by Robot-Coupe 14-Cup Food Processor (pictured above), have a wide gap between the shredding disk and the bowl lid, which allows large pieces of food to slip into the bowl. Photo: Michael Hession Some feed tubes were too wide, such as that on the Magimix by Robot-Coupe 14-Cup Food Processor (left), which caused carrots to fall sideways and cut unevenly. The narrow feed tube insert on the Cuisinart Custom 14 (right) kept carrots upright while shredding. Photo: Michael Hession Some processors, such as the Magimix by Robot-Coupe 14-Cup Food Processor (pictured above), have a wide gap between the shredding disk and the bowl lid, which allows large pieces of food to slip into the bowl. But the way the bowl is put together can make a huge difference in how easy a processor is to use. Bowls with fewer parts and accessories are easier to assemble and clean, as are bowls with fewer nooks and crannies between the parts. The size of the feed tubes in the lid (used to insert potatoes, carrots, or other hunks of food to be sliced or shredded) also makes a difference. Most full-size processors come with a wide feed tube that’s fitted with a food presser, which has a narrower feed tube (with its own presser) in the center. The larger tube should be big enough to easily fit a block of cheese or a potato, so you don’t have to spend time cutting food into pieces that are small enough to fit. But the smaller tube needs to be narrow enough to keep carrots and other thin items upright during slicing. Heavy base: A good food processor will have a strong motor and a heavy base that anchors it to the counter so the processor can mix sturdy yeast doughs. Low-quality machines, which are typically lighter, often skid across the counter when processing dough, or the motor may even seize up. How we tested We chopped 1 cup of whole almonds in each processor to gauge evenness of texture. From left to right: Cuisinart Custom 14, Breville Sous Chef (using mini bowl), Breville Sous Chef, Breville Sous Chef 12-cup, Magimix 14-cup, Magimix 14-cup (using mini bowl), Cuisinart FP-13DGM Elemental, Cuisinart FP-13DGM Elemental (using mini bowl). Photo: Michael Hession To start, we tested how evenly each food processor could chop a variety of ingredients, including onions, fibrous carrots, soft tomatoes, delicate parsley, and whole almonds.