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trishwosere

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Hi, I am a newbie...I'll admit it, and now I'm gonna show my ignorance,I note that many of you use stick blenders to speed up trace, what I need to know is will any stick blender suffice or do I need a top of the range stainless steel one?
:?

Many thanks in advance for a reply
 
I have a cheap Hamilton Beach stick blender that I bought at Walmart. I have used to for several years.
 
lsg said:
I have a cheap Hamilton Beach stick blender that I bought at Walmart. I have used to for several years.

Many thanks but I am the U.K and (unfortunately) don't have the Walmart shops here, so is it a metal one or a plastic one?
 
just want to throw this out there - I stopped by Goodwill today and lucked out - found a 2nd cheap plastic one for when I eventually kill the 1st - I don't want to be stuck in the middle w/o a backup. Goodwill rocks!

:) HTH
 
I have three stick blenders that I got at Yard Sales that I've been using for years ... oh I take that back I have 2. I melted one making liquid soap. After the liquid soap incident I bought a more expensive Waring Pro from eBay that has a stainless steel shaft that I LOVE LOVE LOVE
 
Last edited by a moderator:
hello
i am a newbie and yes i bought the cheapest one i could find and it melted the first time i used it. i was lucky i had a back up i am now looking for a stainless steel one. lol:lol:
 
My first one was a cheap one I purchased at Walmart, seemed to get a lot of air bubbles the older it got. Just bought a Cuisnart and no air bubbles anymore...yippee! I think you get what you pay for, I believe Judymoody posted some pics showing the difference between stick blenders.
 
I'm also just getting started, but something occurred to me. Would it be feasible to get a steel paint-stirring bit for my power drill instead?
 
yes, i have known a soaper to use a drill bit to stir their soap. I have been through a couple, one by kalorik burned within minutes of my soap but now love my kitchen aide with the removable stainless steel shaft.
 
yes, i have known a soaper to use a drill bit to stir their soap. I have been through a couple, one by kalorik burned within minutes of my soap but now love my kitchen aide with the removable stainless steel shaft.

Thanks!
 
I use a heavy plastic stick-blender before trace, just pulsing it on for 5-15 seconds, then hand stir to save on the blender, and alternate like that. Here's a tip that works for me: around trace, I use a regular electric hand beater to mix in the fragrance oils and superfat ingredients. It does a good job thoroughly blending things in evenly in the thicker-traced soap without burning out the stick blender.
 

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