Let's just start by saying this: I ❤️ MY IMMERSION BLENDER.
If you've followed Life As A Strawberry for awhile, you may have noticed this handy dandy little hand blender pops up in about a zillion recipes. I use it for EVERYTHING.
Still, I get asked pretty frequently whether an immersion blender is really worth it.
My short answer? YES. A THOUSAND TIMES YES.
Here's why:
Immersion blenders are compact. My hand blender takes up almost NO space - it's small and fits just about anywhere, which makes it PERFECT for my tiny apartment kitchen.
They're relatively cheap. You can get a good immersion blender for under $40 - try finding a high-quality food processor for that price! (Spoiler alert: you can't).
They're versatile. When I try to talk people into buying immersion blenders (my version of appropriate dinner conversation) the most frequent hesitation is "but I don't make soup that much." WHAT?! You guys - these hand blenders can do SO much more than soup. (And I'm going to show you just how much more in just a lil' bit!)
They're fast. It takes all of 30 seconds to make some of these recipes. SO SPEEDY. I love it.
They cut down on cleanup. The greatest thing to me about using an immersion blender instead of a bigger appliance is that I'm left with hardly any cleanup. (Cleaning = the worst). Just clean the blender piece and whatever bowl or pot you blended your creation in, and you're wham-bam-donezo.
Soooo...let's just jump right into the good stuff, shall we?
Being a wee bit obsessed with hand blenders means I've conducted my fair share of experiments and immersion blender reviews. And after trying a few different brands and styles, Cuisinart has won my immersion blender loyalty at pretty much every price point. Their hand blenders are just better. My picks for best immersion blender:
Cusinart Smart Stick 2 Speed Hand Blender // This immersion blender is just plain awesome. It's cheap, it's sturdy, and it comes in every color you could think of. It also comes with a handy dandy beaker (that you can use for the recipes below!) and the beaker and blender part are both dishwasher safe (SCORE). It's small enough that you can hold it with one hand but big enough to tackle large pots of sauce or soup. It DOES have a cord, so keep in mind that you have to have it plugged in to use it.
MY CURRENT IMMERSION BLENDER: Cuisinart Smart Stick Cordless Rechargeable Hand Blender // So, I have this issue with coordination. I love the immersion blender above, but I found that the cord would get in the way while I twirled around the kitchen. I kept knocking things over with the cord, and it was driving me CRAZY. So last year, I upgraded to this cordless hand blender - it works just like the immersion blender above, but there's no cord to get in my way! The blender comes apart into three pieces - I leave the charger piece plugged in all the time and just snap it together when I'm ready to use it! It's a lot quieter than the immersion blenders I was used to, but it's just as powerful, and I can use it for quite awhile before I have to recharge. (Context: I shot all 10 recipes for this post on the same day, and I didn't have to recharge the blender once). This hand blender also comes with a mixing beaker (you'll see it used in the photos below). The only downside is it's pretty tall, so it's a little awkward to hold it with one hand for an extended period of time. But I wouldn't trade it!
Immersion blenders are amazing, but I find they're even more amazing when I make sure to follow a few general tips:
- Wash it as soon as possible. The blade of the immersion blender has lots of hard-to-reach spots, and if you let it sit for too long it can be hard to clean it completely. As soon as I finish blending something, I run the metal piece of my hand blender under VERY hot water and give it a gentle scrub with a soaped-up sponge.
- Blend in bigger quantities. Immersion blenders work best when there's a lot of blend-able stuff to work with. Avoid small quantities and shallow dishes - for best results, you want the head of the immersion blender to be fully submerged in whatever it's blending. (If I'm making a small batch of something, I like to use the plastic beaker that comes with the blender!)
- Move it around. Move the blender around for best results - when I'm using the plastic beaker, I move the blender up and down as it blends so that it picks up everything and blends evenly. If I'm blending a big pot of soup, I move the blender in a slow stirring motion so I don't miss any big pieces!
- Let hot dishes cool before blending. When you're making soups or other hot blended dishes, remove the pot from the heat and let cool for 10-20 minutes before you blend anything. Things can spatter occasionally when using a hand blender, and getting hit with a drop of boiling hot soup is never any fun.
1. SALSA
Immersion blender salsa is my new favorite thing. I love salsa, but I'm really not a big chunky food fan, so blending a quick, chunky jalapeño salsa with a hand blender is the perfect solution for me.
Throw some tomatoes, onion, garlic, jalapeño, cilantro, salt and pepper in a tall narrow dish (I used the beaker that came with my hand blender!) and move the immersion blender up and down while you blend until you have a smooth salsa.
TIP: Put the tomatoes on top in the beaker - they're easier for the blender to break down and will add some liquid to the salsa so the other ingredients blend more quickly!
2. PESTO
My immersion blender has me like "PRESTO, PESTO!" (annnd...it's the best-o? FINE, I'LL STOP).
Now, the food processor gets alllll the attention when it comes to pesto-making, but honestly? An immersion blender works just as well for me. Just toss some fresh basil leaves, garlic, salt and pepper into a tall dish (plastic beaker for the win! Also, I just love saying the word "beaker") and stream in a bit of olive oil. Blend with the immersion blender (use that up-down-up-down motion we talked about) until you have a smooth pesto. Sub arugula, parsley, cilantro, or even spinach for the basil to give your hand blender pesto a fun twist.
3. PANCAKE AND WAFFLE BATTER
WHAT?! AN EASIER WAY TO MAKE WAFFLES?! (Somewhere, Leslie Knope is jumping for joy. She gets it).
This was a major "DUH" moment for me and my immersion blender. The plastic beaker has a built-in spout, is the perfect size for a breakfast's worth of pancake batter, and it takes all of five seconds to mix everything up lump-free. In short, everyone should be making their pancakes and waffles the hand blender way.
Just toss the ingredients for your favorite pancake batter into the trusty ol' beaker and up-down-up-down blend away until you have a smooth batter. Pour the batter directly from the beaker onto a hot griddle or waffle maker, and voilà! Breakfast time, anytime.
4. SMOOTHIES
Another immersion blender breakfast breakthrough! Using a full-on blender for my one single breakfast smoothie always felt like such a waste to me - it took too many dishes and the cleanup just wasn't worth it. Enter the immersion blender smoothie!
I toss some frozen fruit and yogurt cubes into the beaker (YAY FOR THE BEAKER), add just enough juice to cover all the fruit, and up-down-up-down blend away until I have a smoothie. I wash off the immersion blender, stick a straw right in the beaker, and BOOM! Smoothie heaven with minimal dishes.
5. CHEESE SAUCE
One of my favorite things about my immersion blender is its ability to save sauces that aren't looking so hot.
Take mac and cheese sauce, for example: if your cheese doesn't melt properly, you can end up with a weird, goopy, unappetizing sauce. But hit any lumpy sauce with an immersion blender for just a few seconds and you can bring that sauce back to smooth, cheese-y, delicious life! (PS - Check out our post on how to make perfect mac and cheese!)
6. SOUP
This one might venture a bit into "stating-the-obvious" territory - but even though I use my immersion blender in a ton of different ways, making creamy, delicious soup is by far my hand blender's most frequent culinary adventure. So we couldn't just leave it off the list! I much prefer smooth, velvety soups to chunky stews, and when wintertime hits I use my immersion blender a few times a week to whip up quick soups.
Some of my favorites:
butternut squash and goat cheese soup
vegan roasted red pepper soup
creamy apple tomato soup
broccoli white cheddar soup
7. HOMEMADE TOMATO SAUCE
Homemade tomato sauce is SO. EASY. Especially when we're talking about immersion blender tomato sauce! We pick a TON of tomatoes during the summer, and I like to turn the bulk of them into tasty tomato sauce that we can use all year round. It's better (and more fun!) than the canned stuff you find at the store.
I always hear people talk about how important it is to peeeeeel the tomatoes and then seeeeeed the tomatoes and blah, blah, blah when you're making tomato sauce.
But, umm...I do none of those things. One, because I'm ultra-lazy, and two, because I honestly don't notice any difference in taste or texture when I take those extra steps.
Here's what I do:
Wash the tomatoes (I like to use Roma tomatoes, but use whatever you've got!).
Quarter or halve them so they're all about the same size.
Fill a pot with the tomatoes.
Put that pot over medium heat and cook for an hour or so until tomatoes have reduced.
Remove pot from heat and let cool 10-15 minutes.
Immersion blend the tomatoes.
BOOM.
DONE.
8. HOLLANDAISE SAUCE
It's no secret that I've been on a major eggs benedict kick lately, and you may have noticed that each of those recipes has instructions for an immersion blender hollandaise sauce. It is SO EASY to make your own hollandaise, and the immersion blender hollandaise method takes a seemingly complicated dish like Eggs Benedict and makes it quick and easy.
To make your own hand blender hollandaise, add two egg yolks with a splash of lemon juice and a pinch of salt to your beaker (BEAKER!). Blend until eggs have lightened in color and thickened slightly, about 10 seconds with our trusty hand blender. Melt 1 stick of butter (it should be quite hot) and stream the butter into the egg yolks while blending until you have a smooth hollandaise sauce. Pour it over a poached egg atop a toasted English muffin, and then do a happy dance because you totally just won at brunch ??.
9. WHIPPED CREAM
This was another major, MAJOR a-ha! moment for me and my hand blender. Immersion blender whipped cream! Ready in under 30 seconds! Amazing. AMAZING!
Add a tablespoon or so of powdered sugar and about ½ cup of heavy cream to our trusty beaker. Up-down-up-down immersion blend for 10-15 seconds until cream has stiffened and looks, well, like whipped cream.
10. APPLE BUTTER
Homemade stovetop apple butter is SO. GOOD. And so easy! Toss cored, roughly chopped apples with some cinnamon, cloves, lemon juice, and a splash of maple syrup. Cover and cook on low heat for an hour or two until apples have reduced. Let it cool for a few minutes, then hit it with an immersion blender to form a smooth apple butter. Serve the apple butter warm on buttered toast or pair with some brie and crostini. Eating it with a spoon or faceplanting straight into it are also acceptable. (You can also make apple butter in a slow cooker!)
Phew - we made it! If you're ready to jump headfirst into the amazing world of immersion blender-ing, definitely check out this Cusinart 2 Speed Hand Blender - it's Amazon's #1 BEST SELLER in hand blenders and has great reviews (plus, umm, it's awesome).
What are some of your favorite immersion blender recipes? I'd love to know - just leave a comment to share!
Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. As always, all opinions are my own and I only recommend products that I know and love!
Shelley Lebens
Hi! Thanks for the post! Have you ever made traditional pesto using your hand blender? It looks like your recipe left out the pine nuts.
Jessie
I've been leaving pine nuts out of my cooking for awhile due to some sustainability concerns in the pine nut industry (the NYT has a good, quick overview here) but the blender should be able to handle it just fine if you'd like to add them!
Jasmine
I seriously LOVE that you consider sustainability in your cooking!
Jessie
Thanks, Jasmine! It's so important to know where our food is coming from and what kind of impact we're having on the planet!
Rebecca C Herberg
You can source your pine nuts from the USA. We in the southwest are in no danger of depleting the supply for the wildlife. Every fall I join the pinion woodpeckers to harvest my supply of pine nuts. They work the tops of the trees and I work the bottoms. Between us we knock plenty to the ground for the deer and bunnies.
Some enterprising kids roast and shell them and sell them by the bag at the side of the road, as well, here in Western Colorado.
We just need to be responsible in our purchasing choices and vote with our wallets. When the food industry has enough people requesting USA sourced pine nuts, they will begin to purchase and label them as such.
lilybelle
This is why I like to talk to individuals rather than - at risk of sounding icky - trusting most newspapers or news shows that have been around too long. All the more reason to follow awesome Blogs! I would love to have land and grow stuff that I use, probably more work than my body is capable of, but still a dream for the future! My great-grandparents had fruit trees just in their back yard in Oklahoma, which is not a place with great soil. We legit have red dirt.
I read I needed an immersion blender for a dessert recipe and had to Google it, why oh why are there so many things that chop up my food? I am still trying to find an affordable option for the thing most vegans have that I suddenly forgot the name of (why do people always talk to you only when you need to keep a thought in your head? lol) I wonder if this could work.
Love-ly Blog! I think strawberries are one of the best things in the whole wide world so I know I will like it! And I will be back as I forgot what I was going to ask! Haha!
Abbey Dutton
What is that soup pictured in this post? It looks fantastic.
Jessie
It's a pear and butternut squash soup! I haven't actually put the recipe on the blog yet, but I'll definitely share it soon (it's one of my faaaaaavorites).
Ashleigh
Much appreciated post! Im having hubby buy the one you linked for my bday...yay!
Jessie
So glad you liked it! Hope you love the immersion blender!!
mat
Can you chopp lettuce with it without a chopper?
Jessie
I would recommend chopping lettuce with a regular knife!
Shreya
Dear Jessie,
I always wanted a hand blender in my kitchen but have always consoled myself that I do have a very good (and very bulky) juicer mixer food processor already!....but the crave for a blender has been burning within for too long now.
This post of urs was JUST the encouragement I needed!...can't believe I waited so long..buying a blender first thing tomorrow!!.... thanks!!
Jessie
I'm so happy you liked the post - I hope you LOVE your new immersion blender!!
Ellie Macdonald
wow! Your Blender & smoothie recipe looks is awesome. I think it is very effective for making smoothie! thanks for share…
Jessie
Thanks, Ellie! So happy you liked the post!
sonal
Thanks for post ...i have immersion blender and will be attempting for whipping cream to frosting for my cake..thankx
Anna
Did you use whisk attachment for whipped cream
Jessie
You can use the whisk or blender attachments - here I used the regular blender piece, as pictured!
Raghad
I'm here to find someone who used immersion blender to do smoothies from FROZEN fruit and it appears that you did!
I'm afraid that the blade will lose its sharpness since it was designed to blend liquid/soft food.
Did you notice any thing different after blending frozen fruit couples of times?
Jessie
I haven't had a problem using my immersion blender for smoothies, but I don't make smoothies with my immersion blender all that frequently, so I can't speak to the effect of daily smoothie use on the blades. I'm sure that like any blade it will dull over time with continuous use.
Mary
Funny and really helpful! I only use mine for soup and tomato sauce. I roast my tomatoes, and like you, I refuse to peel and seed! Next to try--whipped cream, and everything else on your list! Thank you!
Jessie
I'm so glad you liked it - thanks, Mary! (unpeeled, unseeded tomatoes 4 LIFE!)
marybeth5
Omelette: 2 egg yolks + 1 yolk w/white + pinch of salt & pepper, and a tablespoon of orange juice or H2O. Use immersion blender to add air to the mixture and you'll get a fluffier omelette.
Jessie
Love this idea! Thanks for the tip! 🙂
HARRIS
I just choose KitchenAid for Hand Mixer 🙂 It really perfect for price and value 🙂
mariana
i just bought the cusinart hand bender, its on its way, and im so happy i found this article! its excellent! thank you!!!
Jessie
Yay for hand blenders! You're going to LOVE it 🙂 I'm so glad the article was helpful for you!
Kelly
"Refried" beans. Black beans, onion, garlic, chicken stock a bit of cheese. Cook till liquid is almost gone and whiz to desired texture. I've done everything from a little chunky to baby food smooth. Forget the hand masher.
Jessie
Love this idea!! Thanks, Kelly!
Kellie
Don't have one yet, but my next stop is Amazon. Loved your ideas, thanks.
Jessie
Thanks, Kellie! I'm glad you liked the post - you'll LOVE having an immersion blender! 🙂
Caroline Rainville
Loved your post! I just bought a KitchenAid recently to replace the old when I had that I now use for soaps. I have every appliance possible in my kitchen and I really need to Learn to use my hand blender. You can use your hand blender to make mayonnaise, a bit like the hollandaise sauce. I also used my hand blender to make meringue but I used the wrong tip of the head blender and ended up with a too soft meringue. Thank you for the ideas!
Jessie
Thanks, Caroline! I'm so glad you enjoyed the post. The hand blender is one of my favorite appliances - and it does make great mayonnaise! Happy cooking!