I need to buy a new blender,but I do make lots of soup so I think it will get well used.especially as it does the same as a blender anyway,i seen them advertised for £69.99(£100 off)
I too make a lot of soups and smoothies. Whilst the blender is essential for smoothies it just helps for soups but I think it only needs to do the basics. I wouldn't expect to pay more than £30-£40 to replace mine. I wouldn't see a need for anything expensive or a soup maker.
A soup maker may save on washing up but you are limited by the volume. At least with a saucepan and a blender you can blitz in batches. A blender will, in all probability, have a more powerful motor for blitzing too.
That's true but it is a flippin' useless article because it isn't comparing like with like.
However.....
The all in one soup maker = Cuisinart wins £123-£139
Stick blender = Kenwood HB724 wins £50-£70
Jug blender =Tefal Blender Force £27-£30
Mini Chopper = Kenwood CH180 £20
Juicer = Philips HR1869 £150
Personally, I'd go stick blender, less washing up as you can blitz in the saucepan. Although I favour Bamix.
a soup maker? never heard of anything so ridiculous!!! all you need is a saucepan and a hand held blender. anything else is a complete rip off, imho....x
I make a lot of soup and use my trusty stick blender that I have had for decades now.
I wouldn't spend the money on a soup maker as the stick blender is so versatile.
Eccles: I don't agree that the article is "useless"....unusual, perhaps, in not comparing similar products.
However, it's pointing people in a different direction from dedicated soup-makers...and, in the process, saving the expense of one, and pointing out their disadvantages.
I may have been a tad harsh in describing it as 'useless'. It would have offered more benefit if they had found space for at least a comparison of three of each type in the more usual Which? style.
FGT: can't agree with you, either. Have you actually seen the Which? report? It didn't play on any insecurities of anybody...it looked at, and tested, kitchen gadgets that people (like the OP) may consider buying to prepare soup easier/ quicker/ more expensively.
But it has created indecision, without balancing the pros and cons of the various style of offerings. The articles crux is consider this, that and t'other, without a fair comparison within each class.
I agree with FGT, that this is preying on the insecurities of a home cook who thought they wanted 'A' but now wonders if 'C' would be better.
Irrespective of the Which? report, the overwhelming advice from ABers is to can the soup maker and get a stick blender. Sound advice IMHO.