It's hard when I use it to not have it touch the pan. The suction ends up bringing it down.leek wrote:You have to have a reasonable amount of liquid, though. It shouldn't ever need to touch the pan.
Well...I'm not really willing to accept chips each time I use an item. That's going to ruin the pan in pretty short order. This is a 15-year old pot and it's seen heavy use with no previous issues except cosmetic.Kennyz wrote:I think the real answer is not to care if your Le Crueset, or whatever other cookware, has a couple of chips or scratches. Anyone with unblemished cookware isn't really cooking.
grits wrote:Well...I'm not really willing to accept chips each time I use an item. That's going to ruin the pan in pretty short order. This is a 15-year old pot and it's seen heavy use with no previous issues except cosmetic.Kennyz wrote:I think the real answer is not to care if your Le Crueset, or whatever other cookware, has a couple of chips or scratches. Anyone with unblemished cookware isn't really cooking.
grits wrote:It's sounding like I need a lot more liquid in the pan than what I had last night so that the suction does not force the blender down, and to try to keep it in a side to side/circle motion.
Yes, I think with the amount of liquid I had in the LC I should have transferred it to the beaker that comes with the stick blender. I don't think it was deep enough to work really well and I was being a little lazy. Lessons learned.Jazzfood wrote:The answer is just above: "transfer the food to a narrower vessel, so you have more depth to work with", such as a bain marie.
elakin wrote:i don't understand the concern with nicking your pots. doesn't your immersion blender have a guard area around the blade, preventing the blade from hitting the inside of the pot?
like these: http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&q=immersion+blender&btnG=Search+Images&gbv=2???
with every immersion blender i've ever used, it's physically impossible for the blade to touch the vessel that the liquid is in, due to the guard that surrounds the blade.
The Kitchenaid users have noted that it's actually pretty large, and the blade guard is metal so it won't take wielding it like a pickaxe to chip or scratch when it starts getting sucked into the vortex. Also, I'm using it at the lowest speed. If I took it up to 9 I'd probably be in the basement looking up at a hole in the ceiling. Luckily it doesn't go up to 11.Jayz wrote:Like the members before me have said...it shouldnt be chipping your pan unless you're attacking it as if the blender were a pick-axe. I'd say practice with water in a medium sized metal pot so that you can see the bottom and know what you're doing...somehow you're doing it all wrong if you're chipping a pot with a small stick blender.
I got this guy. Just to be clear, the blade is not touching anything. The blade is guarded and completely safe, and there's nothing wrong with the blender. I just need to practice a bit more and get the hang of it. Thanks for everyone's help.Mhays wrote:Wait a minute: which KA hand blender do you have? Mine only has two speeds: the blade is well inside the guard, so it never touches the bottom of my pan (though there is some suction that pulls the metal guard down, just not with force) I wonder if it's the model...
grits wrote:I got this guy. Just to be clear, the blade is not touching anything. The blade is guarded and completely safe, and there's nothing wrong with the blender. I just need to practice a bit more and get the hang of it. Thanks for everyone's help.Mhays wrote:Wait a minute: which KA hand blender do you have? Mine only has two speeds: the blade is well inside the guard, so it never touches the bottom of my pan (though there is some suction that pulls the metal guard down, just not with force) I wonder if it's the model...
http://www.amazon.com/KitchenAid-KHB300 ... 984&sr=8-2
There is some "How To Use an Immersion Blender" on the internet and the woman constantly touches the bottom of the stick when presenting and going over the features. Obviously the blender was off but even this presentation made me cringe since it was such an unsafe way of showing off the tool.Bridgestone wrote:Not strictly on-topic but the mention of the power some of these immersion blender has makes me want to remind people to watch their fingers.
I love my immersion blender and use it frequently for soups and sauces but also for pureeing/mincing food (for example, I make fish "burgers" for the kids by mixing pollack fillets with egg, boiled potato and seasonings with my immersion blender). In fact, it's so easy, quick and painless that I find myself forgetting that it's, well, a blender.
My manager at work was making/mixing a batch of holiday meatballs with his and found that some meat had wrapped itself around the blade. Working with greasy hands, he laid his blender on its side, tried to steady it with one arm and proceeded to pick at the entangled blade. He end up chopping off the tip of his finger (right behind his fingernail) when he accidentally pushed hard enough to turn the thing on.
It's common sense but always remember to either unplug your blender or disengage the blade if you ever find yourself needing to examine the blade!
Thank you Matt, I tried the KA immersion blender again last night and just started out on the bottom of the pan. This worked much better. I also did not do what I was doing before, which was tip the pot so that I had deeper liquid along the side--it's not really necessary if you are sitting at the bottom of the pot already and it's too hard to control the blender with one hand. Being less nervous after getting some advice helped as well.Matt wrote:elakin wrote:i don't understand the concern with nicking your pots. doesn't your immersion blender have a guard area around the blade, preventing the blade from hitting the inside of the pot?
like these: http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&q=immersion+blender&btnG=Search+Images&gbv=2???
with every immersion blender i've ever used, it's physically impossible for the blade to touch the vessel that the liquid is in, due to the guard that surrounds the blade.
I think the OP is saying that it's the blade guard (which is metal) itself that may be nicking the pot.
I have the same KA immersion blender and when I use it in my Le Creuset (the only cooking vessel I am really concerned about chipping), I start it off with the blade guard touching the bottom before turning it on. After I turn it on I pull it up and away from the bottom and move it around as necessary. Doing it this way gives you a good sense of how much force you need to apply to counteract the downward suction and makes it less likely that the blade guard will strike the surface of the pot as a result of not accounting for the force of the suction.