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The best food processors of 2024

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Amazon


Whether you love to cook or absolutely hate it, food processors are a game-changer in the kitchen. They streamline your meal prep and expand your cooking options. The best food processors offer a working bowl big enough for any recipe; a powerful enough motor to effectively chop, slice, grate or puree whatever you need; and a form factor that’s super easy to clean. Some also come with extra attachments and multiple speed settings for more customized mixing.

We rounded up the best food processors for any budget or household, including models from brands such as Cuisinart, Breville, Hamilton Beach and more. Check out the best food processors, all of which boast a four-star rating or higher from customers. 


What is the best food processor of 2024?


Best food processor overall: Cuisinart Prep 9 food processor

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Cuisinart


A few of our staffers have this food processor and absolutely love it. We’re impressed with how quickly and precisely it chops veggies and processes mixtures such as whipped cheese, hummus, salsas and even soups. 

The Cuisinart Prep 9 food processor comes with a chopping blade as well as a medium slicing disc (great for speeding up large slicing jobs) and a shredding disc (the best tool for shredding large batches of cheese). The nine-cup processor is a solid size for cooking meals for one or two people. 

The Cuisinart Prep 9 food processor has a 4.5-star rating on Amazon. One reviewer wrote, “I wanted one of these for a very long time. It didn’t disappoint at all.”

Another customer said it’s “a great price for a great product,” adding: “Powerful chopper. Works exactly as promised.” 


Best small food processor: Cuisinart Mini-Prep

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Williams-Sonoma


The Cuisinart Mini-Prep is another food processor model our staffers either own now or have used in the past, and we recommend it without hesitation.  For such a small food processor, it has a lot of power to dice veggies, make dips and puree soups.

Admittedly, the 24-ounce work bowl is small, but if you’re cooking for one, or are new to food processors and don’t feel comfortable shelling out big money on a larger model, this one will do.

The Cuisinart Mini-Prep has a 4.6-star rating on Amazon. One reviewer wrote: “My original lasted 20 years, so it was a no-brainer purchasing the same model as a replacement. Great for processing just about anything from spice blends to nuts to purees to pestos and sauces.”


Best food processor for large families: Breville Sous Chef Pro 16

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Amazon


If you’re feeding a family or love to host friends for dinner parties, the Breville Sous Chef Pro 16 is the best food processor for you. The 16-cup mixing bowl offers plenty of space and comes with measurement lines in cups, liters, fluid ounces and even milliliters, so you don’t have to dirty separate measuring cups. 

The Sous Chef Pro 16 has multiple useful attachments, including a julienne disc, a french-fry cutting disc, a dough blade and more. For smaller jobs, you can use the included 2.5-cup mini bowl and corresponding blade. When you’re all done, you can put the attachments and cleaning tools in the included storage box. 

The Breville Sous Chef Pro 16 has a 4.5-star rating on Amazon. One reviewer wrote, “This food processor is admittedly expensive. But in this case you really do get what you pay for. It is much quieter than the one it replaced.

“I made a large bowl full of french fries in just minutes. It made really smooth pesto in seconds. Plus cleanup is relatively easy.” 

Right now, you can score this food processor for $375 (reduced from $450) on Amazon.


Best splurge food processor: Vitamix A2300 SmartPrep Kitchen System

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Williams-Sonoma


Get a blender and food processor in one with the Vitamix A2300 SmartPrep Kitchen System. We recommend this model to home chefs who like to cook by the book.

Food processors can do a lot, but cooking experts recommend using a blender for all things liquids, and that includes pureeing soups and sauces. You can technically do both of those things in a food processor, but to get a velvety-smooth soup, you’ll need a blender. Vitamix makes one of the best blenders on the market, so opting for a blender/food processor combo is a solid investment. 

The 12-cup working bowl has measurement lines in liters and contains a multi-blade, two reversible slicing and shredding discs and a disc storage case. 

The Vitamix A2300 SmartPrep Kitchen System has a 4.2-star rating on Williams-Sonoma. One reviewer wrote, “This, by far, is the best blender/food processor I’ve ever used. The only problem is I waited way too long to buy it. I use it every day. I recommend this unit above all!”

Regularly $700, get it now at Williams-Sonoma for $650.


Best budget food processor: Hamilton Beach 10-cup food processor

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Amazon


Hamilton Beach is a brand known for making affordable kitchen appliances, and its 10-cup food processor is a steal for the price, especially considering that most food processors of its size can easily retail for more than $100. The food processor comes with a standard blade plus a reversible disc that slices on one side and shreds on the other. 

It has two speed options and a pulse setting. It comes with a bowl scraper that attaches inside the machine — another tool not commonly found in pricier food processors.

Customers are fans of the Hamilton Beach 10-cup processor, which has more than 30,700 five-star ratings on Amazon. One reviewer called this “a game changer for my kitchen,” adding: “Great food processor, I have used it multiple times and don’t know why I didn’t get it sooner! Works great and is easy to clean!” 




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Almanac: October 27 – CBS News

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Almanac: October 27 – CBS News


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“Sunday Morning” looks back at historical events on this date.

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Kamala Harris on her first priority as president

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Kamala Harris on her first priority as president – CBS News


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“CBS Evening News” anchor and managing editor Norah O’Donnell traveled with Vice President Kamala Harris on the campaign trail over two days, in Texas and Michigan. They talked about what Harris calls her first priority if elected president: signing into law the protections of Roe v. Wade. Harris also discussed what she says are Donald Trump’s intentions for Social Security and Medicare, and what the Project 2025 blueprint means should Trump return to the White House.

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Kamala Harris says her first priority as president is to “stop this pain” resulting from abortion bans

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The Beyoncé song “Freedom” has become Kamala Harris’ anthem – and it was a message the vice president took to the campaign trail, as CBS News traveled with Harris over two days for a behind-the-scenes look during the final stretch of the 2024 election. 

Asked by “CBS Evening News” anchor and managing editor Norah O’Donnell why she chose to campaign that night in Texas (a reliably red state), Harris replied, “Texas is ground zero on this most extraordinary issue, which is that we are fighting for a woman’s right to make decisions about her own body.”

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CBS News’ Norah O’Donnell with Vice President Kamala Harris in Houston. 

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On Friday, at Houston’s Shell Energy Stadium – the vice president’s largest rally yet – 30,000 people endured 90-degree heat to hear her scorching new attack on Texas’ strict abortion ban, which has become a lightning rod for women’s rights.

In an attack on Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s lawsuit aimed at accessing women’s medical records if they cross state lines to seek an abortion where it is legal, Harris said, “On the one hand, Donald Trump won’t let anyone see his medical records. And on the other hand, they want to get their hands on your medical records. Simply put: They are out of their minds.”

It was a message underscored by Beyoncé, who told the crowd, “I’m not here as a celebrity; I’m not here as a politician. I’m here as a mother, a mother who cares deeply about the world my children and all of our children live in, a world where we have the freedom to control our bodies, a world where we’re not divided.”

Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Vice President Harris campaigns in Houston
Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee, embraces the singer Beyoncé as they attend a campaign rally for Harris, in Houston, October 25, 2024.

Marco Bello/REUTERS


On Saturday, in the battleground state of Michigan, former first lady Michelle Obama campaigned with Harris for the first time, challenging men to see women’s health care as a life-or-death matter. “If we don’t get this election right,” Obama said, “your wife, your daughter, your mother, we as women, will become collateral damage to your rage.”

Harris then told the audience, “I pledge to you, when Congress passes a bill to restore reproductive freedom nationwide, as President of the United States, I will proudly sign it into law.”

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Former first lady Michelle Obama joins Vice President Kamala Harris at the Wings Event Center in Kalamazoo, Michigan, October 26, 2024.

JEFF KOWALSKY/AFP via Getty Images


When questioned about the process of restoring the right to an abortion that the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision overturned in 2022, Harris said, “Let’s put back in place Roe vs. Wade. …

“When Roe v. Wade was intact, for 50 years, half a century, women, together with their physicians, we’re here in a medical office talking with physicians. Women, in consultation, if they chose, with their priest, their pastor, their rabbi, their imam were able to make those [decisions].”

Asked if she also supported abortion restrictions after viability, Harris replied, “I support Roe v. Wade being put back into law by Congress, and to restore the fundamental right of women to make decisions about their own body. It is that basic.”

O’Donnell said, “But you know there were, there are restrictions – with Roe v. Wade there were restrictions after viability.”

“We would not be debating this if Donald Trump had not hand-selected three members of the United States Supreme Court with the intention they would undo the protections of Roe v. Wade,” Harris continued. “And what we have seen, as demonstrated last night [when women at the Houston rally spoke of the effects of the Texas abortion ban], and every day these last two years, is extraordinary harm that has occurred in America, where women have died because of Trump abortion bans; where women who have survived rape and girls incest, and no exception for someone whose body has been violated, to make a decision about what happens to their body next.

“We have seen women who are experiencing a miscarriage around a pregnancy they prayed for, and being denied healthcare because doctors are afraid they’re gonna go to prison, and those women developing sepsis. We have seen extraordinary harm and pain and suffering happen because of what Donald Trump did in intending and effectuating and overturning of Roe v. Wade. Yes, my first priority is to put back in place those protections and to stop this pain, and to stop this injustice that is happening around our country.”

O’Donnell asked, “So then, why not say what restrictions you would support as part of that?”

“I’ve told you: Let’s put back in place Roe v. Wade,” Harris replied.

“And when you argue that Donald Trump, if elected, would put forward a national abortion ban?”

“Just read Project 2025,” Harris said. [Project 2025 includes dozens of proposals for further restricting abortion, including outlawing abortion drugs and criminalizing shipping them through the mail.]

“The former president said that’s not true, he would veto [it],” O’Donnell said.

“He says everything – come on, are we really taking his word for it?” Harris replied. “He said that women should be punished. He has been all over the place on this. But I’m too busy watching what he’s doing to see what he has said.”

Harris is on the trail in Pennsylvania today, and plans to make a major address this coming Tuesday – one week ahead of Election Day. Her speech will be not in a battleground state, but in Washington, D.C., at the same place where Trump spoke to his supporters before they attacked the Capitol on January 6, 2021.

“I would, and do, think about that place more in the context of what will be behind me, which is the White House,” Harris said. “And I’m doing it there because I think it is very important for the American people to see and think about who will be occupying that space on January 20th. And the reality of it is that most Americans can visualize the Oval Office; we’ve seen it on television. And this is a real scenario. It’s either gonna be Donald Trump, or it’s gonna be me sitting behind the Resolute Desk in the Oval Office.”

With nine days left to go before Election Day, the vice president said there’s no doubt about what her closing arguments will be: Drawing a distinction between her plans, and those of her opponent.

She says that Trump’s first priority will be “people like him – not people like the people who are watching this right now, people who work hard, seniors, for example, who are depending on that Social Security check as the only source of their income, when Donald Trump is saying we should raise the age of Social Security to 70 before you’re eligible.”

O’Donnell said, “He says he’s going to cut taxes on their benefits.”

“He has been consistent [on that issue],” Harris said. “Again, Google Project 2025 about what he thinks about Social Security, and why he thinks it is nothing that should be supported. His intention’s to cut Medicare and Medicare benefits. His intention [is] – look, again, at Project 2025 – to repeal the $35 a month cap on insulin that we have put in place.”

“Donald Trump has disavowed Project 2025,” said O’Donnell. “He says that is not his campaign plan.”

Harris replied, “As you know, I am a former prosecutor. His DNA is all over it. All over it. His running mate wrote the foreword to the book of the author of Project 2025. I believe Donald Trump’s name appears at least 300 times in Project 2025. And it is a blueprint, a detailed blueprint, that is about the danger and the detail of what Donald Trump and his allies plan if he is in the White House again.”


Additional excerpts from Norah O’Donnell’s interview with Kamala Harris will appear Sunday on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan”; on Monday on “CBS Mornings” and the “CBS Evening News”; and on the CBS News 24/7 Streaming Network.


Story produced by Ed Forgotson and Julie Morse. Editor: George Pozderec.

      
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