KitchenAid KSM1FPA Food Processor, Standard, White
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Last Amazon price update was: October 31, 2024 03:31
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KitchenAid KSM1FPA Food Processor, Standard, White
KitchenAid KSM1FPA Food Processor, Standard, White Price comparison
KitchenAid KSM1FPA Food Processor, Standard, White Price History
Price History for KitchenAid KSM1FPA Food Processor, standard, White
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Current Price | $114.99 | October 31, 2024 |
Highest Price | $114.99 | October 31, 2024 |
Lowest Price | $114.99 | October 31, 2024 |
Since October 31, 2024
Last price changes
$114.99 | October 31, 2024 |
KitchenAid KSM1FPA Food Processor, Standard, White Description
- Connect to any household KitchenAid Stand Mixer* power hub and use the power of the motor to run the food processor attachment, *sold separately
- Slice, shred or julienne a variety of fresh fruits, vegetables or cheeses
- ExactSlice system with external adjustable slicing lever always you to easily to go from thick to thin
- The wide feed tube accommodates various sizes of food for less prep work
- Model KSM1FPA includes (1) slicing disc, (1) shredding disc, (1) julienne disc
KitchenAid KSM1FPA Food Processor, Standard, White Specification
Specification: KitchenAid KSM1FPA Food Processor, Standard, White
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KitchenAid KSM1FPA Food Processor, Standard, White Reviews (13)
13 reviews for KitchenAid KSM1FPA Food Processor, Standard, White
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Warren Spears –
I read a ton of reviews and I was worried about it damaging my KitchenAid. I cook for 50+ people once a month and I needed something that could handle the slicing.
This product is durable, easy to use, powerful, versatile, just all around great. This week will make 1 year, and I use it every week if not more.
Khart55 –
Great addition for our kitchen aid, the additional blades & case to store them comes in handy
Khart55 –
I’ve been eyeballing this a long time as a gardener. I get massive quantities of food to process all at one time and preserve. This definitely makes my job easier. However, it does not work very well for dicing tomatoes. I was hoping to use it to diced tomatoes for salsa, but the great gets clogged up and it just comes out mush. Slices tomatoes well though! Overall happy with purchase.
Patch –
Sieht gut aus,probieren noch nicht.
Hector Ponce –
Works great
jeffrey chaney –
I am SO disappointed in this kitchen aid food processing attachment. While I’ve had it for years, I have only used it a handful of times, and it is no longer operating. I took it apart and was able to fix it temporarily, but upon first using it again, it stopped working, not to my surprise…Once had taken it apart, it was obvious that the design or manufacturing is the problem: Once it is attached and fixed into place the pin is not pushed in enough to engage the gears that spin the pin to which the blades attach. There was nothing broken or worn down from misuse. There is simply too much space in between the outer most gear, or it doesn’t consistently get pushed in far enough to engage with the interlocking gear, so that one doesn’t spin the third, smallest gear, which spins the blade pin. When I manually push the attachment pin in, I can push it far enough to engage, but for some reason the dimensions on the attachment end of the mixer don’t. Either that or there is too much space on the inside around the gears. The cost of this unit is absolutely ridiculous for something that does not function, and I know that this is a consistent problem, as I have seen several results upon searching up the issue online.
Jet Builder –
I had an opportunity to purchase the KitchenAid Food Processor Attachment using some rebates that I’d gotten from an earlier KitchenAid promotion and when i saw a sale for this i decided to give it a try. I’d been looking at it for some time because it was the only item on the market that would dice and not just slice items like my Cuisinart. I’d been looking at the various videos that KitchenAid had on-line as well as independent reviewers and had seen some really impressive results and listened to some very negative comments. It appeared that individuals that bought or reviewed the attachment either found it very helpful or totally hated it. Being an engineer i was curious to see the construction and worried about the mechanism’s quality. So when i received the attachment I had to run it through some tests.
The first thing I noticed was how heavy the attachment was. It’s not a lightweight piece of equipment! So my first concern was about the stress the weight would place on the mixer. I’m still worried about that after several hours of use. Like any of the KitchenAid attachments it’s a little noisy when running and there is some vibration. I attribute that to the causing what some reviewers said about the attachment ‘falling off’ the mixer. I don’t believe that’s an issue if one keeps in mind that vibration in any piece of equipment tends to loosen fasteners over time, particuarly friction secured fasteners like KitchenAid uses to hold their attachments to the mixers. My advice? Check the fastener for any sign of loosening if you’re going to use it for a lengthy period of time.
So on to the tests. First was a twenty pound bag of russet potatoes, peeled and sliced to fit the hopper. I found varying advice on the speed setting. What i discovered was that in general the harder the item to be sliced and diced the faster you want to set the speed. Potatoes took about a seven to eight setting while larger carrots I set to ten. Apples worked fine at lower settings. Tomatoes (I used Roma) worked well and seemed to do better at a medium speed. That surprised me at first, I was expecting them to do better at a lower speed because of their firmness, but I think it’s because of the skin. I did not try any skinless tomatoes – that might be a test for another time. Cucumbers were best at a low setting (Note: I peeled the cucumbers in my testing and the softer they were the worse the results – English cucumbers worked the best for dicing). Another thing that I found interesting was that i got the best results when dicing if I DID NOT use the pusher to force the vegetables into the hopper – letting their own weight and the angled blade pull them in worked just fine. A big WARNING – don’t try to use the attachment to dice meat – that was a disaster! I have not tried cheese yet and if (when) I do I’ll add to this review.
So the dicing aspects of the attachment worked better than i anticipated. Since that was my primary reason for purchasing it I was very happy.
I moved on to the slicing blades and was interested to note the adjustable thickness setting on the slicing blade (KitchenAid calls it their ExactSlice System). That’s an interesting touch and i wonder how long that’s going to last. Endurance is just as important to me as functionality since I tend to keep my technology until it expires! I would have preferred a metal mechanism, but that would have necessitated a price increase that probably would have made the overall cost a nonstarter. It worked fine as did the shredding and julienne discs. I typically prefer my Cuisinart for those functions (so many more blades and options) but if I’m going to do dicing as well as slicing and julienne cuts the KitchenAid is my tool of choice.
Next was cleanup. How labor intensive was that going to be? I found that cleanup was actually easier than for my Cuisinart. I should note that i clean my tools immediately after use, no matter which brand or device. I’ve learned my lesson from letting debris dry in hard-to-reach places! The KitchenAid came apart as easily as it went together. Most of the pieces came clean in just a spray of warm water and a quick dip into a soapy bath and rinse. A nice scrub brush gets almost anything off easily and KitchenAid has thoughtfully provided a small tool for clearing any food stuck in the dicing grid so you don’t end up with bloody fingers. I also like that there is an insert that lifts out to protect the mechanism from any food particles or fluids that go around with the blades. That was a feature I hadn’t really considered important until it came to cleanup – then that made things a breeze.
The included storage case is nice, but I have two concerns. The first one is a little picky, but I had a difficult time in getting the blades back into the case so it would close properly. Turns out that the adjustable thickness slicing has to be in placed into the storage case with what I’ll call the plastic sweeping tab rotated so it’s located to the right of the case or it interferes with the closure. A picky concern, true, but I was beginning to think I’d lost my mind when the case wouldn’t close the first time. Second, the location of the hinge for the case means that in the open position it does not rest on the surface, but is slightly elevated. I’ve seen the same design on other cases and the failure mechanism is when left in that position for too long or if there’s an impact it damages the hinges. A very small design change would have alleviated the possibility with zero additional cost in either materials or fabrication.
Overall I think this one’s a winner!
Concerns? Well, like all bladed kitchen tools how sharp they are tends to make a huge difference. I am concerned about how well the dicing grid retains its edge since there’s really no way to resharpen it. I didn’t look into the cost of replacement, but i suspect it’s not cheap! The other blades? Well, they seem to be the same quality as the Cuisinart’s, and I’ve used those blades for at least ten years without issue.
Tempo –
Este accesorio es ideal si estás buscando un procesador y no quieres que sea un monstruo. Obviamente debes tener una batidora KitchenAid. Revisé muchos procesadores de todos los precios y en general son super grandes y los mas completos complicados y tienen una caja de accesorios que es mas grande que el mismo procesador!!!.
Yo estaba buscando algo para picar y rallar (no tanto para rebanar) y que no ocupara mucho espacio para guardarlo. La calidad de todas las piezas es buena y las navajas y cuchillas parece que van a durar un buen rato. Como todo procesador, tiene muchas piezas que hay que saber armar y luego hay que lavar o limpiar pero así son todos los procesadores.
El picador funciona mejor de lo que se pueden imaginar, simplemente pica y muchas veces no hay que empujar la comida por el alimentador, solita va cayendo. El tamaño de los cubos es de 8mm por lado y salen perfectos. Yo he picado cebolla, zanahorias, calabazas, jícamas, pepinos, queso manchego (debe estar muy frio), jamón y salchichas sin problema. Los tomates también se pican bien pero no deben estar muy maduros porque se aplastan y salen sin forma los pedazos. La boca del alimentador si es algo chica pero el proceso de picar es tan rápido que vale la pena cortar las cosas a la medida para acabar en un dos por tres!
El rallador en fino o grueso funciona bien y ahi si no hay mucha ciencia. Hemos rallado zanahorias, calabazas y sobre todo queso. El queso debe ser duro (como Parmesano) o estar casi congelado para el rallado sea limpio y no se “embarre” el queso en el disco.
La función de rebanar es la que menos nos interesaba pero sí la hemos usado y funciona bien. El tamaño del alimentador limita mucho su utilidad. No puedes rebanar tomates para las hamburguesas o un pepino para la ensalada porque hay que partir el tomate en 2 o 4 para quepa y el pepino a la mitad (a lo largo) para obtener mitades o cuartos de rebanada normal. El hecho de que puedas modificar el grosor de la rebanada es muy bueno y util para cosas mas chicas como apio, zanahorias, salchichas, cebolla (en mitades), etc.
Trae un disco para hacer cortes juliana que creo es el que menos sirve. Todo sale como si fuera rallado y como el alimentador es chico, el largo de la juliana está limitado y no hace mucho sentido.
Este accesorio de la batidora no tiene un depósito en el que haya cuchillas para triturar, moler, amasar, etc. Si estas buscando algo que haga eso y además rebane y ralle, vas a tener que comprar un procesador completo. Yo compré un Food Chopper de 3.5 tasas de la misma marca y con eso tengo para picar finamente cebolla, nueces, hierbas, etc.
Paula –
Works great! Does everything I need. Takes up less space than a second appliance. Easy to clean. Takes a little extra time to set up, but I’m sure there’s a learning curve.
Kev –
You buy this for the dicer. It slices fine, and it should have a larger feeder to reduce prep, but it’s definitely a workhorse post harvest. Don’t get this if you’re chopped an onion once a week, it’s overkill for that.
Chris from Michigan –
Worked well on cheese. However I did two package of cheddar cheese. First one came out in pieces the second was curled up pieces sticking together. Think the paddle underneath gets a build up of cheese and it needs cleaning.
Kelly A Williams –
It fit perfectly on our Kitchen Aid and was extremely easy to use. The tool box containing all of the attachments keeps everything organized and stored in one location. My husband loves to cook so it was the perfect accessory for our mixer and reduced his prep time using the shredder and slicer blade attachments, which are also dishwasher safe.
N –
extremely satisfied with the kitchen gadget. Would be great if the dicer blade gets bundled at a reasonable price.However one really needs the special box for housing the blades.