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DeLonghi A930 Fruit and Vegetable Strainer Attachment | 
enlarge | Brand: DeLonghi
List Price: $90.00 Buy New: $54.95 You Save: $35.05 (39%)
Rating: 1 reviews
Fragile: No Batteries Included: No Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 10.2 x 10.1 x 4.7 Warranty: Full US Warranty by DeLonghi
MPN: AT930 Model: A930 UPC: 044387779302 EAN: 5011423000725 ASIN: B00006JL0P
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Strainer for making baby food, wine, preserves, soups | | • | 5-quart bowl, paddle, fine and coarse screens | | • | Accessory to Kenwood KM800/DeLonghi DSM800 and DSM700 stand mixers | | • | Screens offer smooth or rough side | | • | Clean with warm water and mild detergent |
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| Accessories:
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Review This fruit and vegetable strainer is for use with DeLonghi's DSM800 and DSM700 series' and Kenwood's KM800 series of stand mixers and is useful for making everything from baby food to wine. The set comes with a 5-quart bowl, a paddle attachment for the mixer, and two different screens, which offer a choice between coarsely or finely strained fruits and vegetables. Additionally each screen has a rough and a smooth side. The coarse screen's rough side is useful for removing fibers from cooked vegetables, such as kale or rhubarb, and for pureeing; its smooth side is ideal for straining cooked fruits, such as plums. The fine screen's rough side works well on pureed fruits and vegetables, such as potatoes or tomatoes, while its smooth side sifts flour or purees soft fruits, such as raspberries. All strainer components should be cleaned with warm water and mild detergent. --Cristina Vaamonde
Product Description
Designed for use with:
DSM800
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| Customer Reviews:
Good, yes, it's good January 6, 2003 nickunt (Sheffield, UK) 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
The DeLonghi A930 hasn't got the depth, width, or strain to hole size ratio of the KitchenAid StrainMaster 2003, but it comes a very close second, and at this kind of price, you're not really going to know the difference. I strained pasta, I strained green beans, I strained broccoli, hell, I even strained my wrist pulling the damn thing out of the box, but it still gave me maximum performance time after time after time. If you want your veg straining, you don't need to look any further than this, unless of course, money's no object, in which case I'd go for the KitchenAid model. Mind you, at one cent off, you can't really say no to this bargain!
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