Sunday, September 1, 2013

Cuisinart DLC-10S Pro Classic 7-Cup Food Processor, White

Cuisinart DLC-10S Pro Classic 7-Cup Food Processor, White
List Price : $180.00
Price : $99.95
Code : B00004S9EM
* Special discount only for limited time



Product Feature


  • Includes stainless steel chopping/mixing blade, dough blade, medium slicing disc (4mm), and shredding disc
  • Also includes small and large pushers, detachable disc stem, compact flat cover, spatula, How-to DVD and recipe book
  • Extra-large feed tube holds whole fruits and vegetables; BPA-free and dishwasher-safe parts
  • Powerful enough to knead bread dough with ease; Easy to use and clean
  • Five-year full motor warranty, three-year limited entire unit warranty

Product Description


Cuisinart Pro Classic Food ProcessorThe Cuisinart DLC-10SPro Classic Food Processor makes all your favorites, from stir-fries and main course salads, to peanut butter and home-made bread. It features a shatterproof 7-cup work bowl that is both heat and cold resistant, dual pushers for ingredients of varying sizes, an extra-large feed tube that can hold whole fruits and vegetables, and a compact flat cover for when feed tubes are not in use. Stainless steel accessories are easily changed to meet your requirements.


Product Detail


  • Amazon Sales Rank: #205 in Kitchen & Housewares
  • Size: 7 Cup
  • Color: White
  • Brand: Cuisinart
  • Model: DLC-10S
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 13.75" h x7.00" w x11.25" l,15.63 pounds








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Product Reviews

786 of 819 people found the following review helpful.
4Useful for a number of chores in the kitchen
By Joanna Daneman
While I usually chop on a plastic cutting board with a big chef's knife, the Cuisinart makes several tasks a lot easier. Chopping cooked or raw meat is one. If you are making hash from leftover corned beef, a short burst in this food processor is the easiest way to go. For mixing certain pastry doughs (pie or pate brisee) this is also a very good item to have, although you have to be careful to go slowly and not overprocess. The one thing the Cuisinart does is heat up the dough if you whirl it around too much, so you have to be careful. And if you put too heavy a bread dough in, using the plastic bread blade, you can heat the shaft up enough to jam the blade onto the central post and that's a big nuisance. However, with these cautions, the Cuisinart is hands-down my favorite food processor and for shredding, slicing thinly or chopping, pretty much the best kitchen appliance for the job.

288 of 299 people found the following review helpful.
5Worthy of the Five Stars
By Floyd Ian Slipp
I'm an enthusiastic amateur cook. Some might say I'm an advanced cook. Whatever.

I've had a number of food processors over the years. Just a few factoids are pertinent here:

* My first FP was an original Cuisinart 7-cup model. I just tossed it out because the bowl finally broke and I didn't want to replace just the bowl at this point. Why? Because I bought the original over 30 years ago! In thirty years of hard use, only one minor part failure. I'd say that original was pretty durable.

* There's Cuisinart and there are 'all others.' In thinking over my experiences, I couldn't bring myself to buy anything other than a Cuisinart. Especially after reading the numerous reviews on Amazon.

So, I bought a new original -- now called 'Classic,' like Coke -- 7-cup model. And, like Coke, they've changed enough of the product design so that they couldn't call it the 'old' Cuisinart. So it's a 'Classic.' OK.

What are the evolutions in the last 30 years and, more importantly, are they worth it? Here are the ones I can see:

* The steel chopping blade -- the workhorse of the unit -- has changed slightly in its shape. This is no doubt for the best.

* The switch is now a single, double-duty switch instead of two separate controls. One way for 'constant on,' and the other way for 'pulse.' An improvement, both in functionality and manufacturing cost.

* The motor sounds different, presumably because it's both better AND cheaper to make. Also, not having ripped the unit apart to see for myself, I believe that it's also because the controls have been replaced with a solid-state switching mechanism. This is also for the better.

* I've saved the best for last. Cuisinart has included in this model a bowl cover that is simply a flat plate with a hole in it that allows the user to simply drop, drip, or drizzle ingredients into the bowl at will, without having to juggle the three-piece feed tube arrangement. Now, the feed-tube system is lovely for slicing and shreeding, but it always requires cleaning each part every time it's used. So this new, additional cover is a boon to the cook, who might well use it, as I do, about 90 percent of the time I use the processor. Thanks, Cuisinart. You've read my thoughts.

Anyway, the device is also good for all the right reasons. It's functional, well-designed, and well-made. It's called 'classic' because it is. It's stood the test of time for me and thousands of other customers.

I expect to have this processor for the next 30 years. At that point, I'll be 93 years old and probably require a juicer, not a food processor, to prepare my meals. The juicer will probably be a Cuisinart, too.

434 of 454 people found the following review helpful.
5A "gadget" that really works
By P. Drvenkar
I bought the Cuisinart food processor last Christmas...as a gift to myself. My husband rolled his eyes when I told him I had bought this..he thought this was another gadget that would get used once and then disappear forever in a kitchen cabinet. I absolutely love this machine...I use it almost everyday from chopping vegetables to making cookie/cake dough. It is easy to use...easy to put together and best off all..easy to clean. I would highly recommend this for anybody who wants something that really works.

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