Nutri Ninja QB3001 Blender - Black/Red/Silver all reduced from £99.99 down to £39.99
Dubious about original price but a very good price for the slim version.
Online at the moment, will check tomorrow if instore as well.
Create delicious and nutritious smoothies and soups in just moments with the Ninja Nutri QB3001 Blender in black.
This 700 W blender will cut through large chunks of food easily and will even crush ice, thanks to a powerful Pro Extractor blade.
This double action blade rotates with speed and precision to ensure your creations will come out as smooth as you like, and packed full of goodness.
The QB3001 Blender comes with two cups with sip and seal lids, so you can take your beverage with you on the go, and even make one for your other half. Once finished, just pop the cups in the dishwasher.
Simple to assemble and use, the Ninja Nutri QB3001 Blender takes all the hard work out of eating healthily.
Top comments
BigYoSpeck
19 Nov 1515#5
Having managed to snag one of the Nutri Ninja BL450 900W when they were on offer for just over £50 I'm not sure I could live with anything less powerful or with lower capacity than the 0.65 litres cup.
If you're looking at this as a first blender I'd carefully consider it only being 700W and 0.47 litres.
My old 300W pretty much didn't put a dent in berry seeds and the linseeds (flaxseed) I was putting in were broken up but hardly ground down into something drinkable. I learned my lesson that if you buy cheap you buy twice and the move to a 900W unit is much better. But it still doesn't work miracles. It'll happily mulch through a 200g bag of linseeds leaving it very finely ground but without a milling blade does leave some chunkier bits. Same with berry seeds, most get blended but a few bits remain.
0.47 litres would be absolutely useless for my needs but your mileage may vary. 250ml milk, 100g Greek yoghurt, 160g fruits, 40g peanut butter, 25g linseed and 25g oats is pretty much at capacity for the 0.65 litres cup on mine.
Depending how seriously you want to start making smoothies my advice is to take the hit on something more expensive, if you want seeds and fibrous greens taken care of I really think you need 900W or more and don't bother with anything in the 300W range unless the most your asking of it is bananas.
andreasuk to BigYoSpeck
19 Nov 157#6
You sound like a blender connoisseur:-)
robo989
19 Nov 153#21
Just collected mine.
Extremely compact.
No way is £99 a genuine RRP, that is to say I would feel thoroughly shafted if paid such a price.
However at £39 it's a bargain and exactly what I was after, wouldn't feel too out of sorts paying £60 if was actually searching for one.
Takes hardly any space at all on counter, all parts dishwasher safe that come into contact with food.
It's not exactly a premium finish item but has a distinctly above bargain basement feel if you get me. Think Russell hobbs kind of thing.
Tried on a load of stuff, seems to work as expected with no bits...never tried a nutribullet though, or similar so I'm not sure if I'm supposed to get some kind of miracle smoothie or just the contents of the fruit in smoothie form...
Best I can do, would buy again.
All comments (30)
robo989
18 Nov 15#1
Original price is genuine at launch though generally available for £60-75 these days but at £39, super bargain....(if you want one obviously)
Gave it a go.....Thanks
catherton
18 Nov 15#2
Thanks
andreasuk
19 Nov 15#3
this looks like a really good price but i bought the breville active 2 days ago for £20
suspiciousmole
19 Nov 151#4
Thanks OP - just reserved... Actually only £39.00 :smiley:
BigYoSpeck
19 Nov 1515#5
Having managed to snag one of the Nutri Ninja BL450 900W when they were on offer for just over £50 I'm not sure I could live with anything less powerful or with lower capacity than the 0.65 litres cup.
If you're looking at this as a first blender I'd carefully consider it only being 700W and 0.47 litres.
My old 300W pretty much didn't put a dent in berry seeds and the linseeds (flaxseed) I was putting in were broken up but hardly ground down into something drinkable. I learned my lesson that if you buy cheap you buy twice and the move to a 900W unit is much better. But it still doesn't work miracles. It'll happily mulch through a 200g bag of linseeds leaving it very finely ground but without a milling blade does leave some chunkier bits. Same with berry seeds, most get blended but a few bits remain.
0.47 litres would be absolutely useless for my needs but your mileage may vary. 250ml milk, 100g Greek yoghurt, 160g fruits, 40g peanut butter, 25g linseed and 25g oats is pretty much at capacity for the 0.65 litres cup on mine.
Depending how seriously you want to start making smoothies my advice is to take the hit on something more expensive, if you want seeds and fibrous greens taken care of I really think you need 900W or more and don't bother with anything in the 300W range unless the most your asking of it is bananas.
andreasuk to BigYoSpeck
19 Nov 157#6
You sound like a blender connoisseur:-)
robo989 to BigYoSpeck
19 Nov 15#10
Highly informative, doubting my reservation now but a bit unsure about the capacity.
...But I'm going to ignore good advice anyway, wouldn't be the first time :smiley:
sprite127594
19 Nov 151#7
Just but the brevelle for a lot cheaper and does the same job. Done.
robo989 to sprite127594
19 Nov 15#9
If you can get up that early you don't need green smoothies
Opening post
Dubious about original price but a very good price for the slim version.
Online at the moment, will check tomorrow if instore as well.
Create delicious and nutritious smoothies and soups in just moments with the Ninja Nutri QB3001 Blender in black.
This 700 W blender will cut through large chunks of food easily and will even crush ice, thanks to a powerful Pro Extractor blade.
This double action blade rotates with speed and precision to ensure your creations will come out as smooth as you like, and packed full of goodness.
The QB3001 Blender comes with two cups with sip and seal lids, so you can take your beverage with you on the go, and even make one for your other half. Once finished, just pop the cups in the dishwasher.
Simple to assemble and use, the Ninja Nutri QB3001 Blender takes all the hard work out of eating healthily.
Top comments
If you're looking at this as a first blender I'd carefully consider it only being 700W and 0.47 litres.
My old 300W pretty much didn't put a dent in berry seeds and the linseeds (flaxseed) I was putting in were broken up but hardly ground down into something drinkable. I learned my lesson that if you buy cheap you buy twice and the move to a 900W unit is much better. But it still doesn't work miracles. It'll happily mulch through a 200g bag of linseeds leaving it very finely ground but without a milling blade does leave some chunkier bits. Same with berry seeds, most get blended but a few bits remain.
0.47 litres would be absolutely useless for my needs but your mileage may vary. 250ml milk, 100g Greek yoghurt, 160g fruits, 40g peanut butter, 25g linseed and 25g oats is pretty much at capacity for the 0.65 litres cup on mine.
Depending how seriously you want to start making smoothies my advice is to take the hit on something more expensive, if you want seeds and fibrous greens taken care of I really think you need 900W or more and don't bother with anything in the 300W range unless the most your asking of it is bananas.
Extremely compact.
No way is £99 a genuine RRP, that is to say I would feel thoroughly shafted if paid such a price.
However at £39 it's a bargain and exactly what I was after, wouldn't feel too out of sorts paying £60 if was actually searching for one.
Takes hardly any space at all on counter, all parts dishwasher safe that come into contact with food.
It's not exactly a premium finish item but has a distinctly above bargain basement feel if you get me. Think Russell hobbs kind of thing.
Tried on a load of stuff, seems to work as expected with no bits...never tried a nutribullet though, or similar so I'm not sure if I'm supposed to get some kind of miracle smoothie or just the contents of the fruit in smoothie form...
Best I can do, would buy again.
All comments (30)
Gave it a go.....Thanks
If you're looking at this as a first blender I'd carefully consider it only being 700W and 0.47 litres.
My old 300W pretty much didn't put a dent in berry seeds and the linseeds (flaxseed) I was putting in were broken up but hardly ground down into something drinkable. I learned my lesson that if you buy cheap you buy twice and the move to a 900W unit is much better. But it still doesn't work miracles. It'll happily mulch through a 200g bag of linseeds leaving it very finely ground but without a milling blade does leave some chunkier bits. Same with berry seeds, most get blended but a few bits remain.
0.47 litres would be absolutely useless for my needs but your mileage may vary. 250ml milk, 100g Greek yoghurt, 160g fruits, 40g peanut butter, 25g linseed and 25g oats is pretty much at capacity for the 0.65 litres cup on mine.
Depending how seriously you want to start making smoothies my advice is to take the hit on something more expensive, if you want seeds and fibrous greens taken care of I really think you need 900W or more and don't bother with anything in the 300W range unless the most your asking of it is bananas.
...But I'm going to ignore good advice anyway, wouldn't be the first time :smiley: