Added: 4 years ago
From: SMILES2GO
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  • what happens if you get a finger in the press, it seems like a lot of work to make a juice..

  • IDK man this seems pretty expensive. Its a dam juicer not a car...

  • the machine is huge! but you need the bag make juice?

    and the price is more than $2500!! forget it.

  • @Enzo10009 Ya, it doesn't seem right to charge so much especially since a majority of their customers have serious health problems.

  • @TheGraceofChrist You clearly have no concept of what it actually costs to manufacture such a piece of equipment. As to your VitaMix question, no. VitaMix stopped using glass containers in the '40s because they broke too often; today they're a potential safety hazard due to the power of the machine. For whatever reason, they opted out of stainless steel containers some time ago; I prefer the new ones because you can see what's going on and the lids are better.

  • @HotVoodooWitch I though regular juicing was supposed to cool the temper. Thanks for answering me though. Take care.

  • IF YOU THINK THAT I WILL PAY $2000 FOR A JUICER YOU CAN GET ON YOUR KNEES, KISS MY ASS AND GO TO HELL.

  • I love my Norwalk Juicer. I have had it for almost 30 years! Very nice people. You can reach them at 760-436-9615 or toll free 866-466-7925. Their website is norwalkjuicerscalifornia

  • Buy an Omega 8005 @ $259 which homogenizes your produce at only 80 rpm's which adds less air and heat for a better enzyme and nutrient rich wet pulp. Then put it in a People's Press or Wells Press which can purchased for $299 and press it out at 2000 psi. This will yield at least the same volume of juice as the Norwalk and be even better in quality due to the lower speed homogenizing machine. The Omega will do the whole job very well on it's own too. And cleans in 2 minutes all under $560!

  • awesome - ;o}

  • I stay with vitamin pills :)

  • @sweetcattv Which would you rather eat? An apple or take a pill? Do you think the vitamin pills produced are anywhere close to giving you what you need to live on? The enzymes necessary to digest cooked food are in the fruits and vegetables, not in vitamin pills. Take a glass of fresh fruit or vegetable juice an hour before or after you eat cooked food and you will not want to eat so much. The food is more thoroughly digested using the real enzymes in food. Bon apetit mon ami

  • ohh my god 2 bags wow

  • I trust those bags are reusable or it could get VERY expensive!

  • what a process for retired people

  • I don't think that narrator can sound any more excited!!

    I wish I had those 10 minutes back.

  • You can't beat stainless steel and a 12 year warranty. Unfortunately nowadays if you want that type of quality you're going to have to pay a lot. It is what it is.

  • looks very messy. everything's dripping from that bag. u can do the same with simple food processor. Put the mashed up mass into the cheese cloth, and just squeeze.

  • @sugaqube17 lol good point.

  • This is probably the best juicer in the world, though I feel like that 'bag' situation is one step too many. I mean, after you put your fruit (or vegetable) in that top slot, and you use the wooden plunger, that should be enough. No? If a person has to go through too much, after a while people just might give up and open up a can. Trust me, I know. And I have a Hurom--wherein you don't have to do nearly the steps.

  • This may be the best but my Angel 5500 is very close behind.

  • it does seem to be a hassle, but from the demonstration, it does appear to make exactly what a normal blender makes, but the press is the key to this thing being the best in the world. unlike the cheap juicers on the market, where you get a much smaller amount of juice, this thing seems to utilize all of the existing juice from that bag

  • what a hassle

  • what if u put ur penis in that presser?

  • @VgendAirsoft all bad boyfriends-penis through grinder and press!!!!

  • @VgendAirsoft Only a gal would think of this because a guy would feel that pain even before the thought of THINKING of doing this, OUCH!!

  • good old days when stuff was made of steel and it worked... 

  • @NeoQuello , BUT 2500$????

  • @runerevensen I think this is one of the finest presentation's on one of the finest juicers to ever exist. It has been the standard for everyone to reach for in juicing. Even today, I don't think anyone has exceeded it but I do believe there is one that can match it today. That one is the Green Star Elite.The Green Star Elite turns at 80 to 100 rpm's (the Norwalk grinds at an ultra high RPM) and the Green Star Elite has twin stainless steel augers that are 3 stage.

  • how many ml of juice does bag sucks?

  • I have just bought a Hippocrates twin gear juicer it is superior to the Nawalk, is a masticating juicer with magnetic twin crushers which preserves all the enzymes and increases the benefits of the juice. It is very quiet and you don't have to have bags, it costs between 700 - 900 dollars in New Zealand. It sends the juice straight out one opening and the fibrous material out another, which you can compost or feed to the chickens. Dr Gerson would certainly approve. 

  • @MsGuard2 Does it have all stainless steel parts?

  • There are too many parts... I bet I can find a better juicer.

  • im gonna put justin beiber in that press!!!!

  • @smallbigjohn

    Oh please?! Can I watch?!

  • I just ordered a set of 4 Norwalk filter bags for $16 only. I am gonna use my regular blender that I already had and put the mixture inside this bag. Then I'm gonna use pressure and torque from my hands to squeeze the living crap out of it. I did this before with a cheesecloth and I end up with left over fibers that are drier than Jack Lalane meaning more juice. I use twisting motion. May not be as good as the Norwalk hydraulic press but much less clean up and only $16 instead of $2500.

  • @fuckvegan The bags are made to be used with the juicer; as you surely realize by now, they're very narrow, a pain to fill by hand, are meant to hold pulp only in the middle third, and sewn to take vertical pressure, not twisting. Did you ask Norwalk if they recommend their bags for the method you describe?

    Get yourself some nylon nut milk bags (there's a lady on eBay who sells them at a very reasonable price). They're far better and cheaper for your method than Norwalk bags.

  • @HotVoodooWitch Good answer..I ended up ripping the bags as they dont take twisting pressure well. I ended up using eating whole fruits. Much more nutritious and full of fibre. Fuck juicers..

  • I need to get a juicer but every one says there one is the best....

  • Here is an American made 100lb very much more complex product for only $400. Snapper (22") 190cc High-Wheel Self-Propelled Lawn Mower, these people have an engineering staff that knows how to make something affordable and still makes money employing USA people. This just an example, not to be used as a juicer, lol

  • I'll agree pressing is the best way to go but why is this so expensive. I can buy a meat grinder so powerful it will grind up deer bones for $120 and anything else and I can buy a hand operated hydraulic bearing press for cars that has 10 tons of pressure for $300 plus it would be able to squeeze oils out of nuts. Why is a so simple machine so expensive?? If these people truly wanted to help sick people they would find a way to make it under $500.

  • @ssssaaafff It's expensive because it's hand-made HERE, not offshore, in a little factory in Arkansas from stainless steel (it weighs more than 60 lbs.). There are plenty of Norwalks out there that are 40+ years old and still making juice because they're built to last--that kind of durability and reliability doesn't come cheap. And they're not made to help sick people--they're made to make juice. People's reasons for juicing is another matter entirely and the manufacturer makes no health claims.

  • Still, there are many much more complex products or heavier, ect. made in the USA that are far cheaper. It's just greed or very poor engineering and production organization. In the United States, depending on grade of stainless steel, you can get from $2 to more then $3 per lb. Add 2 motors and some gears. Not even close to rocket science.

  • @ssssaaafff And these more complex products are...?

    Okay, tell ya what...I'll front you $150 for 60 lbs. of stainless steel @$2.50/lb. (sorry, shipping's on you) on the condition that you manufacture HERE a WORKING prototype that does exactly what this juicer does, i.e., makes juice, grinds coffee beans, makes flour and cereal, chops veggies, makes snow from frozen fruit, et al., with a 12-year warranty, that you can sell for <$500. Remember: shipping the steel comes out of the remaining $350.

  • I'm guessing the VTR350 juicer is easier for juicing grapes, cherries, alfalfa, wheat grass - and I think you don't have to remove the pits from cherries before juicing.

    But can this Norwalk extract oil from seeds? Such as olive oil or flax seed oil? If this thing is a good for getting cold pressed oils, it might be worth it, and I bet this Norwalk will last for decades. Anybody able to confirm my guesswork?

  • @l00k33 It'll last for decades but it's not for pressing oil. I doubt the cloths would allow the oil to permeate and even if they did, cleaning them would be unholy mess. It will make nut butter, though.

  • Worth every cent. No juicers can compare

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  • @ashworth1025 This company has been in business for almost 77 years and has been tweaking the same basic principle and in all that time, the consensus is that it still makes the best juice. If you find something better, be sure to let everyone know but don't call what you don't understand and haven't tried a waste.

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  • @ashworth1025 "ME as a company?!" MY product?! How is this MY product?! And if your mother can afford $2000+ three times for the same juicer in 15 years, more power to her--it took me 21 years to be able to afford my Norwalk and that was only because I won the money. "3 in 15 years..." hmm...a bit odd considering there are 40 year-old Norwalks still in use but considering you're using a Blendtec instead of a Vitamix I guess the tree didn't fall too far from the apple. :)))

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  • @ashworth1025 WTF are you stirring up in your Blendtec that makes you so hostile and immature towards fellow posters? My goodness, taking cheap & childish shots by calling someone "Jerk" and "Asshole" , telling them to "shove an apple up (their) rear end"? C'mon now, what grade are we in? In defending your love affair with your blender, must you spew such vitriolic invective on a youtube commentary? All this concern about juicers, but none at all towards working on your deeply embedded anger. :(

  • @ashworth1025 *yawn*

  • @ashworth1025 You're a name-calling cretin, which in itself could be amusing but you ACT on your stupidity, which is sobering. Case in point: I'm still waiting to learn the particulars of "my company" and "my product," after which I hope Medicaid renews your prescription and that you crawl back into your hole. You're one angry individual; I hope your keeper doesn't allow you the use of sharp objects.

  • @ashworth1025 Wait what did you write about the Norwalk? You have owned three and they each broke or.... What was the basis of this heated debate between you and the other posters? Anyone care to inform me. (the posts are removed)

  • @HotVoodooWitch Is there a blender option besides Vitamix made of all glass and stainless steel parts that does what the Vitamix can do? I'm trying to buy some of these gadgets for health reasons. Thank you.

  • @ashworth1025 good riddance, i guess the poor fellow wisened up!!!

  • @elizabethannshapiro Maybe his blender broke and whatever he'd been ingesting worked its way out of his system.

  • Sorry, how is this NOT the most cumbersome, overly technical and intimidating machine of ANY kind out there?! Bags and folding instruction, scrubbings and cleaning and... "and that's all you have to do is.." And THAT'S ALL I HAVE TO DO????

  • this video looks about 20 years old

  • The press will get a LOT more juice out of your food than other juicers will give you. If you are on the Gerson Diet and juicing $40 of food per day, you will save $10+ per day with this press. The juicer will pay for itself in no time. Plus there are studies showing that certain enzymes such as L-oxidase only live through the process of this juicer and did not show up in the juice from other juicers. If you can't afford this, get a similar grinder called the Champion Commercial and a press.

  • @ndpioneers Enzymes NEVER live. Ever.

  • @ndpioneers Can you tell me more about L-oxidase, I can't find any information on it.

  • @TheGraceofChrist I don't have much information on it either. It would be great if they would study it more. The Gerson Institute has used other machines but always goes back to the Norwalk because they get results with it and not from the other ones. So there may even be other enzymes surviving with this method of grind and press as well.

  • @TheGraceofChrist

    metacyc.org/META/NEW-IMAGE?typ­e=ENZYME-IN-PATHWAY&object=MGI­:1353434-MONOMER "Gulonolactone (L-) oxidase is an important enzyme that is present in most mammalian species. It is required for the terminal step in vitamin C biosynthesis."

  • That press looks dangerous!

  • @TheLoserKingdom all juicers are dangerous. they are designed to mutilate. Be careful when using them.

  • this thing is wayyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy to expensive besides the jack lalanne power juicer is a million times better

  • Too expensive and too much work

  • After watching The Gerson Miracle, I'm excited to get this juicer. Our Acme juicer, like most juicers on the market, is a centrifugal juicer, which burns the nutrients and it takes a lot of fruit to make one glass. The Norwalk juicer pressing the fruit so you get all the valuable nutrients and you get more juice. It is expensive but I believe it is well worth it. Isn't your health worth it?! I'll post a follow up once we get our Norwalk.

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  • I am happy with my new Hurom. Easy to use and clean (a must for me to use often and consistently) and it's slow so does not oxidize my juice. I just gave away my Jackie La. special just a paper wieght compared to the better models. My buddy uses a People's press (2 ton) with his champion and works well. I give him all my pulp that I save in the freezer for him.

  • i have a reallly nice juicer thats a fraction of this price. 10yr warrenty, no 'bags' (wtf is that) you dont need the bags, and you get dry pulp. plus is self-feeding juicer, you dont force the food into the juicer, like this machine has to...

  • @kpumaorn , What is the name of your juicer and the number if there is one...I am looking for a good juicer to replace the jack LaLanne which I'm not happy with. Thanks

  • Think about it...some people spend $5K and more for "professional grade" ovens for their homes. This juicer is built to last for decades, is all stainless steal, and gives you 50 to 100% more juice than other juicers.....meaning, it pays for itself by cutting your grocery bill at least in half. Buy a cheap juicer, you buy twice as much produce because it doesn't make juice as efficiently as the Norwalk. Plus you have to replace the cheap juicers while the Norwalk will last decades

  • Ouch, $2500? I'll stick to my Jack LaLane Juicer.

  • I think the omega vrt 330 would work just fine and it is one seventh the price.

  • How does the norwalk compare to the hurom slow juicer.

  • @specializedfitness seems like you'd be all day using this thing. the angel juicer is more interesting than this. the hurom and angel would be a more interesting comparison

  • @ShaolinHero1 It's not about "interesting"; it's about what makes the best juice. I've been juicing for 22 years and have had juice from a number of different juicers and NOTHING beats the quality of Norwalk juice. As to the "wtf is that" bags, they filter the juice so that it's absolutely pulp-free. I'd point out that the Super Angel comes with a strainer because the juice isn't pulp-free.

  • @HotVoodooWitch Funny, I always thought "interest" is what leads to learning. The norwalk may make the best juice, but at that price I think it would stress my health more than help it.

  • @ShaolinHero1 What you spend on a juicer is between you and your wallet. As to learning, your interest seems to have locked you into one point of view and this video wasn't posted for comparative purposes anyway--it's rather old and was made to put the machine through its paces for Gerson patients. Your idea is a good one but not relevant to this clip--why not ask a vendor who carries both the Super Angel and the Hurom/Omega Vert to record and post such a comparison?

  • @specializedfitness You can't compare a 60+ lb. all-stainless juicer that applies a ton of pressure to one made of plastic; they're not even in the same league.

  • I found this amazing software to help me get recipes for JUICES from ingredients I have; instead of telling me to get ingredients I don't have! Very quick and easy!

    It helped me so much and saved me so much time , you try it too!!!

    Copy the link below

    a79e04-ir4vkw3a813-3q11r4z.hop­.clickbank.netx <---- remove the x

  • Seems pretty complicated compared to cheap models. Also just a not here: drinking the apple carrot mixture would be so much sugar directly into your system you'd become a carbo junkie real fast. Not so good for your insulin regulation. Also green juice can be immediately frozen and not loose much vitality if you use it within a few months.

  • @menderfire9 Unless the patient is suffering from pancreatic cancer, insulin is probably the least of a Gerson patient's concerns.

  • @HotVoodooWitch Thanks for the comment. My bad.

    I was so focused on watching this video because I was simply researching "juicers" to buy for myself, and it did not register in my ears (or my brain) the part about Gerson disease. So when I read your comment today I googled Gerson disease and now I am a big fan of the cause of the Garson people. Thanks for raising my awareness, I appreciate you for that.

  • @menderfire9 Oh, no problem. And I agree with you about freezing the juices (although I don't do it personally). Gerson has their own protocol but since I'm not a cancer patient (knock wood), I don't follow it and am free to store juice. If you're looking into a juicer, I HIGHLY recommend a commercial-grade Champion in black. You can probably pick up a used one on eBay and add a manual press later if you're so inclined.

  • this machine looks a tiny bit dangerous lol dont get ur finger caught in there.

  • Just chew more...

  • @sidehop You are absolutely right. We live in a society that doesn't chew. We also live in a society that has very few teeth or really bad ones.

  • I was advised by the president of Norwalk to give #3 a try for carrots, apples, beets (which I grind together), so I bought one extra each of the juicing grid and #s 2 and 3 to swap out while juicing and now use #3 most often. The machine's heat does NOT transfer to the pulp, either while grinding or pressing. My yield, already excellent, was increased appreciably using #3, although I continue to use the juicing grid for greens.

  • What is the grid number you use to grind apples and carrots?

  • its a great machine but the compact living juicer is faster and easier and much cheaper at  check it out

  • @atgb4ever I think most people considering a Norwalk purchase are looking for all stainless steel parts for health reasons.

  • talk about an eye sore

  • 12 year's guarantee dont hear much of that anymore.

  • I'm happy with my compact omega vrt 330..

  • im getting it

  • @Riiyona Did you end up buying a Norwalk? If so, please tell me what you think of it, do you use it regularly? THANKS!

  • Kosai19, I juiced with an industrial Champion for 21 years--it's a great juicer. I know it's claimed that you can get the same results using it as a grinder in tandem with a K&K press but not only have I read that this isn't so from those who've tried it, but it can't be because the Champion doesn't handle greens well by themselves. The only thing the Norwalk doesn't handle well is small amounts of wheatgrass, other than that, it does an excellent job on pretty much everything else.

  • Yes, I own this juicer and it was 21 years before I had the money for it. I won it in a state lottery and immediately contacted Norwalk. I don't own a Ferrari (or any car, for that matter--this is NYC), don't live in luxury, and am not looking to impress anyone. I take juicing very seriously and this is the best one made, period. If you have something else that you like, that's fine; it's better than no juice at all. But don't knock someone else's choice because you don't get it.

  • this is like the most boring commercial ever

  • It's worth mentioning that the Norwalk is 1 part masticating (grinder) and 1 part hydrolic press (2000 pounds of pressure).

    You can buy any cheap masticating juicer (chamption juicer for $199) and the K&K hydrolic press (4000 pounds of pressure for $365). With both machines you replace the need for the Norwalk and save yourself $1936.

    Do the research and confirm it for yourself. It's a better option than getting the Norwalk.

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  • @kosai19 except the champion is not stainless steel.

  • $2,400.00

    It better be good.

  • Are there any good press juicers out there that are cheap? If so I would just grind up the produce with a blender.

  • 50 or a 100% compared to what???????

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  • its so huge and seems sucha hassel. There are better juicers machines and much affordable

  • It's not that large although it's very heavy and yes, there are more affordable juicers. Better? A juicer's only good if you use it. And all juicing involves work.

    It's obvious that you've never tasted juice made with the Norwalk; given that, you're not in a position to comment about what's better.

  • okay... :(

  • @HotVoodooWitch you actually own this thing? you spent $2500.00 just to make juice? how much do those bags cost that you have to use with it?

  • 2 expensive!!!!!!!!!

  • Strart by watching the movies, The Gerson Miracle, then watch The Beautiful Truth, and the Food Matters in that exact order. Until then, you will not throughly inderstand this Therapy for health and curing cancer and oher diseases.

  • Why not eating the damn vegetable or fruits the way they are, are we that lazy??

  • It's not about being lazy. Gerson therapy is to recover from cancer and other chronic diseases. You drink 13 juices a day to get vitamins, enzymes and other needed nutrients from those juices. It's no way someone can eat so many vegetables a day to get all the nutrients as from those juices. Get educated, you never know when you or someone close to you might need to be on Gerson therapy.

    Watch the movie "The Beautiful Truth" [available on youtube in parts] to learn what this is about.

    Peace!

  • I would imagine back before we had modern society people were constantly eating. So eating 10-20 pieces of vegetables a day would be easy, but today we don't do that.

  • I agree with you. But back before people did not have GMO foods, full of pesticides, herbicides, insecticides and other chemicals. They did not have today's stress, they did not stay closed inside with artificial light all the day long. They did not drink water full of chlorine and sodium fluoride, which is a poison, a byproduct of aluminum industry. Modern society and life brought about all the disease we have today. To fight cancer, you need mega doses of juice, to repair cells damage.

  • Well when I was 3 (1988) I had cancer and underwent normal surgery and chemo, but for some reason I had a strong craving for carrots and could rip through 1-2 pounds per week. I credit that to having almost no chemo related complications during my treatments which lasted some 80 weeks.

  • Is not me saying so, the statistics say so. Eat lots of ORGANIC raw fruits and vegetables; avoid sugars of any kinds; avoid process foods and deli meats; they are loaded of chemicals [hormones, artificial colorants, chemical preservatives, artificial flavoring etc...etc.]

  • Eating those carrots was your instinct of doing what was right for yourself. Unfortunately, most humans lost their instinct, from lack of touch with nature. If you had cancer already and were treated with chemo and radiation, please be aware that lots of people develop another cancer years later.

  • @gigiontube It's scary how we live among all these toxins. It's no wonder why there are sooooo many diseases these days. Now a days, too many people are popping pills in their mouths only to sort of function normal. The FDA doesn't care about your health. If you are always sick, then you are forced to buy medication to feel somewhat better and therefore making them rich. The only way you can live purely healthy is to live in the wilderness. Hunt your food, breathe pure oxygen, have no stress.

  • @gigiontube Don't you just wish is was back to were momma would make some fresh hand squeezed OJ or that "an apple a day, keeps the doc. away"?

  • that's a lot of chewing!

  • @LukeL007 I'd like to see you eat 20 veggies a day. lol. get real.

  • If we were still on the move as ancient societies were eating 7-10 cups of veggies or fruit would be simple. Remember a serving is quite small

  • Lazy? How would they be lazy if they need to do all the prep and cleaning?

  • The norwalk juicer is the most expensive juicer in the world today.

  • it only costs 2500 and 50 dollars to ship it from california

    worlds most expensive juicer, i just spent 90 dollars on my juicer and i am making a press

  • this is the best juicer in the world.

    period

  • this is gay as fuc

  • you are gay as fuc because you are sick and you need a juicer and a vibration plate

  • It's as if you can't do the gerson therepy with out it. When I can get an iphone which is a serious piece of tech for a couple hundred and this thing which is the most rudimentry machine I've ever seen for over two Thousand it makes you wonder

  • If it's merely a matter of raw fresh fruits and vegetables THEN USE ANOTHER JUICER. There are plenty of other options, all of them cheaper than this one.

    It is a FACT, independent of my arrogance/patriotism that labor costs more here than in Asia or Mexico., plus the machine is hand-tooled and hand-assembled. FORGIVE ME if I have the unmitigated gall to think that it's better for a 76-year-old company to retain its manufacturing base here rather than offshore.

  • heres to getting rich off sickness

  • from what I have read the Angel juicer is at least its equal, some studies suggest it gives even better quality juice

  • I am sure it is a wonderful juicer, BUT at almost $2500, I think I will go with something else.

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  • These are amazing machines but a disgusting price is charged for them..............

    Anyway, what is the bags the grinded produce goes into?

    Wouldn't they be infested with bacteria :S

  • The machine is manufactured and hand-assembled here, where labor happens to be quite a bit more costly than in, say, China or Korea. It's built like a tank (the all-stainless model is over 60 lbs. assembled and it's not that large), there's toll-free customer service (also here, not the Philippines or India), and a 12-year warranty. If you think the price is disgusting, make your own.

    The bags/cloths are made of Dacron (they're hand finished, BTW). They're kept in the freezer between uses.

  • Don't be such a smart ass.

    Equipment like this helps in the cure of cancer!

    I was merely suggesting they should be cheaper, and more widely available worldwide, as they are pretty essential items to sick people who have a clue.

  • Equipment like this MIGHT "help[s] in the cure of cancer!" precisely because it's well-made...here in the States, which costs money. The manufacturer is not obligated to make the item cheaper (putting its employees out of work) or more available. The manufacturer is in business to make money on his product, period. The Norwalk is not marketed as a cure for disease; it's marketed as a juicer that makes juice of fantastic quality. Nowhere in their literature do they claim to cure disease.

  • WOW, you are really showing your arrogance, sorry I mean patriotism, typical american.

    It's not because this machine is made in the US which you seem so proud of. It's because raw fresh fruits and vegetables are better than any chemical laden prescription drug available.

  • 0:49 thats what she said

  • good one!

  • lol thanks!

  • Dogs are anivores, they'll eat anything!! My last dog ate cat shit! Dry, wet, he didn't care. He ate it. He would have ate that dry piece of nutrient-free crap. My dog right now ate several dry, wooden Christmas ornaments. He also ate some of my tree and the flocking. It was dry. So again, he would also eat that dry shit. I don't know if he'll eat cat shit, I haven't seen him do it, so hopefully he has a more refined, cat shit less, pallet.

  • HotVoodooWitch:

    "It's unlikely that dogs would eat pulp, regardless of how dry it is. They're carnivores"

    No. They are omnivores. Cats are carnivores; dogs are not. My two labs have had a carrot with their breakfast and their supper for the last nine years. They also love fallen mangos; apples; tomatoes; cabbage, lettuce; nuts, that they scrounge from the ground in the garden; mushrooms; and fruit and vegetable pulp, dry or moist.

  • POWER JUICER

  • my magic bullet is da bomb!!! simple, compact and efficient!

  • The Magic Bullet is very cute but it's not a juicer.

  • it has attachments now, I can juice, I still prefer my Omega vert juicer

  • What attachments?

  • this machine is too time-consuming and complicated.

    I love my Magic Bullet, it's easy to clean too.

  • magic bullet oxidizes the juice, this doesn't because it's from concentrate.

  • you dont just use the pulp to make compost you can make homemade baby food with it all you do is add a little water to it and your done

  • ... it has no nutrients, I read from their website that the pulp is so depleted that goats and dogs refuse to eat it. Think about that, 4000lbs/ square inch. Everything good thing goes into the juice.

  • It's unlikely that dogs would eat pulp, regardless of how dry it is. They're carnivores.

  • @HotVoodooWitch my dog eats carrots.

  • You miss the point and he won't eat the pulp. Not all dogs eat carrots (we had one that loved fruits and veggies but this is considered somewhat eccentric). The point is that an HERBIVORE, i.e., a creature that can be counted on to eat carrots, won't eat the pulp because it lacks nutrients.

  • You know this has happened or is going to happen. How many dill holes have put their hands in the press and permanently damaged their hands. Doesn't seem to be like a very smart machine for a sue crazy nation.  Unless there is a safety feature I don't see here. But come on...we live amongst quite a few stupid people.

  • It's been made for over 75 years so i'm sure they're sue proof by now,

  • I bet they are...these things look jamin'. I mean they get the job done! I just can't help but thing of stupid people when I see this machine.

  • lol that's why there's a wooden plunger to avoid pushing the food in too far with your hand. And I doubt stupid people would use their money on this anyway. It's worth it you could make any juice from concentrate with this thing.

  • hahaha good point...stupid people not using their money on this. I just see something like this and the first thing that comes to my mind is this sue hungry country we live in.

  • I know what you mean like on the side of microwaves now it says:

    WARNING DO NOT PLACE PETS IN MICROWAVE TO DRY THEM, USE A TOWEL OR A BLOWDRYER!!!