Does this come with a cow?
Does anyone have experience using this particular product? Wondering if this price is worth it, or if there are better alternatives
Got it for my daughters for Christmas, one hasnât touched hers, the other uses it quite often and loves it. It doesnât make a lot, but just the right amount so there is not a lot of extra sitting in the frig. She says the self cleaning part of amazing. She has a small kitchen and this stays out of the limited counter space. Overall, I would say itâs worth it.
Milk comes from animals.
Juice comes from plants.
Face it people, anyway you market itâŚ
Youâre drinking nut juice.
I havent, although it looks like it does in one machine that i do in two but not as versatile as two. I blend almonds and water and then run that slurry through my slow juicer for the liquid.
I dont know which is more difficult to clean up (mine is not difficult but takes 2 machines i already own), i take the almond meal that comes out of the juicer and freeze it use in baking.
Dont know much about the steaming aspect, but most recipes use soaking overnight. How smiliar? ÂŻ_(ă)_/ÂŻ
Non-dairy milk? Whatâs that?
Omg, so do I - it was like chalk
I have been using one for over a year. We use it mostly to make soy cashew milk and plain cashew milk. You can add cocoa and cinnamon in with the soy beans and cashews to make a dairy free hot chocolate (we add brown sugar and vanilla to the pitcher and use it as coffee creamer). You donât have to strain and the self cleaning is really convenient. For reference, we also have a Soyajoy G5 and a Vevor Nutmilk maker. I definitely prefer the Chefwave since there is no straining and virtually no cleaning. Super quick and easy to use. You do have to experiment with the amount of nuts or beans you use to get your preferred consistency. The almond milk setting is good, too, but the oat milk I made sucked and I never tried it again.
There are a few YouTube videos that show how it works that are spot on.
I paid full price on Amazon for my first one so this is a great deal.
So I donât have any issues with dairy, typically buy plant milks rarely (like if thereâs a deal), and my family consumes cow milk on the regular (and they tend to avoid the plant milks).
But my ultimate goal is to reduce animal product intake in my home for health reasons (still working to get my wife on boardâŚ).
I honestly didnât realize you could buy a machine to make your own plant milks till I saw this.
Would this machine make milk that I like better than the stuff I buy in the store?
Would this machine make milk cheaper than the stuff I buy in the store?
How long will this milk maker last?
âMilkâ has been used to refer to plant-based milks going back centuries. For example, the cookbook "The Forme of Cury,â which dates back to circa 1390, refers to âalmaund mylke.â
Just because people were wrong a long time ago doesnât make them right now.
Just because people today think people of the past were wrong doesnât make those people of today right.
Kinda like how people used to say that the Sun revolved around the Earth and that the Earth was flat