Milk Shake
Machine Vs. Blender
By Athena Hessong, eHow
Contributor
Milkshake
machines and blenders are both capable of producing
frothy ice cream-based drinks, but there are significant differences between
these. Restaurants noted for their milkshakes employ specialty machines to do
the job rather than relying on a bar blender, but when making milkshakes at
home, you likely put your blender to a second use rather than pulling out
another appliance. If making the perfect, diner-style milkshake is important to
you, you might want to consider getting a
milkshake machine to replicate the desserts you
covet.
Milkshake Machine History
Comparing milkshake machines to blenders in their history, the
milkshake maker wins the longevity race, but only by a hair. In 1911, Chester
Beach completed his work on a motor to run on both AC and DC power. He put this
motor into a blender specifically designed to blend a
popular brand of malted milk powder. Both Beach's company -- Hamilton Beach --
and the milk powder company -- Horlick's -- continue to make their wares today.
Blender History
Blenders came later
than milkshake machines, but not by much. It was not until 1922 when Stephen
Poplawski created the bar blender to prepare drinks at a soda fountain. Later
improvements and marketing by manufacturers in the 1930s and 1950s introduced
the public to the many uses beyond fountain drinks they could make with their
blenders at home.
Construction
A milkshake machine consists
of a spindle suspended from a motor. Commercial versions of the machine have
numerous spindles for mixing several milkshakes at once, a unit invented by
McDonald's founder Ray Kroc, called the Multimixer. This spindle is inserted into
a removable cup and blends and aerates the ingredients inside the cup. A blender has a
lidded jar which fits atop a motor. Blades inside the jar spin and aerate and
mix the ingredients inside the jar.
Uses
A milkshake machine mixes
drinks or thick batters, but that is all the machines will do. Milkshake
machines cannot crush ice, grind spices or make chunky soups smooth -- all
actions a blender can do. The best uses for a milkshake machine are for
combining drink ingredients, especially if one of the ingredients is a powder
like malted milk powder or drink mix. A blender will crush ice with other drink
ingredients for making icy blended drinks such as coffee frappes and blended
margaritas.
Milkshake Differences
Making a milkshake with a milkshake machine produces
a drink with a light and airy texture, but the machine will require twice as
long to run as a blender. Blender jars have a larger capacity than the cups
designed to fit under the spindle of milkshake machines, making the blender the
better choice for making shakes for a crowd. The milkshake machine has an
advantage over the blender. After pouring the milkshake into a glass, the
leftover shake in the bottom of the blending cup can be given to the drinker,
as is a customary practice in some modern soda fountain shops and diners. This
cannot be done with a larger blender as the
drinker could nick the base of a spoon getting milkshake from around the blades
at the base of a blender jar.
Original article
from: http://www.ehow.com/info_8578169_milk-shake-machine-vs-blender.html
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