Driving across the border into Canada late this summer, the CBC anchor on the radio announced that a glut of blueberries had pushed their prices down to historic lows. Having brought a fancy new juicer with me, I sensed an opportunity.
The juicer in the back of the car was a Hurom H-AI, a sort of Maserati of juice machines, with a powerful motor that gives it a near-unflappable ability to liquefy whatever you throw in the hopper.
It is a very effective machine, but it had a lot of convincing to do if I was going to like it, as the damn thing costs $700—a number that created a hurdle I was worried I couldn't clear.
I dropped off my wife Elisabeth and the juicer at my mother-in-law's house and headed to the produce store, returning with a mammoth flat of blueberries and 50 loonies worth of other fruits and vegetables to throw in there.
A few years back, I reviewed one of the H-AI's predecessors, the Hurom HH Elite, and was curious to see what changes were in store. The major differences turned out to be the streamlining of the machine, and an extra hopper, this one a basket-like "self-feeding" number, allowing you to dump food in there en masse. I also wondered if the "AI" in its name stood for "artificial intelligence," but instead, a company rep told me that the letters have "no meaning."
As I unpacked these parts and accessories—13 to 15 of them, depending on how you count them—they spread out far enough to cover an entire dishcloth, with enough bits and bobs that I started to wish the juicer came with its own pegboard.
Still, that new hopper was nice. I could chop up some fruit and dump it in there with abandon thanks, in part, to a multi-armed spindle that twirls around and keeps things moving toward the auger. For most foods, it's a marked improvement over the traditional chute hopper.
This convenience does not mean less prep is involved. Unless it's something like those blueberries which just need a quick rinse, most of what you juice will require prep—washing, scrubbing, removing pits from stone fruits, and sometimes peeling. You'll also need to reduce your juice-ables down to what could be called "just bigger than bite size." This all takes a while.
