34 Baking Recipes to Make the Most of Your Food Processor (2024)

A stand mixer may be the workhorse of my kitchen, but the food processor might be its unsung hero. While stand mixers excel at aeration, such as foaming eggs and sugar for a chiffon cake or creaming butter and sugar until fluffy and light for classic chocolate chip cookies, food processors are uniquely suited to an entirely different range of kitchen chores that make it just as vital to my work.

Thanks to its powerful motor and blade, a food processor is a remarkable tool for grinding chunky ingredients into a fine powder, giving stiff doughs a workout in record time, keeping fats cold as they're worked into flour, and blending toasted nuts into creamy butter.

Because some of those chores can be done with other tools, I don't want to focus on all the pastry projects a food processor can technically do; I want to focus on the jobs it does best. These are the kinds of chores that are accomplished faster, more easily, and more efficiently with a good food processor.

It's important to note that I'm talking about sturdy, large format machines, and not mini-choppers or "prep assistants." For more on what makes a good machine tick, see our guide to the best food processors.

I have a Breville Sous Chef at home, but enjoy using the Magimix and Cuisinart models we have in the Serious Eats kitchen, too, so there's plenty of brands (and price points) that can work for everyone.

Keeping Solid Fats Cool

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Quick breads, like biscuits, muffins, and scones, are traditionally made by combining the butter and flour up front. It's a common approach to making shortbread and other types of tender, crumbly cookies as well. This method coats the flour in fat, making it more difficult for gluten to form when the liquid ingredients are added later on.

It's a lengthy process when done by hand or with a pastry knife, which allows the butter to warm over time. This can often make doughs sticky and difficult to handle—hence why so many recipes include a step for chilling the dough before it's rolled and cut. Put a food processor on the case, though, and these chores can be done with cold butter in a few seconds flat, keeping the finished dough cool and easy to handle (and your hands clean).

It's my preferred approach for making delicate lemon scones, tender blueberry skillet cake, pumpkin coffee cake, and fluffy pancakes, as well as any cookie or cracker meant to have a crumbly, shortbread-like consistency.

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That category of cookies includes lemon meltaways, Mexican wedding cookies, digestive biscuits, Tate's-style thin and crisp chocolate chip cookies, and even Carr's-style whole wheat crackers.

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Working cold, solid fats into flour is also the underlying principle in Kenji's super-easy pie dough, and the crust for my silky lemon bars.

Promoting Gluten Development

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Not all types of bread dough do well in a food processor, but it's a powerful tool for those that require more structure than the average home baker has the skill to develop by hand. Think crusty dinner rolls and homemade bagels (whether plain or cinnamon-raisin), as well as chewy pizza crust, à la Kenji's famous Sicilian-style pizza (a weekly endeavor at my house).

My yeasted pumpkin bread relies on a food processor to turn a dry mess of flour and pumpkin purée into a soft and supple dough, and my 100% whole wheat bread and multigrain loaf use a food processor to develop gluten even with grainy formulas that aren't inclined to do so on their own.

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I also use my food processor to provide structure in crackers that need a crisp but sturdy texture, like homemade Wheat Thins or even beautifully blistered cannoli shells (yup, they're a type of cracker!).

Grinding

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A food processor is essential for working with freeze-dried fruit, as it quickly reduces the crispy pieces to a fine powder for making bright pink strawberry layer cake, fruit-infused whipped cream, no-bake cheesecake with freeze dried fruit, and fruity, no-churn ice cream.

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Plus, no other tool can pulverize dark chocolate finely enough for homemade brownie mix (traditional or vegan) and hot chocolate.

Wet Grinding/Puréeing

Not only can a food processor whip up run-of-the-mill purées, they're powerful enough to purée dried fruit—the secret to my homemade Fig Newtons—and they make short work of fibrous winter squash in bulk, for a silky-smooth pumpkin pie.

I also use my food processor to wet grind fresh herbs into sugar, as when I make basil mousse.

Wet grinding is also crucial processing nuts until they express their oils, a key step in made-from-scratch pistachio paste and homemade Nutella, as well as the creamy hazelnut butter used in my favorite hazelnut cookies.

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Perhaps dessert alone couldn't make the case for owning a food processor to anyone but a pastry chef, but, combined with its utility in savory applications, it's a tool that's worth the investment for serious home cooks.

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While it may not be an appliance for everyone, my food processor has more than earned its keep in the kitchen, making old techniques faster and less messy, while helping me discover new techniques altogether.

34 Baking Recipes to Make the Most of Your Food Processor (2024)

FAQs

How do I get the most out of my food processor? ›

Tips for Doing It Right
  1. Always insert the blade before adding food. ...
  2. Use the pulse button. ...
  3. Let hot liquids cool down. ...
  4. Purée soup ingredients without stock. ...
  5. Partially freeze meats and cheeses. ...
  6. Be patient when making nut butters. ...
  7. Avoid “mashed” potatoes.
Jul 12, 2020

What are 3 things you can do with a food processor? ›

Your food processor can tackle the tough and rigorous work of shredding, kneading, dicing and grinding, but it can also blend a combination of ingredients into hom*ogeneous mixtures in a similar fashion as a blender. Food processors often depend on a multipurpose blade set to a high speed to get the job done.

Can you use a food processor for baking? ›

As well as being able to make light work of food preparation in a matter of seconds, food processors can handle a wide range of baking tasks quickly and efficiently, from chopping, grinding and mixing to whisking, whipping and kneading.

What can I use my food processor for recipes? ›

Put Your Food Processor to Work
  1. Herby Butter Bean Dip. rated 4.0 of 5 stars. ...
  2. Kofta with Feta Cheese Sauce. rated 4.2 of 5 stars. ...
  3. Maamoul: Stuffed Date-Orange Cookies. rated 4.3 of 5 stars. ...
  4. Pizza Dough. rated 3.7 of 5 stars. ...
  5. Smoked Trout Spread. ...
  6. Good-on-Everything Green Sauce. ...
  7. Chicken Liver Pate. ...
  8. High-Tech Crackers.

What is the life expectancy of a food processor? ›

The average cost, energy consumption and lifespan of the most popular kitchen appliances
ApplianceAverage life expectancy of an item (years)
14Slow cooker8
15Food processor8.5
16Oven13
17Juicer10
22 more rows

What can a food processor do that a blender cannot? ›

Food processors are great for recipes that require chopping, making purees and even a flaky pie dough; they also come with accessories so you can slice and shred and sometimes dice and spiralize. Blenders are good for liquids, like smoothies, frozen drinks and soups.

Can you shred chicken in a food processor? ›

If you're using boneless, skinless chicken breasts, you can cut them into halves or thirds. Place the chicken pieces into the bowl of your food processor, and pulse for about 30 seconds, or until the chicken is fully shredded,” instructs founder and recipe writer Jessica Clark of Gluten Free Supper.

Can you make butter in a food processor? ›

Pour cream into a food processor

"Unpasteurized cream turns into butter more quickly, and tastes a lot better." If you can't find unpasteurized cream, you can add 1 tablespoon of crème fraîche to the cream, which will give the finished butter a flavor similar to cultured butter.

Can I mix cookie dough in my food processor? ›

While many cookie recipes are made by hand or in the bowl of a stand mixer, Beranbaum instructs bakers to whizz up the dough for this recipe—among several others in the book—in the food processor. Throughout The Cookie Bible, the food processor stars in recipes for tahini crisps, shortbread cookies, and biscotti.

Can I mix cake batter in a food processor? ›

Magimix Food Processors are famous for their 'all in one' baking method, and are able to blitz up a cake batter in as little as 7 seconds.

Can you put cake mix in a food processor? ›

You want to make a cake, so you need a stand mixer, right? And a blender for smoothies, and a food processor for finely chopping veggies. But hang on... your food processor can also mix cakes, your blender can do the veggies, and mixers come with attachments for all sorts of extra functions.

Can I use a food processor for cookies? ›

No need to use a mixer to create the best chocolate chip cookie recipe. Our Test Kitchen developed this easy cookie recipe using a food processor.

Is it worth getting a food processor? ›

Food processors tend to do a lot more, and it's worth considering what functions they offer before buying one. Most enable you to slice veg far faster than you could with a knife, whizz herbs for a garnish or mix a bread dough in seconds.

Can you make peanut butter in a food processor? ›

Food processors fitted with a multipurpose or S blade are the best option for making homemade peanut butter. Both large capacity and mini food processors/choppers can help you create your own nut butters, but you may need to adjust the recipe based on the size of your appliance.

How do you make slices thicker in a food processor? ›

Adjusting the Slicing Thickness of Food Processor

Set the desired thickness by moving the Knob to the left for thinner slices and to the right for thicker slices.

What are the rules for food processors? ›

Keep hands and utensils away from the blades:

Always turn the power off at the mains before putting your hands or any utensils near the blades. Only add ingredients to the bowl via the feed tube when the machine is in use, and never leave children unattended near sharp parts or a machine that is plugged in.

How many cups should my food processor be? ›

Small food processors are usually considered 6–9 cups while medium-size food processors can handle 10–13 cups and large ones can accommodate 14–16 cups or even more. Food choppers have some of the same functionality as food processors but are smaller, with about 3–5 cups of capacity.

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