Topzee EasyGo Blender review – Drink your fruit

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TopzeeEasyGo 6

REVIEW – Drinking your food has become a passion recently. Smoothies are the new fad for quick, frequently nutritious, usually fruity beverages. The folks at TopZee offered us their latest take on this, their EasyGo blender, and I have been playing with it for a bit. Let’s see the options and find out if it passes muster.

⬇︎ Jump to summary (pros/cons)
Price: $59.99
Where to buy: TopZee

What is it?

The Topzee EasyGo is a “Bullet”-style inverted blending system.

TopzeeEasyGo 1

What’s in the box?

  • Topzee EasyGo Blender Motorized base unit
  • Main container
  • Blade lid
  • Pour-spout lid
  • Instructions/recipe booklet

Tech specs

  • Powerful Ice Crushing
  • Excellent Milkshake Taste
  • Hands-Free Stability
  • Easy Dishwasher Cleaning
  • Work & Life Companion

TopzeeEasyGo 2

Design and features

The TopZee EasyGo Blender is a fairly large base (for a bullet-style blender), roughly 8” tall and 6” across. The 700 ml (23.6 oz.) max blending container is another 8”. The blending container is 4” wide at the opening and only tapers to 3” at the base, so it’s a big’n! (Compare it to a standard roll of paper towels in the lede photo above.)

The top screws on firmly, with three double-sided and double-edged blades bent into a very effective matrix. In black plastic with silver accents, the base will blend in easily (see what I did there?) with most modern kitchen decors. Both food-contact pieces of the unit are dishwasher-safe.

Four suction cups hold the unit in place on smooth surfaces during operation. The cord is about 36″ long. To engage the motor, simply press the assembled mixing unit into the slots in the base and press down, while turning slightly clockwise. It will lock into place (which I kept forgetting and holding it).

Performance

I made several different types of smoothies during testing. (Hey, it’s a tough job, but it needs to be done!) I used various combinations of bananas, blueberries, blackberries, yogurt, and oranges to make drinks. I also added some protein powder to a few, to test how well it dissolved. I was pleased with the performance of every combination.

TopzeeEasyGo 5

I followed the manufacturer’s suggestion and usually put in ice last, but I found over time that adding a bit of liquid would make the whole melange blend more readily. Especially when adding powders on top of the ice, I found that the blender made it into a semi-frozen wall that the other items could not penetrate. The liquid prevented this from happening and made it unnecessary to stop and shake things up.

I wish it had a way to pulse or chop, rather than an all-or-nothing motor speed. If I could pulse it a few times to get the ice broken up, and let some of the other items flow down, I think it would work better.

Last night, while editing this article, I peeled a few small oranges to make “full pulp” orange juice, and it was amazing how quickly things got liquified. I added a touch of water, a few ice cubes, and a scoop of vanilla protein powder. In a glass with some vodka and Licor 43, it was like a Dreamsicle with a kick. The aeration provided by the blender made the concoction creamy without adding any milk at all. You can’t shake it enough to get this texture. Screwdrivers in college were never this good!

Final thoughts

The “bullet” style blender has been around for a while. Rather than dumping items into a container with blades at the bottom, you dump them into a container, put on a top with blades, invert the whole, and put that lid into the motor mechanism. Sure, it’s still the same idea – blades being fed by gravity from a container – but because the blades are on the larger end, rather than down on the bottom, hopelessly stuck under it all, the bullet style encouraged you to – quite literally – shake things up. I’ve owned one or two of these over the years, but they always seem to suffer from poor motor function or small container size, which made cleaning down (up?) into the deep recesses difficult.

The TopZee EasyGo Blender suffers neither of those drawbacks. It’s never even paused on anything I’ve put into it, and I can put my whole hand into it enough to touch the bottom with my fingertips. Things just don’t get stuck inside it.

The strong motor and ease of cleaning means it may hang around my food prep area for a good long while. I look forward to tiki-type drinks made with quickly crushed ice and pesto with fresh basil and pine nuts this summer!

What I like about the Topzee EasyGo blender

  • Good sized container
  • Heavy-duty motor and base
  • Easy to use

What I’d change

  • Add a speed control or a few different speeds, rather than just full power.
  • Cannot add ingredients easily once processing has begun

Price: $59.99
Where to buy: TopZee
Source: The sample of this product was provided for free by TopZee and the company did not have a final say on the review and did not preview the review before it was published.

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