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Blender
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=== Europe === [[File:Karottensaft.JPG|thumb|An electric centrifugal [[juicer]]]] In Europe, the Swiss Traugott Oertli developed a blender based on the technical construction and design style conception of the first Waring Blendor (1937β1942),{{citation needed|date=December 2014}} releasing in 1943 the ''Turmix Standmixer''.<ref name="TURMIX">{{cite web |url=http://google.com/ |title=History of TURMIX |publisher=TURMIX |access-date=December 31, 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141231085555/http://www.turmix.com/en/ueber-turmix/geschichte/ |archive-date=December 31, 2014 }}</ref> Based on the blender, Traugott also developed another kind of appliance to extract juice of any juicy fruit or vegetables, the ''Turmix Juicer'', which was also available as separated accessory for use in the [[Turmix]] blender, the [[juicer]] ''Turmix Junior''. {{Interlanguage link|Turmix|de}} had promoted the benefits of drinking natural juices made with fruits and vegetables, with recipes using juices to promote its blender and juicer. After the World War II other companies released more blender in Europe; the first one was the popular Starmix Standmixer (1948), from the Germany company Electrostar, which had numerous accessories, like a coffee grinder, cake mixer, ice cream maker, food processor, thermic jar, milk centrifugue, juicer and meat grinder; and the Braun Multimix (1950) from Max Braun, which had an attachment with glass bowl to make batter bread and a juicer centrifuge like the one developed by Turmix.{{Cn|date=March 2025}}
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