Vitamix just released a “smart” scale called the Vitamix Perfect Blend Scale, and this is my review. It’s an interesting device. I don’t think it is for everyone, but some people will love it. (Vitamix sent me one to review, and if you order one via one of my links, I get a commission.)

Here are the ways in which it can improve your blending experience:

Offers recipe exploration and reminds you what you can make.

Makes measuring easier, especially for sticky ingredients.

Guides you through more complex recipes.

Tracks nutrition.

Facilitates portion control.

Update: the scale is now available reconditioned at a discount.

What exactly is the Vitamix Perfect Blend?

The Vitamix Perfect Blend is a digital scale that wirelessly connects to your smartphone or tablet. Through their app (available for iOS and Android), you select a recipe, then it guides you through making it. In addition to making measuring things easier, it also makes a precise calculation of the nutrition information for your blend, which you can then log to Google Fit or Apple Health.

How the scale and app work

You put your blender container on the scale, then the app tells you what to add, and it tells you when you’ve added enough of that ingredient. A progress indicator shows on the scale display, as well as in the app, and then the app chimes once you’ve added enough of each ingredient. Its default behavior is to automatically progress to the next ingredient after the chime, although you can override it by tapping a step (and you can take ingredients out if you accidentally added too much).

Once you complete your blend, you can tell the app if you are consuming the whole thing, or only part of it. If you are having a portion, it prompts you to weigh out how much you are having, and then it logs the nutrition info.

Here is a 30-second overview from Vitamix:



Or you can check out Vitamix’s info page about the scale.

Product Background

Vitamix partnered with Perfect Company to make this scale. Perfect Company launched their first product in 2013, which was a smart scale specifically for making cocktails called the Perfect Drink. Then in 2014 they released the Perfect Bake. (The early versions used less precise scales and required a wired connection.) That history is relevant because 3 years is a long time for tech products, and they have been through several iterations. The result is that the app does almost everything I could imagine it should, and it works smoothly.

This year Perfect Company released the Perfect Blend. There is an unbranded version, and then there is the Vitamix version. The Vitamix version lets you customize the app for your particular Vitamix model. You can use the Vitamix Perfect Blend with all of the other Perfect apps, including the Drink and Bake. However, you need the Vitamix Perfect Blend scale to use the Vitamix-specific features of the app.

One of my concerns with the transition to the Perfect Blend from the previous products was that many smoothie ingredients are harder to divide precisely. When measuring liquids or powders, you can pour just the right amount, but when I make a smoothie, I often use whole fruits. I want to use 1 apple, not 5 oz of apple. How does the Perfect Blend deal with this? Two ways: you can just tap to the next step to move on, and the nutrition information will correctly use what was weighed. Or, you can adjust the number of servings (on the fly), and the app will scale all of the other ingredients accordingly.

One interesting thing is that if you make a recipe multiple times, the nutrition facts may come out slightly differently. That’s because each ingredient is weighed, and the app calculates the nutrition facts from the measured amounts.

A brief aside about Perfect Company Support: I emailed them a few times with questions, and each time they responded super promptly with knowledgeable replies. (I did not identify myself as a reviewer.) They appear to be making customer support a high priority.

Recipe Browsing

There are currently over 500 recipes in the app, and they plan on continually adding more. The app lets you set dietary preferences (vegan, vegetarian, dairy free, gluten free, egg free, nut free), as well as exclude specific ingredients. As someone who hates bananas, it’s nice to be able to exclude all of their recipes with bananas.

There’s also a part of the app called the Pantry where you can tell it what ingredients you have on hand, and it will find recipes based on those. However, I think this feature is better suited to the Drink and Bake apps, where more ingredients have a long shelf life. I can’t imagine entering different produce that I buy every week into the app, although I guess it would work with some blending ingredients.

The app also has a shopping list section that lets you add items automatically from a recipe. There doesn’t seem to be a way to get the app to export the shopping list, but I guess the advantage of keeping the list within the app is that once you buy the items, it lets you check them off and add them to your app Pantry.

The app also has a tool for setting up a meal plan. You add recipes by the day, and it can generate a single shopping list for you. Then you choose a start date, and it will prompt you with the recipes you chose, day by day.

Recipe Editing, Creating, and Sharing

If you don’t have all of the required ingredients for a recipe, you can edit a copy of the recipe, and make substitutions. To change an ingredient, you just select it, then you can choose a different ingredient. You can either select from a categorized list, or you can start typing, and it will search. Their system had all of the ingredients that I could think of already in it.

In the unlikely event that you have some ingredient that’s not listed, you find the ingredient that is closest, and then create a sub ingredient. This could be a weakness if you have something with a nutritional profile that doesn’t match anything else, because as far as I can tell, there is no way to edit nutrition profiles. That said, they have so many ingredients in the database, I don’t think it would be a significant problem. One weird thing is that you can’t view nutrition profiles for individual ingredients (you can indirectly, if you create a recipe with just that ingredient). [Update: You can now add custom ingredients with fully customizable nutrition profiles in the now-available app version 6.2. However, you still cannot directly view the nutritional profile of a built-in ingredient.]

Once you have an ingredient, there are a bunch of options for how to specify an amount. You can do it by count (e.g 10 almonds) or by measure. However, I found the count feature to not calculate nutrition stats for the recipe properly, so I think it’s best to go with measures. With measures, you can enter an amount either by weight or volume. Weight will be the most accurate, and you can use the scale to automatically record the weight of an ingredient to your recipe.

You can also create a recipe from scratch. For smoothies, it defaults to 3 ingredients for you to fill in, but you can easily add or remove ingredients. Then, if you create an account, you can save and share recipes. I created this recipe. Those nutrition facts were automatically generated by the app. You can view it in a browser without needing the app. If you have the app, you can tap to import it.

Using the Scale

One thing that briefly confused me is that the buttons do different things depending on if you do a short press or a long press. Once I figured out what was going on, it was easy enough. If the scale is not connected to a device, you can use it as a normal digital scale, and it also has a countdown timer. The scale defaults to grams, (which I like), but you can switch it to oz with a button press.

The scale has a blue backlight that comes on when there’s activity, and then after a while the light goes off, but the display stays on until you turn it off.

Much of the rest of the world uses scales in the kitchen more than Americans. I think scales are great for two main reasons:

More accurate than volume measurements. Volume measurements of liquids are OK, but once you have powders or chunks of things, volume becomes super imprecise. And leaves are especially bad. For the Kale in the above smoothie, there’s a wide range of volumes that I could describe it with, but there’s no question of the number of grams. Avoid dirtying measuring implements. Particularly if you have to measure sticky things like nut butter or honey, it’s nice to put ingredients directly into the container, instead of having to fill a measuring spoon or cup, and then having to get all of the sticky ingredient out of it.

I hope the advent of these sorts of smart scales gets Americans to use kitchen scales more.

The smart aspect of the scale also helps guide you through a recipe. Most of the things that I make with a Vitamix are simple enough that this doesn’t seem like that big a deal, but it could be for some people. Either if you’re just starting out, or if you want to make more complex things, the real-time step-by-step instruction could be helpful. It’s sort of like a futuristic cookbook.

Portion Control

Another useful thing about using this scale is that it guides you to make exactly the amount you intend. When you have a 64-oz Vitamix container, it can be easy to overdo amounts. It’s natural to keep putting things in until the container is full, but that results in a smoothie that is more than a single serving. Some people store leftovers in the fridge, but I like to drink smoothies right after blending for maximum freshness. One thing that previously helped me with portion control is to use the 32-oz container when blending a single serving, but using the scale is even more effective.

More about the App

Update: Vitamix and Perfect Blend updated the app significantly, and I wrote a new post about the the update.

You won’t be able to see the Vitamix-specific part until you connect a Vitamix Perfect Blend Scale, but you can preview the rest of the Perfect Blend app by installing it for free. It is in the Apple, Google, and Amazon app stores. That said, the magic really only happens once you connect the scale.

My one complaint with the app is that you cannot rotate the display. Phones are locked in portrait position, and tablets are locked in landscape. This generally makes sense, but if you have a small tablet like I do (Nexus 7), it would be nice to have the option to switch to portrait view. I contacted Perfect Company support about this, and they wrote back right away to say that others have made the same request, and that they are looking to add it to the app.

The Vitamix Part of the App

The Perfect Blend App just updated (to version 6.2), and it now contains Vitamix-specific content. There are two parts of this new content:

300 recipes submitted by Vitamix. Each of these recipes comes with a warning that it was designed for a Vitamix blender, and that it might damage a lesser blender. It turns out that you do not need to have the Vitamix scale to view these recipes in the app. When you connect the app to the Vitamix scale, it will ask what model and container you have. Based on your selection, the app customizes your experience. This is a neat feature, but at this point I am mostly disappointed by the customization.

Vitamix model and container customization

The main feature that gets unlocked by selecting a Vitamix model is that the app customizes the blending step of recipes. It matches the control panel of your particular model. So, if you have a model with presets, and there is an appropriate preset for the recipe, it will show you to use it (here’s the Pro 750):

If your model does not have presets, it shows instructions for what to do in real-time, along with a countdown timer (here’s the 5200):

As you can see in the above screenshots, you also get a custom container icon that matches your container selection.

The next thing is that instead of a generic blender icon beside your recipe, you get a Vitamix icon:

In principle this is a nice touch, but it partially comes up short: the blender icon does not depend on your model or container selection. If you have a C-Series Vitamix with 64-oz container, the icon matches, but if you have anything else, the icon will not look like your setup. This is not a big deal, but it’s a bit sloppy.

I was more disappointed that, as far as I can tell, the container selection does not influence the app other than to modify the container icon. I was hoping that the container selection would constrain the amount you can blend, but it does not.

Minimum blending volume is particularly relevant for thick things like nut butter or hummus, where you need to have enough volume to allow the tamper to properly push ingredients into the blades. The wider G-Series container requires greater minimum volumes than the narrower containers, but the app does not reflect this. Vitamix’s current solution is to use medium default volumes for everything, so if you stick with the default batch size, recipes should work in all containers. (The minimum required volume depends on the recipe, so if Vitamix properly implements it, this could be a super useful feature.)

In addition to not depending on the container, the batch sizes do not have reasonable restrictions. For example, in the peanut butter recipe I was able to adjust the batch size down to below 1 oz. That amount wouldn’t work in even the narrowest Vitamix container. This extreme example is obvious, but less obvious is the fact that you can’t make 8 oz of peanut butter. Also, the app does not prevent you from scaling up a batch beyond the capacity of the largest Vitamix container. When you adjust batch size, it does tell you the total volume, so if you pay attention it’s not a big deal. But I think it really should have a limit.

Interestingly, some recipes do enforce a minimum batch size. The hummus recipe does not let you select less than 9 servings, although you can adjust the serving size down to 1 oz, which would make the total volume too small to properly blend. So, it appears that the app has the ability to enforce minimum cutoffs, but, at this point, Vitamix has not properly used it.

Another part that Vitamix did not customize by model/container is blending time. They chose medium blending times that should do OK on all models. But if you have something tough like kale and berry seeds, the smaller S-Series models will take longer to get them totally smooth compared to the more powerful models.

There is some weirdness with to-go/personal blending containers. The app is built to let you choose a traditional blending container or a “personal” container, where you screw the blades onto the top of a cup, then invert it to blend. When you select personal blending in the app, it reverses the order of ingredients. This makes sense, since you invert the container to blend with personal blenders. However, the problem is that the app allows you to select personal blending, even if you have already indicated that you are using a model that is incompatible with the personal container. (Currently only S-Series Vitamix models can use a personal blending container.) The app also lets you select the personal container for all recipes, including ones that won’t work with it. For example, to make peanut butter you need to be able to use the tamper, which is not possible with a personal container.

I was also disappointed with some of the Vitamix recipes. There are two coleslaw recipes, but neither includes instructions for how to shred cabbage using a Vitamix. There is an easy technique, which they could have described. Instead the recipes just use the blender for making the dressing. If you are hoping the app will teach you how to put your Vitamix through its paces, the app currently comes up short.

This is a missed opportunity for “smart” behavior. I wish Vitamix had initially rolled out a smaller number of recipes and focused on making them truly smart, instead of the 300 not-so-smart recipes. I hope Vitamix updates the app to address these concerns. (One nice thing about it being an app is that Vitamix can seamlessly roll out updates to users.) [Update: Vitamix tells me that they hope to add the minimum and maximum volume limits in a future update.]

In the box

The Vitamix Perfect Blend comes with two smoothie cups. These are not quite as nice as Vitamix’s other on-the-go smoothie cup, which is double-walled, but they are decent. There is also a device stand for propping up your phone or tablet. The stand is slightly rubberized, and I found it to work well for holding a phone or tablet. There’s also a short paper instruction manual, but I was able to figure everything out before I got around to reading the manual.

Not in the box

You obviously need a smartphone or tablet to use the smart features, and no smartphone/tablet is included. You also need to provide 3 AA batteries or a micro USB cable for power.

Specifications

Units: g, oz, and lb

Resolution: 0.1 g/0.005 oz

Maximum weight: 6 kg/13 lb

Power: 3 AA batteries (not included) or micro USB cable (also not included)

Dimensions: 8.75 x 7.25 x 1.5 inches

Warranty: 1 year

Device Compatibility: Requires Bluetooth 4.0; Android 4.3+, iOS 7+, or Kindle Fire OS 4+

Price: $99

Summary

The nutrition and measurement aspects of this smart scale and app are great, but the Vitamix smarts are currently a bit lacking. This product could be great for you if you’re interested in keeping track of your nutritional intake. And it makes measuring easier and more accurate. It also gives a new way to discover recipes. Finally, if you are intimidated by any recipes, the app will guide you through making them. However, the Vitamix part of the app is currently lacking in terms of enforcing feasible batch size and teaching techniques like chopping vegetables.

Note that you can also use the Perfect Drink and Bake apps with the Vitamix Perfect Blend. (If you get one of the non-Vitamix Perfect scales, you can use the Perfect Blend app, but it won’t let you customize it to your Vitamix model. Update: the Perfect Blend app has been re-branded to be the Vitamix Perfect Blend app, and I am not sure if you still need the Vitamix scale for model customization.)

Also note that the scale is covered by Vitamix’s awesome 30-day risk-free in-home trial, in which they pay for all shipping and give a full refund if you decide to return the product within 30 days. Here’s the link to the Vitamix Perfect Blend.

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