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My mom uses this in India. It is very convenient, has 5 types of detachable blades - some are smooth for mixing, while some sharp for chopping. I haven't been able to find a similar product on amazon.

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elexhobby
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  • Did you search for "stick mixer"? https://www.google.com.au/search?q=stick+mixer&oq=stick+mixer&aqs=chrome..69i57j69i60l5.912j0j7&sourceid=chrome&es_sm=0&ie=UTF-8 or http://www.amazon.com/b/ref=dp_brw_link?ie=UTF8&node=289916 – Ming Jul 10 '14 at 02:27
  • Yes, I couldn't find having chopping blades. – elexhobby Jul 10 '14 at 02:35
  • Is the second one I linked to below what you're looking for? – Jolenealaska Jul 10 '14 at 02:39
  • Ah yes, thanks! That is as close as you can get. Wish it was less powerful (150W vs 550W) - and thus cheaper - but I'm happy with this. Thanks again! – elexhobby Jul 10 '14 at 02:49
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    You're very welcome. You should be happy with that one, the reviews are very good, it seems to be a quality product. As a matter of fact, that one would replace my mini food processor that just died and I've wanted an immersion blender for some time, so I'm going to get it too :) – Jolenealaska Jul 10 '14 at 02:54
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    Yes, the reviews are indeed good. I ordered one. :) – elexhobby Jul 10 '14 at 03:28
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    @Jolenealaska Once you have an immersion blender you'll find yourself wondering how you ever survived without one. – Carey Gregory Jul 10 '14 at 04:43

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That's a hand blender, or immersion blender. They're common, Amazon has a bunch of them.

Here's one with interchangeable blades.

Jolenealaska
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  • Side note: They're sometimes called "liquidisers" in the UK/Commonwealth. Mind your spelling ;-) – hoc_age Jul 10 '14 at 15:54
  • That looks sooo weird with an S. – Jolenealaska Jul 10 '14 at 16:27
  • Didn't mean to be disruptive; OP mentioned India and it seemed relevant. Do you prefer "liquidiser" (sans trailing `s`), or "liquidiserz" (in the "can haz" sense)? ;-) A Google search for "[liquidiser](http://www.google.com/search?q=liquidiser)" returns many more useful results for this topic than does "[liquidizer](http://www.google.com/search?q=liquidizer)" (which looks sooo weird; won't you agree?). – hoc_age Jul 10 '14 at 17:52
  • @hoc_age :) Not disruptive at all. I just find the British "ise" odd looking, being more accustomed to the American "ize" – Jolenealaska Jul 12 '14 at 03:22