Ambiano Immersion Blender Coming to Aldi
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EDITOR’S NOTE: Updated for 2025.
I stumbled upon the best recipe for homemade tomato soup years ago. It involved simmering canned diced tomatoes into the slow cooker along with fresh diced carrots and onions, basil, chicken broth, cream, and parmesan cheese, among other things.
While you can serve this particular soup without pureeing it, my family and I like when it’s blended smooth. Pureeing hot soup in a traditional blender can be tricky because the steam can cause the lid to pop off, and you risk getting burned by soup spraying out. So I decided to buy an immersion blender — also sometimes called a hand blender — to get our soup smooth without a lot of hassle.
Immersion blenders feature a handheld blender without a jar or other container for holding the food you’re blending. You put the blender blades directly into whatever container holds your food, whether it’s a pot of soup or a tall smoothie bottle. These types of blenders are good for pureeing lobster bisque, whipping eggs, blending pancake batter, or making various sauces.
Immersion blenders have several advantages over traditional countertop or jar blenders, depending on what you’re making. They’re convenient because you can blend food right in the pot you’re cooking it in without transferring it to a separate blender. They’re also good at blending large amounts of food that might not fit in a countertop blender, and they can be good for blending small amounts of food that might be difficult to mix in a countertop blender.
Aldi occasionally sells immersion blenders or hand blenders, including a model that comes with a chopping bowl. I own an older Aldi immersion blender that came with a chopping bowl, and while the blender is great, I never use the chopping bowl.
The most recent immersion blender at Aldi features a simple stick blender with a separate whisk attachment but no chopping bowl. Here’s more information.
What We Know:

The Ambiano Immersion Blender is an Aldi Find, which means it’s only in stores for a short time. Each store is supposed to get one shipment, and after that sells out, it’s gone unless Aldi decides to bring it back at some point. Aldi does not offer online ordering for products not currently in stock at your local store.
This is scheduled to be in Aldi stores the week of September 3rd, 2025.
The immersion blender cost $14.99 in September of 2025, September of 2024, and September of 2023. This is cheaper than the model Aldi sometimes sells that includes a chopping bowl, because here you’re not paying for the addition of the chopping bowl. This is also on the lower end of prices for immersion blenders on Amazon.
Here’s more information about the 2025 Aldi immersion blender:
- Available in black, green, or white
- Includes whisk attachment to whip eggs and emulsify vinaigrettes
Aldi has not yet published details about the 2025 blend, but the 2024 version had a 500W motor that “easily blends, chops, crushes, and purees.”
The 2022 model came with a three-year warranty. We don’t yet know if the 2025 model has a warranty.
This is sold under the Ambiano brand. That’s not a company. Instead, it’s the name Aldi puts on kitchen products it sells, which it sources from various suppliers.
What We Don’t Know:
We haven’t tried this particular blender model, so we don’t know how well it works or how it holds up to regular use. We write open threads so readers can discuss Aldi products.
Do you own the Ambiano Immersion Blender? Tell us your thoughts in the comments below.

This is returning to Aldi the week of September 4th, 2024, while supplies last.
I have the 2023 model. It has held up better than pervious Aldi ones. I don’t use it everyday. But when I do, it gets a workout. Usually making smoothies from frozen fruit or milk shakes.
Bought this and love(d) it right away.
I realized after the first use that the instructions for cleaning seemed to not account for liquids traveling up the shaft.
Lots of sites say to submerge it in a glass of soapy water, run it, swap for clean water and do it some more.
Sounded like a good idea. I thought I did it really well after making a smoothie this afternoon. When I took it out of my drainer and shook it to see if it was dry, cloudy liquid came out. 😛
There seems to be no way to disassemble and clean it. These don’t say they’re dishwasher safe (not that I think that would help).
I’m open to advice on this. I’d prefer not to return it (unless someone can recommend a better brand).
As a follow up, yes, I’m returning this.
I do like it, but even after realizing this needs AGRESSIVE cleaning, it’s nearly impossible to clean completely.
After my last mixed berry smoothie I cleaned it a LOT.
Shaking the stick today, liquid came out that was clear but colored lightly purple with a berry seed.
Debris checks in, but it won’t check out.
I saw the number HB-6001 on both models. This seems to be connected to https://abuler.com/ who seems to be the manufacturer of these including the original variable speed one I had. However, there is no model on the site with this number.
Using it to puree in the pot pays for it first time.