Yes, juicing celery in a Ninja is doable—use a cold-press model, a micro-juice filter, or blend and strain for smooth results.
Effort
Yield
Smoothness
Blend + Strain
- Any Ninja blender works
- Add 2–6 tbsp cold water
- Press through nut-milk bag
DIY Method
Micro-Juice Filter
- Single-pitcher workflow
- Less mess, medium yield
- Great for daily 8–12 oz
One-Pitcher
Cold-Press Juicer
- Adjustable pulp control
- Higher extraction
- Quiet, quick cleanup
Max Yield
What “Juicing Celery With A Ninja” Actually Means
“Juice” can mean two different outcomes. One is true extraction, where a machine separates liquid from pulp right away. The other is a blender method that breaks celery into a drinkable puree you strain through a mesh or nut-milk bag. Ninja sells both styles: dedicated cold-press juicers and powerful blenders with an extract program. Your path depends on the gear you own and how much pulp you like in the glass.
| Method | What You Need | Pros & Trade-Offs |
|---|---|---|
| Cold-press juicer attachment/unit | Ninja NeverClog™ / JC151-series juicer | Highest extraction with adjustable pulp; fast cleanup; higher upfront cost. |
| Blender with Micro-Juice™ filter | IV700-series DUO with Micro-Juice™ | Built-in filter catches pulp; slightly lower yield than a cold press; quick single-serve batches. |
| Blend-and-strain | Any Ninja blender + fine strainer or nut-milk bag | Works with gear you already have; a bit more hands-on; yield varies with squeeze. |
Celery Juice With A Ninja Blender: Step-By-Step
This route is simple and budget-friendly. You’ll blend chopped stalks with a splash of water, then run the puree through a fine strainer. The texture ends up close to classic juice when you squeeze well. It also sits neatly between smoothies and clarified juice—right in that juice vs smoothie space many people enjoy.
Prep And Safety
Rinse stalks under running water and pat dry. Trim the base and any browned tips. Leaves add a peppery kick; remove them for a milder glass. For food safety, stick with water—no soaps or detergents. The FDA’s produce guidance calls for a thorough rinse under running water and skipping commercial washes.
Blending Ratios That Work
For each packed cup of chopped celery (about 100–120 g), add 2–4 tablespoons of cold water. Start low, then add more only if the blades struggle. Pulse to break down, then run an extract or smoothie program for 30–45 seconds until silky.
Straining For A Clean Finish
Line a bowl with a nut-milk bag or set a fine mesh sieve over a jug. Pour the puree through and squeeze to separate the liquid. If you like a richer mouthfeel, stop squeezing early and let a hint of pulp through. Chill and drink right away for the brightest flavor. Prefer a one-pitcher workflow? Certain systems include a built-in filter—see Ninja’s Micro-Juice quick start for how that insert works.
Using Ninja’s Micro-Juice™ Filter Or A Cold-Press Juicer
Some Ninja systems ship with a Micro-Juice™ filter that drops inside the blender pitcher. It catches pulp in one pass, which saves the straining step and keeps counter mess low. If you own a NeverClog™ cold-press unit, the feed chute and auger handle celery easily—cut stalks to fit and let the machine handle separation.
When A Cold-Press Shines
Cold-press gear extracts more liquid from fibrous stalks and usually leaves less foam. It also gives you control over pulp levels. If you make celery drinks several times a week, the hands-off process and higher yield can be worth it.
When The Micro-Juice Filter Makes Sense
You get a compact, single-pitcher workflow without extra bags or bowls. Yield is a touch lower than a dedicated juicer, but cleanup is quicker. For small daily glasses, it’s a practical middle ground.
Flavor Boosters That Keep Celery Center Stage
Celery’s clean, herbal bite pairs well with tart and sweet accents. Keep the base mostly celery if you want the classic profile, then add one balancing note.
Simple Pairings
- Green apple for a crisp, lightly sweet finish.
- Cucumber for extra hydration and softer edges.
- Lemon for brightness; peel the zest if bitterness bothers you.
- Fresh ginger for warmth; a ½- to 1-inch nub is plenty.
Light Salinity Trick
A tiny pinch of mineral salt sharpens flavor the way it does in tomato juice. Go easy—just enough to wake up the glass.
Nutrition Snapshot And Portion Cues
Celery is mostly water with a trace of natural sugars, some potassium, and a little vitamin K. A single large stalk won’t move the calorie dial much, which is why the drink tastes so light. For specifics, see the USDA-curated celery nutrition facts.
How Much To Make
Juicers pack liquid quickly, so start with one to two cups per person and scale from there. If you’re blending and straining, expect a bit less volume from the same weight of stalks.
Prep, Yield, And Foam: What To Expect
Celery varies. Older bunches can taste sharper and release less liquid. Younger, snappier stalks usually give a sweeter glass. Cut size and water level also change foam and yield.
| Prep Detail | Water Added | Typical Yield From 1 lb Celery |
|---|---|---|
| Fine chop, cold-press juicer | None | 10–14 fl oz, low foam |
| Chunked, Micro-Juice filter | 1–2 tbsp | 8–12 fl oz, medium foam |
| Blend-and-strain | 2–6 tbsp | 8–11 fl oz, depends on squeeze |
Gear Checklist And Smart Techniques
Best Blades And Cups
Ninja’s Hybrid Edge™ design handles fibrous produce well, especially in smaller cups where vortex control is tighter. If your base has an “Extract” button, use that profile for finer breakdown.
Cut Size And Loading
Two-inch pieces feed smoothly and reduce stalling. Load celery first, then any add-ins on top. For cold-press units, switch on before adding pieces so the auger is already moving.
Noise And Cleanup
Blenders run louder than auger juicers. If you’re sharing a space early in the morning, a cold-press unit keeps things quieter. Either way, rinse parts right after pouring to stop fiber from drying on surfaces.
Food Safety And Storage
Wash hands and boards before you start, rinse produce under running water, and dry the stalks. Skip soaps and commercial washes—plain water is the standard on the FDA page cited above. Store juice in a sealed jar in the fridge for up to 24 hours; separation is normal, so give it a shake before serving.
Troubleshooting Celery Juice In Ninja Appliances
Stringy Bits Sneaking Through
Run the drink through a second filter. A fine mesh sieve lined with two layers of cheesecloth catches stubborn threads without stripping all body.
Foam On Top
Let the jug sit for 2–3 minutes and skim with a spoon. Cooler water in the blend step also tames foam.
Low Yield
Use crisper stalks, chop smaller, and squeeze the bag longer. If your unit has a Micro-Juice insert, run one more quick cycle to clear pulp.
When A Blender Drink Beats Strained “Juice”
A blended celery drink keeps all the fiber, which can help with fullness and slow sugar absorption. If texture doesn’t bother you, skip straining and keep the pulp. That choice leans closer to a smoothie style than a clarified juice—great at breakfast with a side of protein.
Frequently Overlooked Details That Improve Results
Temperature Matters
Cold produce blends cleaner and tastes fresher. If bunches sat out, chill the chopped pieces for 10 minutes while you set up.
Leaf Ratio
Leaves bring aroma and a light bitter edge. For a sweeter profile, stick with stalks only; for a herbal profile, include a small handful of leaves.
Acid And Ginger Timing
Blend ginger and lemon with the celery for full extraction. If you prefer a clearer color, stir lemon juice into the glass at the end instead.
Quick Buyer’s Notes If You’re Upgrading
If you juice often, a dedicated cold-press unit makes daily glasses easier and quieter. If you make mixed drinks and soups too, a power blender with an extract setting covers more bases and still handles celery well with a strainer. Either route works; pick based on frequency, budget, and cleanup style you’ll stick with.
Bottom Line And A Simple Routine To Copy
Your Three-Minute Morning Flow
- Wash and trim 4–5 stalks; cut into 2-inch pieces.
- Blend with 2–4 tablespoons cold water until silky.
- Strain through a nut-milk bag; squeeze firmly; pour over ice.
If you own a cold-press model, feed the same cut pieces through the chute and skip the strainer. Either path gets you to a crisp, bright glass with minimal fuss. Want a fuller read next? Try our real fruit juice piece.
