Yes, with a combo unit or by pairing a juicer with a blender, you can make smoothie-thick drinks using Breville gear.
Juicer Only
Soft-Fruit Purée
Bluicer/Blender
Extractor Only
- Clear juice base
- Add to blender later
- No ice or dairy
Light drinks
Juicer + Blender
- Extract base first
- Add frozen fruit
- Blend until creamy
Most flexible
Bluicer Combo
- Juice into jug
- Crush ice easily
- Fewer parts to wash
One-base setup
Why Smoothie Texture Needs More Than A Juice Extractor
Juicers separate liquid from fiber, while blenders keep everything in the cup. That single difference drives texture, thickness, and how filling the drink feels. A glass from a juice extractor runs thin and clear, with foam on top. A blended cup stays thick because the insoluble fiber remains suspended. If you want a spoonable, creamy result, you need blending somewhere in the chain.
Breville sells stand-alone juice extractors, stand-alone blenders, and hybrid “bluicer” models that let you run both in one base. With those choices on the table, you can build a setup that fits your counter and budget—without giving up the cold, velvety mouthfeel people expect from a smoothie.
What Each Breville Machine Actually Does
The quick map below shows which job each device excels at and where it comes up short.
| Device Type | What It Makes | Best Use |
|---|---|---|
| Centrifugal Juice Extractor | Clear, light juice | Fast carrot, apple, celery runs |
| Slow/Masticating Juicer | Dense juice with less foam | Leafy greens, wheatgrass, softer yields |
| Blender Or Bluicer Jug | Thick blends and shakes | Frozen fruit, ice, yogurt, nut butters |
Banana, mango, and berries don’t give free-flowing liquid in a juice extractor, so the yield turns into a purée or gets trapped in the filter. That’s why many owners route delicate fruit to the blender jug, then add extracted liquid for balance.
You also get a nutrition shift when you keep the pulp. Blended drinks retain fiber that helps with fullness and steadier digestion, while straight juice skews lighter and quick to absorb. That trade-off matters if you want the drink to hold you past mid-morning.
This is where conversations about fruit smoothies healthy usually land: use whole produce when you want lasting fullness; use juice when you want a light, fast sip.
Making Smoothie-Level Thickness With A Breville Juice Extractor
You’ve got three workable paths. Pick the one that matches the gear you own and the texture you prefer.
Path 1: Use A Bluicer Combo
Hybrid models let you extract juice straight into the blender jug, then spin everything until it’s creamy. You get speed from a wide feed chute plus the power to crush ice in the same base. That flow trims cleanup and removes guesswork on ratios, because you can watch thickness change as you blend.
Path 2: Pair A Juicer With Any Blender
Start by extracting a bright, watery base from apples, pears, or cucumber. Pour that liquid into your blender jug and add frozen fruit, Greek yogurt, oats, or nut butter. Pulse, then blend until the vortex pulls down evenly. The juice sweetens and thins the mix without added sugar, while the blender turns it silky.
Path 3: Purée With A Froojie-Style Insert
Some older Breville units include a soft-fruit disc and insert made for banana, mango, and strawberries. The attachment doesn’t aerate like a blender or crush ice, but it does push soft fruit into a spoonable purée you can swirl into extracted juice. The texture sits between nectar and smoothie.
Ingredients That Do And Don’t Work Inside A Juicer
Soft fruit with little free water clogs filters and won’t drip into the jug. Think bananas, ripe mango, or avocado. They shine in a blender. High-water produce—cucumber, melon, pineapple, grapes, citrus, celery—runs beautifully through an extractor and gives a clean base for thick blends. Starchy add-ins like cooked oats, nut butter, or protein powder belong in a blender jug only.
Dairy and alternative milks are blender territory. Don’t pour milk through a juice extractor; it’s built for produce. If you want creaminess, add milk to the blender after you’ve extracted your fruit and veg.
Texture, Nutrition, And Cleanup
Texture rides on particle size. A blender cuts produce into tiny pieces and traps air, which gives a fluffier feel. A juicer pulls liquid through a mesh, so the glass stays thin. If you crave a spoonable mix, you need blades. If you want a crisp, light sip, stick to extraction.
Fiber changes satiety. Keep the pulp and the drink fills you longer, handy if the cup replaces breakfast. Extract the pulp and you get quicker absorption with a lighter feel. Neither is “better” every time; match the method to your goal.
Cleanup differs, too. Extractors rinse fast when you do a same-flavor run. Blenders make short work of sticky ingredients, but the jug needs a warm soapy spin to release nut butter or yogurt. Combo setups cut the number of bases you wash, which can save time on busy mornings.
A Simple Ratio For A Thick, Cold Blend
Use a 1:1 base of extracted liquid and frozen fruit by volume, then adjust to taste. Start with one cup of apple-cucumber juice and one cup of frozen mango. Add half a cup of Greek yogurt for body, or a spoon of peanut butter for richness. Spin until smooth. If the mix stalls, stop and add a splash of juice, then pulse again.
Paths Compared: Which Setup Fits Your Kitchen?
Here’s a quick comparison of your options once you want a thick drink that still tastes bright.
| Path | How It Works | Pros / Watch-Outs |
|---|---|---|
| Combo Base (Bluicer) | Extract into the blender jug and blend | Fast flow; one base; handles ice • Higher cost than single-purpose gear |
| Juicer + Blender | Extract a base, then blend with frozen fruit | Flexible; easy upgrades • Two machines on the counter |
| Froojie Purée + Juice | Push soft fruit to purée; swirl with extracted liquid | Simple, spoonable nectar • No ice crushing; attachment availability varies |
Starter Blends That Always Work
Green Glow
Extract a base from cucumber, green apple, and celery. Blend with frozen pineapple, a handful of spinach, and a squeeze of lime. Add a spoon of chia seeds if you want more body. The greens taste bright, not grassy, because pineapple cuts the edge.
Strawberry Cream
Run pears through the extractor for a fragrant base. Blend with frozen strawberries and Greek yogurt. If you like a dessert note, splash in vanilla and a pinch of lemon zest. The combo pours thick enough to crown with a few strawberry slices.
Pro Tips For Thicker, Colder Cups
Chill Your Juice Base
Cold liquid helps the blend set up.
Use Frozen Fruit As “Ice”
Frozen mango or pineapple gives body without watering the drink. If you need extra frost, add a few ice cubes only after the blades catch a strong vortex.
Layer Ingredients For Easy Starts
Pour extracted liquid first, add powders next, then frozen fruit on top. That order helps the blades grab and reduces stalls.
Sweeten Smartly
Juice from pears or oranges brings natural sweetness.
Common Mistakes To Avoid
Don’t force banana through an extractor basket; you’ll get paste and a tough cleanup. Don’t pour milk through a juicer. Don’t run ice inside a juice extractor. And don’t forget that a quick spin of warm water and dish soap in the blender jug scrubs away sticky residues in under a minute.
Ready To Build Your Setup?
Pick the flow that matches your space and morning routine. Small ratio tweaks fix texture fast today, right away.
Want a fuller read on trimming calories without losing flavor? Try our low-calorie drink ideas.
