Smeg SJF01 Slow Juicer review

Good looks and great tools

(Image: © Future)

TechRadar Verdict

The Smeg SJF01 Slow Juicer is basic in its offering, but its stylish body will serve you well.

Pros

  • +

    Juice density regulation lever

  • +

    Large capacity juice and pulp jugs

  • +

    Matching Smeg appliances available

Cons

  • -

    Basic juicing functions

  • -

    Foam separator not included

  • -

    A little on the heavy side

Why you can trust TechRadar We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

Italian domestic appliance manufacturer Smeg is best known for its range of curvaceous 1950s-style appliances that come in a selection of pastel and pop colors. As well as large appliances including fridge freezers, dishwashers and washing machines, the company has a selection of matching small countertop appliances, which includes the Smeg SJF01 Slow Juicer. 

With its instantly recognizable retro good looks, the Smeg Slow Juicer makes a stylish addition to the kitchen countertop. To find out if its performance is as attractive as its aesthetics, we take a closer look at its offering. Read on for our full review of the Smeg SJF01 Slow Juicer, and for how it stacks up against the best juicers out there.

(Image credit: Future)

Price and availability

Amazon is currently stocking the Smeg SJF01 Slow Juicer for £359.99 / $472 / AUS $688 with a two-year guarantee. You’ll also find it at Appliances Direct for £499.96 / $655 / AUS $956.

If you're able to find it at the cheaper of those prices, it puts the Smeg appliance in the same sort of price range as the Sana EUJ-707 juicer by Omega, which is priced at £369 / $ 483 / AUS $705 online at UK Juicers and Amazon. The Omega model currently stands as our favorite juicer on test.

(Image credit: Future)

Design

With its clean-cut retro 1950s good looks, the Smeg Slow Juicer has plenty of appeal. If you already own one of the brand’s classic fridge freezers, washing machines or coffee makers, the juicer will feel like a natural choice. 

Its smooth body is tactile and looks clean on your worktop. Its design is well suited to standard juicing functions, with a slim hopper and pusher for feeding through the produce and a seal on the juice outlet to stop any spillages onto your worktop. Assembling the motor is straightforward with clear instructions in the manual on how to attach the parts and simply drop them onto the base. 

(Image credit: Future)

Two jugs – a 1.6 litre one for pulp and a 1 litre one for juice – will come in useful for preparing large batches in one go, although the design lacks a foam separator should you want to divide the froth from your juice yield when you pour. Two cleaning brushes – one with a pointy end and small brush for getting into hard to reach places – make clear up relatively painless.

(Image credit: Future)

Performance

The Smeg Slow Juicer comes with a fine and coarse strainer so you can use it for leafy green vegetables as well as harder fruits such as pineapple, provided the skin has been removed. 

Its 150-watt motor is designed to slowly compress the nutrients from each ingredient. Having used it to juice a number of hard and soft fruits and vegetables we found it a little heavy handed on the finer produce – producing very little juice when we inserted leafier greens such as spinach and kale. 

(Image credit: Future)

Carrots, apples, pears and beetroot however worked particularly well, producing a satisfying amount of liquid and little dry pulp. It’s also a relatively quiet machine, and reached a reasonable 89 decibels when we used it to juice a broccoli floret. 

As well as a reverse function button, which you can use should any ingredients get stuck in the motor, a juice density regulation lever helps you adjust the thickness of your juice – the manual explains how best to use it but the general idea is to switch it to the half-open position when the final ingredients of your juice are added. 

Verdict

With two strainers for clean juice or thicker soups and smoothie-type drinks, a recipe booklet and easy to clean body, the Smeg Slow Juicer has an enticing offering. While it may not be your first choice if you’re serious about juicing, it’s a safe bet for seasonal use. 

  • Want to blame it on the juice? Find out how well the Smeg SJF01 Slow Juicer performed against its rivals in our Best juicer for 2020 test feature. 
Emily Peck
Lifestyle journalist

Emily is a lifestyle journalist who writes for a range of publications including TechRadar, Livingetc, Wired, Ideal Home and GQ. She writes about interior design and smart home, gardens, wellbeing, food and fitness and has tested everything from food processors to paddleboards, and bee hives to the best beds. When she’s not typing away at her computer, she can be found tending to her Dorset-garden, trying the latest water sport at the beach or acting as chauffeur to her two young kids.

Latest in Juicers & Blenders
Nutribullet Flip blender on pink background with white text reading "TechRadar big savings"
This Nutribullet blender transformed the way I make protein shakes, and it's going cheap at Amazon
Ninja Creami on a blue background with the text lowest price
Want to get fit for 2025? Then grab this Cyber Monday ice cream maker deal – no seriously
Blender full of vegetables on blue background with text reading "TechRadar lowest price"
Pip pip purée - Vitamix and Ninja blenders are going cheap for Cyber Monday
Ninja Creami ice cream maker on turqoise background
The Ninja Creami is my secret weight loss weapon, and now it's got a massive Prime Day discount
ice cream maker against blue background
Hurry and get these pre-Amazon Prime Day Ninja blender and ice cream maker deals before they disappear
Woman putting ingredients in Nutribullet SmartSense blender
Nutribullet's new blender makes everything from nut milk to soup with a single touch
Latest in Reviews
openSUSE Tumbleweed main image
openSUSE Tumbleweed review
Nitrux OS main image
Nitrux OS review
ManageEngine OpManager Professional 12.7 main image
ManageEngine OpManager Professional 12.7 review
Linux Mint 21.2 main image
Linux Mint 21.2 review
Tiger Woods and Matt Fitzpatrick on the PGA Tour 2K25 artwork
I’ve spent hours honing my swing in PGA Tour 2K25, and while its shot craft remains excellent, familiar frustrations can’t keep it totally out of the rough
Millie Bobby Brown's Michelle armed with a paint gun while standing next to some robots in Netflix's The Electric State movie
The Electric State could have been a great Netflix sci-fi movie, but it's just more evidence that it's Marvel or bust for the Russo brothers