logo
Aldi is launching a £15 NutriBullet dupe in DAYS… and it's £55 cheaper than branded version

Aldi is launching a £15 NutriBullet dupe in DAYS… and it's £55 cheaper than branded version

Scottish Sun28-07-2025
Scroll down to find out what else landed in Aldi's middle aisle this week
BLAST OFF Aldi is launching a £15 NutriBullet dupe in DAYS… and it's £55 cheaper than branded version
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
ALDI is launching a £15 NutriBullet dupe in just days, and it's £55 cheaper than the branded version.
Whether you're aiming to be healthier by making a delicious morning smoothie, or fancy trying your hand at a hearty soup, blenders can be a great addition to any kitchen.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
2
Aldi's High Speed Blending Set is just £14.99
Credit: Aldi
2
The NutriBullet 600 is priced at £69.99
Credit: Nutribullet
However, with branded blenders setting you back upwards of £60, they can seem like an unaffordable luxury for many.
Thankfully, Aldi's budget-friendly Specialbuys are here to save the day.
From garden tools to beauty dupes, Aldi's bi-weekly middle aisle offerings are constantly wowing bargain-loving customers.
And landing on Thursday, July 31, the Ambiano High Speed Blending Set is sure to be another offering that will impress Aldi fans.
Aldi blender
The bargain gadget comes in three sleek colours, black, grey and red, meaning there is an option to go with every style of kitchen.
It's ideal for blending smoothies, juices and dips, and you can customise it with three different cup sizes.
The budget bit of kit also comes with two solid lids and a flip top to go lid for on-the-move sipping.
Aldi said: "Experience the convenience and power of the incredible 11-piece High Speed Blending Set - the ultimate tool for blending, grinding, and creating delicious dishes with ease."
The £14.99 tool will be located in the middle aisle of Aldi stores but you better be quick as it will only be available whilst stocks last.
Cheaper than a NutriBullet
The bargain buy is £55 cheaper than the NutriBullet 600, which retails for £69.99.
Aldi rolls out 'INSANE' shelf change to all 2,550 locations - and it means 33% more savings for shoppers
The 600 watt branded buy and the Aldi product look strikingly similar, and share many of the same features such as different sized cups and a number of lids.
It is unclear what the wattage of the budget product is, but The Sun has contacted Aldi to find out.
More Aldi bargains
Dozens of great Specialbuys landed in stores yesterday, including a cute and comfortable plush Bluey, Bingo & Muffin armchair, which the store said will be "perfect for your child to play, read or relax in".
It added it will "also make a great addition to any child's playroom or bedroom and is made of high-quality plush with a soft filling".
Why do Aldi and Lidl have such fast checkouts
IF you've ever shopped in Aldi or Lidl then you'll probably have experienced its ultra-fast checkout staff.
Aldi's speedy reputation is no mistake, in fact, the supermarket claims that its tills are 40 per cent quicker than rivals.
It's all part of Aldi's plan to be as efficient as possible - and this, the budget shop claims, helps keep costs low for shoppers.
Efficient barcodes on packaging means staff are able to scan items as quickly as possible, with the majority of products having multiple barcodes to speed up the process.
It also uses 'shelf-ready' packaging which keeps costs low when it comes to replenishing stock.
It costs just £24.99 but is not recommended for children under 18 months due it its size.
Other items in the sale for children include a Pokemon squish, for just £12.99, and a Pokémon squishmallow for the same price.
Shop around in the middle aisle and you'll also find a Bluey Soft Toy, for just £6.49, Play Doh Assortment (£5.99) and a variety of activity books for just 89p, with Giant Sticker Activity Books costing just £1.99.
Aldi said: "There's hours of fun to be had with these giant sticker activity pads. Includes stickers and plenty to colour in.
"Let their imaginations soar with their favourite characters."
The store adds these books "promote creativity and problem solving" while customers can choose from characters such as Bluey, Paw Patrol, Dino, and Unicorn.
Today's bargains also include items for parents such as a 10-can pack of Aspall cider for just £10.49, equivalent to £3.18 a litre.
In addition to these, there are Loaded Tasty Takeouts Burger crisps from Seabrook for only £1.25 a pack of 130g.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Aldi reveals 11 new stores opening this year - is one coming to a high street near YOU?
Aldi reveals 11 new stores opening this year - is one coming to a high street near YOU?

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Aldi reveals 11 new stores opening this year - is one coming to a high street near YOU?

Aldi has revealed it will open 11 new stores across the UK before the end of the year, on the same day it was beaten to the title of cheapest supermarket of the month. The supermarket says it will open a total of one new store a week on average before the end of 2025. Aldi said it is making a £650million UK investment this year, including refurbishing 35 current stores as well as the new openings. The German-owned group, Britain's fourth biggest supermarket, is recruiting for 1,000 store roles as it ramps up its store opening programme. Currently, Aldi has more than 1,050 UK stores with a long-term goal of reaching 1,500 stores. New stores opening in 2025 include locations in London, Liverpool, Leicestershire, East Sussex, Chesterfield, Kent, Durham, Tyne and Wear, Deeside and Caerphilly. Jonathan Neale, Managing Director of National Real Estate at Aldi UK, said: 'At Aldi, our goal is to make sure people across the UK have access to affordable, high-quality food, and opening new stores is key to making that happen. 'We're now opening an average of one new store a week for the rest of 2025, showing just how ambitious our plans are to build a store network that will help us reach millions of new customers. Aldi was beaten as Britain's cheapest supermarket for the first time in 20 months, with the price of the shop coming in 85p more expensive that Lidl in July 11 new Aldi stores to open in UK in 2025 Airfields, Welsh Road, Deeside Rockingham Road, Market Harborough, Leicestershire Fulham Broadway, London Pacific Drive, Eastbourne, East Sussex Mafon Road, Nelson, Caerphilly Ashford, Waterbrook, Kent Commercial Street, Shoreditch, London Philadelphia Lane, Houghton le Spring, Tyne and Wear Mill Road, Meadowfield, Durham Pendle Drive, Litherland, Liverpool Ringwood Road, Brimington, Chesterfield It comes after the discount supermarket loses out on the top spot in the Consumer group Which?'s cheapest supermarket of the month for the first time in 20 months After comparing a list of 76 items featuring both branded and own-brand items, including Birds Eye peas, Hovis bread, milk and butter, Aldi were pipped to the top. The analysis includes special offer prices and loyalty prices where applicable, but not multibuys. However, it has now been usurped by its German rival Lidl, where the shopping bill came to £128.40 on average across the month. The price of the same shop at Aldi was 85p more expensive than its fellow discount supermarket. The longer list at Asda cost £474.12, cheaper than Tesco with a Clubcard by £7.47 (£481.59). Which? researched the average price of popular groceries at eight UK supermarkets - the other six being Asda, Morrisons, Ocado, Sainsbury's, Tesco and Waitrose. In a longer list of 192 items, Asda remained cheaper than Tesco - even with a Clubcard. The study of bigger shops does not include Aldi or Lidl because they do not always stock some of the products on the consumer group's larger shopping list. Waitrose was the most expensive on average, with the bigger shop costing £538.33 - a difference of £64.21 compared to Asda - 14 per cent more. Waitrose was also the most expensive supermarket for a smaller list of items this month, totalling £170.91 on average. This means shoppers would be spending £42.51 more on the same shop at Waitrose than shopping at Lidl with a loyalty card, a 34 per cent increase. Families are said to be saving money by switching to simpler meals with own-brand products and fewer ingredients as grocery price inflation soared to an 18-month high. The prices of foods including fresh meat, chocolate, butter and spreads are now rising the fastest, although costs are falling for dog food, sweets and laundry products. The inflation rate hit 5.2 per cent for the four weeks to July 13 - its highest since January 2024, according to Worldpanel by Numerator, formerly known as Kantar. Revenues at many supermarkets in the UK are benefiting from the price surge with take-home sales at the grocers growing by 5.4 per cent in the four-week period. Lidl had a strong month as it hit a record high market share of 8.3 per cent, gaining 0.5 percentage points as it attracted more than 500,000 new customers to stores. Britain's biggest supermarket Tesco also did well as it boosted its share to 28.3 per cent as sales grew by 7.1 per cent, the fastest rate since December 2023. Sales at Sainsbury's increased by 5.3 per cent, putting its market share at 15.1 per cent – while grocery sales at M&S were 6.5 per cent higher than a year ago. Sales at the UK's fourth largest grocer Aldi increased by 6.3 per cent, bringing its share to 10.9 per cent. Aldi overtook Morrisons in autumn 2022, with the latter seeing sales nudge up by just 1.0 per cent and it now holds 8.4 per cent of the market. Ocado retained its place as the fastest growing British grocer as its sales rose by 11.7 per cent, exceeding the overall online market growth rate of 5.7 per cent. Online accounted for 12 per cent of all sales at the grocers over the past 12 weeks, with 23 per cent of households making at least one virtual shopping trip. But Asda saw its market share fall one percentage point from 12.8 per cent to 11.8 per cent; while Co-op's share dropped half a percentage point from 5.7 per cent to 5.2 per cent.

The supermarket own-brand salt and vinegar crisps that beat Tyrrells and Kettle on taste and price
The supermarket own-brand salt and vinegar crisps that beat Tyrrells and Kettle on taste and price

The Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Sun

The supermarket own-brand salt and vinegar crisps that beat Tyrrells and Kettle on taste and price

A HOST of supermarkets' own-brand salt and vinegar crisps have been crowned better than Tyrrells and Kettle. A blind test carried out by 72 crisp enthusiasts for Which? found six retailer own-brand varieties pipped their branded counterparts in terms of both flavour and price. 1 Tasters tried 10 different varieties of the popular flavour in total, including three branded bags - Tyrrell's, Kettle and Pipers. Which? testers found Asda 's Extra Special Sea Salt and Chardonnay Wine Vinegar Hand Cooked Crisps (£1.34 for 150g) came out top – scoring 78%. The crisps were rated highly on texture, thickness and flavour, earning a Which? Best Buy tag. Costing around half the price of the big brands, they also received a Great Value recommendation. Also impressing Which?'s tasters and earning the Which? Best Buy was Co-op Irresistible Hand Cooked Sea Salt and Chardonnay Wine Vinegar Crisps (£1.70 for 150g), which scored 75%. Tasters said they had an appetising aroma and appearance, with most agreeing they were the right thickness and crispiness. The majority of tasters said the saltiness of the crisps was good – though some found that the vinegar was slightly too much, so these would be a good choice for fans of especially zingy crisps. Aldi's Specially Selected Sea Salt and Chardonnay Vinegar Hand Cooked Crisps (£1.09 for 150g) scored 69% and were both the cheapest on test and a popular choice among Which?'s tasters who were impressed by the crispness and thickness. Most agreed that the seasoning was about right, though some wanted them to be a bit more salty, while others would have liked the crisps to be more vinegary. Morrisons The Best Hand Cooked Sea Salt and Suffolk Cider Vinegar Crisps (£1.30 for 125g) scored 67%. Most of the tasters in the test said these looked appealing. Two thirds thought they were the perfect thickness but lacked flavour compared to the Which? Best Buys. M&S Hand Cooked Sea Salt and Balsamic Vinegar Crisps (£1.80 for 150g) scored 66%. Half of Which?'s tasters found the salt level of these crisps to be perfect, though a third longed for a sharper vinegar kick. Despite their high-end reputations and prices, none of the branded crisps in Which?'s taste test scored as highly as the supermarket versions. Tyrrell's Sea Salt and Cider Vinegar Crisps (from £1.75 for 150g) scored 63%. While it was the best of the brands on test, they did not wow Which? tasters. Most of the panel enjoyed their thickness and crispness, but nearly half found these crisps pale-looking and lacking in flavour. Kettle Sea Salt and Balsamic Vinegar of Modena Potato Chips (£2.40 for 130g) scored 60%. These widely available Kettle crisps were judged to be mediocre, with thickness and crispiness being their stronger points. Many of Which?'s tasters thought they were bland, and would have liked them to be more salty and more vinegary. Pipers Burrow Hill Cider Vinegar and Sea Salt Crisps, the most expensive crisps tested at £3 per 150g, came in last with a disappointing 57%. While Which? tasters agreed these had a good thickness and crispiness, very few felt the salt and vinegar flavour hit the spot. Most wanted more flavour out of these pricey crisps. Jessica Carson, Which? food and health editor, said: "Our Which? taste tests show you don't have to splash out on the more expensive brand name crisps to get great flavour and a satisfying crunch. 'If you're after that classic salt and vinegar zing, a supermarket own-label is the best bet. "Asda's and Co-op's posh crisps wowed our panel of crisp connoisseurs – outperforming the big names on every front." In other news, a supermarket instant coffee was crowned better than a host of branded counterparts including Nescafe and Kenco. Plus, the supermarket ice cream that's identical to Magnum and 46% cheaper. How to bag a bargain SUN Savers Editor Lana Clements explains how to find a cut-price item and bag a bargain… Sign up to loyalty schemes of the brands that you regularly shop with. Big names regularly offer discounts or special lower prices for members, among other perks. Sales are when you can pick up a real steal. Retailers usually have periodic promotions that tie into payday at the end of the month or Bank Holiday weekends, so keep a lookout and shop when these deals are on. Sign up to mailing lists and you'll also be first to know of special offers. It can be worth following retailers on social media too. When buying online, always do a search for money off codes or vouchers that you can use and are just two sites that round up promotions by retailer. Scanner apps are useful to have on your phone. app has a scanner that you can use to compare prices on branded items when out shopping. Bargain hunters can also use B&M's scanner in the app to find discounts in-store before staff have marked them out. And always check if you can get cashback before paying which in effect means you'll get some of your money back or a discount on the item.

Lidl launches £19.99 self-cooling dog bed for the summer
Lidl launches £19.99 self-cooling dog bed for the summer

Leader Live

time8 hours ago

  • Leader Live

Lidl launches £19.99 self-cooling dog bed for the summer

Keeping your dog cool is very important during a heatwave, as they can get heatstroke without shade and plenty of water. Grooming your dogs can also be useful, as it can remove dead or excess hair, leaving a slightly less dense coat. The RSPCA also recommends giving your pet damp towels to lie on or an ice pack wrapped in a towel. Dogs can get heatstroke in heatwave temperatures, so owners need to look out for their welfare (Image: Getty Images) Lidl are offering a way to help with this, as they will be selling a Reversible Self-Cooling and Warming Dog Bed for £19.99. This will be available to buy in-store from Thursday, August 7, alongside some other pet products. Explaining how the product works, Lidl explained: "One side offers a cooling surface for hot summer days, while the flip side gently reflects the dog's body heat, creating snuggle-worthy warmth for cooler nights. "Available for only £19.99, this clever dog bed provides pups with year-round comfort." Lidl was set up in Germany in 1930 when Josef Schwarz became a partner in a company called Südfrüchte Großhandlung Lidl & Co. This had been established by Anton Lidl since at least 1858 under the name & Cie, specialising in the sale of exotic fruits. Schwarz renamed the company Lidl & Schwarz KG and expanded into a food wholesaler. In 1977, under his son Dieter Schwarz, the Schwarz Group began to focus on discount markets and larger supermarkets. Dieter wasn't keen on using his own name for this, as the name Schwarz-Markt translates to 'black market'. Recommended reading: Lidl shoppers 'can't unsee' hidden animal in supermarket logo - can you spot it? Tesco, Sainsbury's, Asda, Aldi, and Lidl to introduce huge car park changes Tesco, Sainsbury's, Morrisons, Asda prices set to increase by 33%, experts warn He wanted to use the name of his father's former business partner, but legal reasons prevented him from doing so. When he discovered a newspaper article about a painter and retired schoolteacher Ludwig Lidl, he bought the rights to the name from him for 1,000 German marks. From there, the Lidl name was used, and it expanded into many countries over time.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store