The most technically sophisticated mixer here. The flat beater has silicone scraper blades built in — it scrapes the bowl sides and bottom on every rotation, eliminating the need to stop and scrape by hand. A 550-watt motor, 5-quart bowl, and 12-speed electronic controller with a slow-start function that prevents flour clouds. Breville's build quality is excellent and the integrated scraper is a genuine time-saver for cake batters and cookie doughs.
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| Bowl capacity | 5 qt / 4.7 L |
| Motor | 550W |
| Included attachments | Scraper beater, dough hook, wire whip |
| Speed settings | 12 speeds + slow-start |
| Head type | Tilt-head |
| Warranty | 1 year |
The Breville Scraper Mixer Pro solves a specific, real problem: the need to stop the mixer, scrape down the bowl, and restart — typically two to three times per cake batter recipe. Breville's flat beater has silicone scraper blades moulded into its arms that brush the bowl sides and bottom on every rotation. In practice, this eliminates manual scraping almost entirely for batters and soft cookie doughs, saving three to five minutes of interruption per use.
The slow-start function is the second notable feature. At speed 1, the Scraper Mixer Pro ramps up over approximately two seconds before reaching full speed. This prevents the flour cloud that any stand mixer creates when starting with dry ingredients — a small but genuinely useful quality-of-life improvement that KitchenAid does not offer on the Artisan or Pro 600.
The 550-watt motor is the second-strongest among tilt-head models here (behind the Cuisinart SM-50's 500W — actually the Breville is stronger). The machine handles standard bread doughs adequately, though the tilt-head design limits stability under maximum stiff loads. The Breville is better suited to cake batters, cookie doughs, icings, and meringues than to artisan bread — for the latter, the KitchenAid Pro 600 or Kenwood Titanium are better choices.
The attachment ecosystem is limited: Breville offers a few first-party accessories, but nothing approaching KitchenAid's 59-point hub. At $349, it positions awkwardly between the excellent-value Cuisinart SM-50 ($199) and the KitchenAid Artisan ($449). The case for the Breville rests on one thing: if you bake cakes and cookies frequently and are tired of scraping the bowl by hand, the integrated scraper genuinely saves time and effort on every single use.
CA$469 · Prices in CAD. Ships from Amazon.ca.
See how the Scraper Mixer Pro (BSM800) stacks up against all 6 models in our full comparison.
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