If you spend half your evening chopping onions, shredding cheese by hand, or kneading bread with aching wrists, you already know what a food processor saves. The Cuisinart 14-Cup Food Processor (DFP-14BCNY) with its 720-watt motor sits near the top of Cuisinart's lineup for home cooks — large enough for a week's worth of meal prep or a dinner party's worth of dips, yet not so oversized it becomes a counter-hog. After four weeks of weekly use, here's the honest read.
Quick verdict
The Cuisinart 14-Cup is a capable workhorse for home cooks who regularly prep large batches or bake from scratch. The 720-watt motor tackles dough and hard vegetables without stalling, and the 14-cup bowl means you rarely need to work in stages. The trade-off: blades are not adjustable, so you're locked into a single slice thickness. If that doesn't bother you, it's one of the best values in its size class. Check the current price for the Cuisinart 14-Cup on Amazon
Who is this for?
This processor targets home cooks doing regular batch prep — anyone meal-prepping Sundays, feeding a family of four or more, or hosting dinner parties regularly. It's also the right call if you bake bread and want one machine that handles both chopping and kneading dough. The 14-cup capacity is the key differentiator: smaller 10- to 12-cup processors force you to work in batches when processing large quantities, and that extra two cups eliminates that frustration entirely. Casual cooks who only use a food processor a few times a month may find the capacity overkill.
Key features
720-watt motor
The 720-watt motor is the headline spec. More watts mean less strain when processing dense vegetables like carrots or nuts, and enough power to knead a standard pizza or bread dough without the machine crawling to a halt. This sits comfortably above entry-level processors in the 500–600W range.
14-cup capacity
The 14-cup bowl handles a full batch of pesto, four cups of shredded cheese, or a week's worth of chopped onions in one load. The detachable bowl sleeve assembly keeps the interior manageable for smaller jobs without sacrificing the full capacity for bigger tasks.
Feed tube options
Both a small and large feed tube pusher ship with the unit. The small tube handles single cloves of garlic or slim carrots without tipping them in sideways. The large tube takes whole or halved vegetables, which cuts prep time noticeably for things like chunked apples or halved potatoes.
Stainless steel blades and discs
Three dishwasher-safe accessories come included: a stainless steel chopping/mixing blade for sauces and dough, a 4mm standard slicing disc, and a medium shredding disc. All three disassemble for cleaning and fit standard Cuisinart replacement disc sets if you want to expand later.
Real-world performance
Over four weeks, the processor handled everything from weeknight pasta sauces to a holiday batch of hummus. Here's how it performed across tasks.
Onions for a big pot of soup — dropped six halved onions in the large feed tube, processed in roughly 30 seconds. Result was consistent dice with minimal cleanup: just the S-blade and bowl. Cheese for a family taco night — two cups of cheddar shredded in under 20 seconds. The medium shredding disc handled mozzarella and cheddar without binding. Pesto for six servings — basil, pine nuts, garlic, and parmesan pulsed smoothly in under a minute. The motor didn't slow, and the pesto held its bright green color without over-processing.
For pizza dough — the S-blade and pulse function kneaded a standard 500g flour dough in about two minutes. The motor stayed cool, and the dough came out smooth and elastic. One caveat: for the full 14-cup capacity, you'd need to split dough into two batches. Slicing carrots and potatoes with the standard slicing disc produced clean, even pieces at 4mm. The thickness is fixed — there's no dial to adjust — so if a recipe calls for thin-sliced potatoes, this disc won't get you there.
Pros and cons
See the structured pros and cons below the article for the full breakdown.
Verdict & price check
The Cuisinart 14-Cup Food Processor earns its place on the counter for home cooks who prep in volume. The 720-watt motor handles dough, hard vegetables, and nuts without flinching. The 14-cup bowl means fewer batches. The fixed blade thickness is the main limitation — if you need variable slice widths, look at models with adjustable discs. But for sheer capability per dollar, the DFP-14BCNY is a solid buy. Check the latest price for the Cuisinart 14-Cup Food Processor on Amazon

