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KitchenAid KFP0719BM0 food processor

KitchenAid KFP0719BM0 food processor Parts

Here are the diagrams and repair parts for KitchenAid KFP0719BM0 food processor, as well as links to manuals and error code tables, if available.

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Browse Parts for KFP0719BM0 Food Processor

  • Use & Care Guide (kfp0718*) for KitchenAid KFP0719BM0 - Part W11103322

    Housing unit parts diagram

    Use & Care Guide (kfp0718*)

    Part #W11103322

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Disc, Julienne (on Some Models) for KitchenAid KFP0719BM0 - Part W11239507

    Housing unit parts diagram

    Disc, Julienne (on Some Models)

    Part #W11239507

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

KitchenAid Food Processor KFP0719BM0 FAQs

For the KitchenAid KFP0719BM0 food processor, avoid items that can overheat the motor, crack the bowl or lid, or dull the cutting edges. In general, skip hot liquids, very hard or frozen-solid foods, and tasks that require a blender or grinder instead.

Foods and materials to avoid

  • Hot liquids or hot soups: heat and steam can force liquid up through the lid and create a messy, unsafe overflow.
  • Bones, pits, and very hard shells: these can chip or dull the blade and stress the drive system.
  • Fully frozen blocks of food (solid frozen meat, rock-hard frozen fruit): these can stall the blade and strain the motor.
  • Large amounts of thin liquid (smoothies, shakes): food processors do not blend like a blender and can leak or splash.
  • Very tough grinding jobs (whole spices, coffee beans): this is a grinder task; results are uneven and hard on the blade.
  • Sticky, elastic masses (very stiff dough beyond typical mixing): can wrap around the blade and overload the motor.

What to use instead (quick guide)

Task Better tool Why it works better
Smoothies, pureed soups Blender Handles liquids and creates a vortex for smooth blending
Coffee beans, whole spices Burr/spice grinder Designed for hard, dry grinding
Crushing ice Blender (ice setting) Built for repeated impact and liquid flow
Heavy bread dough Stand mixer Kneads without stalling the blade

If your processor struggles or leaks

If you notice leaking, poor chopping, or the unit bogging down, check for worn or damaged accessories and replace as needed.

Why it matters

Using the right tool and avoiding high-stress foods helps protect the motor, keeps cuts consistent, and reduces the chance of cracking the bowl or lid on your KitchenAid KFP0719BM0.

Last updated: January 2026

Martha Stewart has been widely associated with using a Cuisinart food processor in her kitchen, but that is separate from your KitchenAid KFP0719BM0. If you are choosing parts or accessories, match them to KFP0719BM0 so the bowl, lid, and blades fit and lock correctly.

What to do if you are trying to match her results

A chef’s brand choice matters less than using the right blade and feed method for the job.

  • Use the multi-purpose blade for chopping, pureeing, and mixing
  • Use the slicing disc for consistent slices (vegetables, potatoes, fruit)
  • Use the reversible disc when you want two cut styles from one disc
  • Use the dough blade for yeast doughs and heavier mixing
  • Avoid overfilling; process in batches for even texture

Parts that affect performance on KFP0719BM0

If your food processor struggles, leaks, or will not run unless you press down, the issue is often a fit or safety interlock problem with the bowl, lid, or pusher.

Symptom Most common cause Part to check on KFP0719BM0
Will not start Lid not fully seated or interlock not engaged Food processor bowl lid W11551396
Food pushes back up the chute Missing or cracked pusher Food processor pusher assembly W11569314
Uneven chopping Dull or nicked blade Food processor multi-purpose blade W11239491
Poor slicing results Bent or dull disc Disc, slicing W11319164

Why it matters

Food processors rely on tight-tolerance parts (bowl, lid, shaft adapter, blades) to engage the safety switches and spin true. Using the correct KitchenAid KFP0719BM0 parts helps prevent wobble, leaking, and inconsistent cutting.

Last updated: January 2026

If you want one food processor that “does everything,” we recommend choosing a full-size, multi-attachment model that can chop, slice, shred, and knead reliably. For KitchenAid model KFP0719BM0, the best results come from using the correct bowl, lid, and blade or disc for each task.

What “does everything” should mean

A true do-it-all food processor should handle everyday prep plus heavier jobs without stalling or leaking.

Look for these capabilities:

  • Chopping and pureeing: onions, salsa, hummus (multi-purpose blade)
  • Slicing: consistent veggie and fruit slices (slicing disc)
  • Shredding: cheese and potatoes (reversible disc)
  • Dough mixing: pizza or bread dough (dough blade)
  • Safe feeding: stable pusher and lid fit to reduce jams

Best choice depends on your most common jobs

Instead of chasing a single “best” brand, match the tool to the job you do most.

Your main goal What matters most KFP0719BM0 part that supports it
Everyday chopping Sharp, balanced blade Food processor multi-purpose blade W11239491
Thin, even slices True disc alignment Disc, slicing W11319164
Shred and slice in one Reversible disc design Disc, reversible W11319167
Dough and heavier mixes Dough blade shape Blade, dough W11319166

Quick buying checklist (so it really “does everything”)

Use this checklist when comparing models or deciding whether to refresh accessories on your current unit:

  • Choose a 7 to 11 cup size for most households (capacity sweet spot)
  • Confirm it includes at least 2 discs plus a multi-purpose blade
  • Make sure the bowl and lid lock securely and do not wobble
  • Prefer a wide feed tube if you slice a lot of produce
  • Replace worn accessories (cracked lid, dull blade) before replacing the whole machine

Why it matters

Most “it won’t do everything” complaints come from using the wrong attachment, a dull blade, or a lid/bowl fit issue. Keeping the correct KFP0719BM0 accessories in good shape improves performance more than switching brands.

Last updated: January 2026

A food processor is worth buying when you cook often and want faster, more consistent prep. With a KitchenAid food processor like model KFP0719BM0, we typically see the biggest payoff for chopping, slicing, shredding, and mixing tasks that would otherwise take a lot of hands-on time.

When a food processor pays off

  • You meal prep weekly and want to cut prep time for onions, carrots, cabbage, and herbs
  • You make dips and sauces (hummus, pesto, salsa) and want consistent texture
  • You shred cheese or slice vegetables frequently
  • You make dough occasionally and want less hand mixing
  • You want more uniform results than hand chopping

When it might not be worth it

  • You rarely cook at home or mostly use pre-cut ingredients
  • You have limited storage or counter space
  • You only need small-batch chopping (a mini chopper or knife work may be enough)
  • You dislike cleaning multiple pieces after each use

What to consider before you buy (or before you invest in replacement parts)

What you care about What to look for Why it matters
Prep speed Wide feed tube and stable base Less pre-cutting, faster slicing/shredding
Results Sharp blade and tight-fitting bowl/lid Cleaner cuts, fewer leaks, better control
Convenience Easy-to-clean bowl and lid You will use it more often
Longevity Replaceable wear items Extends the life of the machine

Why it matters

A food processor earns its keep by turning repetitive prep into a quick, repeatable process. If you use it even a few times a week, the time saved and consistency gained usually outweigh the cost and cleanup.

Parts that commonly affect day-to-day usefulness

If you already own the KitchenAid KFP0719BM0 and it feels “not worth it,” worn or missing accessories often cause the frustration. These model-matched parts are common fixes:

Last updated: January 2026

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