this post was submitted on 27 Mar 2024
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I'm not here to convert you, but this is just as dismissive as OP. Yes it's a convection oven. We also have a full size convection oven. It does not cook things as dramatically faster as an air fryer does. It's not the same experience at all.
I say this as someone who literally said, "so it's just a small convection oven" until we got one. We have used it literally every day since getting it ~2 years ago.
It's not just any of these things:
There is so much air moving around in an air fryer that parchment paper without food holding it down gets immediately sucked against the circulating fan filter (which we learned the hard way) and lighter bits of food (like cooked bacon that you might toss in for a quick reheat) will swirl around inside the cook basket.
It may not be for everyone, but it absolutely does cook food faster than in a regular oven, sometimes by an astonishing amount. We have a short but significant list of things that we also think are noticeably better from an air fryer, and nothing I can think of that we've tried comes out worse.
What about frozen stuff?
Frozen stuff works great, everything from fries to eggrolls.
You will start to get an idea how long things take after you have it. Many things now have airfryer instructions, or there are lots of "how to make xxx in an airfryer" articles.
Generic airfryer instructions are usually pretty close for ours, but any given model may have its own cookbook with times for different sorts of things (ours does) and after awhile you'll get a feel for how to nudge generic instructions to fit your model.
For a very small number of specific kinds of breaded things, I'll spritz them with cooking spray when they go in to help them get more like they were fried in oil, but that's really personal preference and I only do it on a couple of things.
Get one with a big enough basket. Things need to be cooked in a single layer. You can pack it pretty full, but single layer is important.
Thanks