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Cooking with an Air Fryer


mgaretz

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32 minutes ago, mgaretz said:

The new Ninja arrived today and guess what, I'm going to try a pork chop tonight! 

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Anna Nielsen aka "Anna N"

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So the pork chop came out a little underdone but that could be where I placed the thermometer.  Still quite edible but not as many crispy bits as with the old grill.  Straight grill marks on this version though.  The non-stick seems to be much better and the grill grate and "catch basin" are all one unit so less to clean.  Even though this one is bigger, it actually seems lighter in weight.

 

nnfg-pork-chop.jpg.b5114cb43bc64652d5219eb74a79cbf1.jpg

 

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Another convenience food success:  canned "popping" biscuits.     My little air fryer is set to 380F and I do ~10 min and then flip over to brown the bottoms for a couple more minutes.

 

I've had limited success with the "from frozen" individual biscuits.   I think I need to flip them about halfway through instead of near the end.  Like at 6 min into the time.  Otherwise they are slightly raw in the middle.

Edited by lemniscate (log)
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1 hour ago, lemniscate said:

Thanks to those who recommended the Alexia brand frozen fries.   We were pretty pleased with the crinkle version in the air fryer.

 

Alexia fries are on my menu for tonight -- assuming I can force myself to be hungry enough after the large, late breakfast I had at sundown.  Standard time throws everything off.

 

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23 hours ago, lemniscate said:

Thanks to those who recommended the Alexia brand frozen fries.   We were pretty pleased with the crinkle version in the air fryer.

Which Alexia crinkle fries did you have?  I like many Alexia products, but I haven't had their crinkle fries except for the sweet potato crinkles.  The big supermarkets here don't have them.  Sprouts appears to carry Alexia Garlic Fries (which are crinkles), and Natural Grocers appears to carry Organic Oven Crinkles and Smart Classics Crinkles (which are lower fat.) I don't go to those stores as often, but I'll pick up some Alexia crinkles next time I'm there.

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1 minute ago, Chimayo Joe said:

Organic Oven Crinkle

These.  Whole Foods has them.  I also bought the Yukon Gold frozen ones, but left them with another household for their air fryer.  There's a Crispy Rosemary Fries that I thought about but didn't buy.  I may pick those up later.  

 

FYI, the Crinkles don't get very brown but they do get crispy.

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Second try in the Ninja.  This chop came out better than the first one, very moist and juicy with enough crust.  However the device is a lemon.  The first time I used I had to plug the thermometer in a second time to get it to recognize it.  I chlaked it up to me not having plugged it in all the way.  Last night it took about 30 tries to get it to work, so it's getting exchanged.

 

nnfg-pork-chop2.jpg.e77378005d60aa5b928e48a18bc82ec2.jpg

 

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Tonight I cooked a burger and some snap peas on the grill in "lid open" mode to see how it did vs the Philips Indoor Grill.  The burger came out OK, nice crust but still medium rare inside.  I would say a little better crust than the Philips.  The snap peas cooked OK but the grill has a slant so the grease can run down and collect in a trough at the front side of the grill.  The peas kept rolling down and into the trough, and a standard pair of tongs was too wide to pick them out easily.  So I would say it's not for grilling things that can roll or slide easily.

 

My replacement grill arrives tomorrow, we'll see how that does.  I have yet to try the air fry mode.

 

At this point I am on the fence about whether to keep this one or revert back to my smaller one.

 

nnfg-burger.jpg.97bd2f129e1a5e282dc15efcc721cde4.jpg

 

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  • 5 months later...

With Bed Bath & Beyond going out of business and everything on sale, I figured it was time to get one.  I made french fries today.  They were better than oven baked in a gas stove but I was disappointed that they said frozen store bought fires do better than fresh cut ones.  Tomorrow I'll do some fried chicken thighs.

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11 minutes ago, Norm Matthews said:

With Bed Bath & Beyond going out of business and everything on sale, I figured it was time to get one.  I made french fries today.  They were better than oven baked in a gas stove but I was disappointed that they said frozen store bought fires do better than fresh cut ones.  Tomorrow I'll do some fried chicken thighs.

 

Curious - which one did you get?

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9 minutes ago, Norm Matthews said:

frozen store bought fires do better than fresh cut ones. 

In my experience this is true if you just compare the frozen potatoes with fresh potatoes in the air fryer. But! If you do a little prep work, and I know you're not afraid of that, you can wind up with something that is way better than frozen.

Bear in mind that I cannot get russet potatoes here and I can very seldom get good yellow potatoes so I have to use the waxy white ones.

The way I prepare my potatoes is to cut them in wedges, microwave them in salty water until they are about 3/4 done. Then I drain them and dry them. After this I coat them with a couple tablespoons of cornstarch and let them dry for a while. Before putting them in the air fryer I drizzle them with a little bit of oil and shake them thoroughly. At this point you can add any kind of seasoning that you want but do not add more salt.

 I make pretty small batches so about 15 to 20 minutes at 400° turns out a pretty crispy, almost puffy french fry.

Just don't forget to shake them as they are frying

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@Tropicalsenior  I think I'll try this recipe I have had for a few years and it turns out very well. I will cut them thicker and freeze them without the first fry time, then use them in the air fryer;

 

McDonalds French Fries

 

Cut potatoes into 1/4-inch strips, soak in water a couple minutes, transfer to pot with water to cover.. about 4 cups.  Add 2 Tbsp salt and 2 Tbsp. white vinegar and turn heat on high.  When boiling, time for five minutes, then transfer to cold water to stop cooking.  Spread on dish towel and dry.   

 

Fry @ 375 for just one minute.  Drain and freeze.  When ready to cook fry from frozen@ 375 for three minutes, transfer to paper towels, salt and enjoy.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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To my dismay, my girlfriend bought one. Took up almost as much space as a chamber vac or commercial ice cream machines (things I deny myself, because there's no room to spare).

 

Her dream was to make crispy sweet potato fries. That project failed, so she sent it back, thank Bezos.

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Notes from the underbelly

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8 minutes ago, paulraphael said:

To my dismay, my girlfriend bought one. Took up almost as much space as a chamber vac or commercial ice cream machines (things I deny myself, because there's no room to spare).

 

Her dream was to make crispy sweet potato fries. That project failed, so she sent it back, thank Bezos.

 

Crispy sweet potato fries are a challenge with deep fat fryers too.  I've never been happy with ones I make.

 

I think SPs lack the starch that potatoes have and  there's less to crisp-up.  Perhaps a starch coating.....

 

 

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@Kerala I wouldn't believe the nutrition facts.  Other spray fats make the same claim but the amount they call a serving is a nano second worth of spray.  Any amount of duck fat will have the same amount of fat and calories as any other fat.

 

@donk79 and everyone else here is what I did and what we thought about the results.

 

These are the ingredients I used and I cooked 4 thighs in the air fryer.. that is how many I could put in without crowding too much.   Just before I put them in the fryer, I sprayed two of them with the duck fat.  I used just enough to tell they were evenly covered but no more.  Maybe about a second or two worth of spray on each side. i didn't tell Charlie that one was different until he'd tasted both.  Both of us thought the one with the duck fat was tastier.  I don't think it made any difference in texture or appearance but we both thought the duck fat one was better tasting.

 

Air Fryer Fried Chicken

 

1 C. Buttermilk

1 Egg

 

 

marinate chicken in above 30 min.

 

dredge in seasoned flour:

 

2 C. flour

1 T. salt

1 1/2 tsp. dried thyme

1 T. galic powder

1 1/2 tsp. ground black pepper

1 tsp. ground mustard

2 T. Paprika

1 T. onion powder

3/4 T. ground white pepper

 

Let rest 20 min.

 

cook according to air fryer directions.

Edited by Norm Matthews (log)
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18 hours ago, paulraphael said:

To my dismay, my girlfriend bought one. Took up almost as much space as a chamber vac or commercial ice cream machines (things I deny myself, because there's no room to spare).

 

Her dream was to make crispy sweet potato fries. That project failed, so she sent it back, thank Bezos.

 

18 hours ago, gfweb said:

 

Crispy sweet potato fries are a challenge with deep fat fryers too.  I've never been happy with ones I make.

 

I think SPs lack the starch that potatoes have and  there's less to crisp-up.  Perhaps a starch coating.....

 

 

 

I think similarly about sweet potatoes; I've never seen them crisp, only tried them in restaurants, and they're always not good.

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