Iâve gone to a friendâs place that used one of those kmart airfryers to cook some chips. I was thinking about this, and Iâd rather trade a bit of functionality for a single device I donât need to get out of storage and plug in every time I need to use it
Comment on Daily Discussion Thread: đ˘đĄđ˘ Tuesday, September 10, 2024
CEOofmyhouse56@aussie.zone â¨2⊠â¨months⊠agoYou have to keep in mind that the combos donât work as well as a traditional bucket airfryer. You are better off buying a small airfryer from kmart to try out. Alot of people recommend them.
tombruzzo@aussie.zone â¨2⊠â¨months⊠ago
CEOofmyhouse56@aussie.zone â¨2⊠â¨months⊠ago
I get it. Space in my small kitchen is at a premium. I have a microwave/ convection oven/ grill combo and it works well but it is not the same as a bucket airfryer and donât believe people who say it is. The convection oven part is just a smaller oven. An bucket airfryer is like a Ferrari.
Baku@aussie.zone â¨2⊠â¨months⊠ago
Iâve never tried one of those convection combos, but I do highly recommend an airfryer with 2 baskets. It does depend on what youâre cooking, but Iâve used air fryers with one big basket, and air fryers with 2 smaller ones, and I definitely prefer the smaller 2 basket ones
If youâre cooking bigger things frequently, then the large one might work out for the best, but the largest things I regularly cook are chicken schnitzels (my butcher does massive heart shaped ones), and chicken Kievs. I prefer to cook those either in the oven or fry them in oil anyway, so it doesnât bother me
I usually use the air fryer for lunchy type things like chicken tenders, chips, or hash browns. Sometimes sausages. But I can fit about 4 large tenders or 6 sausages per basket, so it works out just fine for me