How to Use an Air Fryer

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The Beginner Air Fryer Guide That Actually Makes It Easy – I get so many requests for how to use an air fryer from beginners, I wrote up this easy guide… I Wish Someone Had Told Me This Before I Used an Air Fryer!

I’m sharing my tips and tricks for using an air fryer, an easy guide for how to start using an air fryer, and the best foods to make – or to avoid – in the air fryer.

This is everything you will need to use a new air fryer, like a pro – including common mistakes, my favorite recipes, an oven recipe conversion guide, and more!

What is an Air Fryer?

An air fryer is a small countertop appliance that cooks food by circulating hot air around it, creating a crispy exterior similar to frying but with much less oil. It works like a powerful mini convection oven, which is why food cooks faster and browns so well.

How to Use A New Air Fryer

Before using an air fryer for the first time, remove all packaging and wash the basket and tray with warm soapy water. Run the empty air fryer at a high temperature (around 400°F) for a few minutes to burn off any factory residue. When cooking, preheat if the recipe calls for it, avoid overcrowding the basket, and use a light coating of oil for best crisping. Most foods benefit from shaking or flipping halfway through cooking.

Air fryers cook quickly, so check food early and adjust time as needed. Once you’re done, let the appliance cool and clean it after each use to keep it working well and tasting fresh.

I Just Got an Air Fryer, What Do I Do?

If you just got an air fryer for Christmas, and you’re wondering how to start air frying food, use this handy guide:

Unbox + Clean First

Before using your air fryer, remove all packaging, stickers, and inserts. Wash the basket and tray with warm, soapy water, then dry completely. This removes factory dust and can help prevent weird smells.

Know Your Air Fryer Type

  • Basket-style: Most common and easiest to use
  • Oven-style: Has racks and a door, more like a mini convection oven
    Controls vary, but most air fryers use temperature + time—that’s it.

Do a Quick Test Run

Run the empty air fryer at 400°F for 5 minutes. This burns off any manufacturing residue and helps you learn how loud and hot it gets.

Preheat (When It Matters)

Many recipes work best with a preheated air fryer – not only for cooking speed, but it can help prevent sticking.

  • Preheat air fryer at the recipe temperature for 3–5 minutes
  • Preheating an Air Fryer is especially important for fries, chicken, and anything you want crispy.

Don’t Overcrowd the Basket

Air fryers work by circulating hot air, so you need to have room for your food in the air fryer. If you crowd it, it will cook a lot more slowly and won’t give that like-fried crispy crunch.

  • Food should be in a single layer when possible.
  • Cook in batches for best browning and crisping.

Use a Little Oil (Yes, Really)

Air frying isn’t oil-free cooking – you will usually still use a tiny bit of olive or avocado oil.

  • Lightly spray or toss food with oil for better color and texture.
  • Avoid aerosol sprays that can damage nonstick coating – they add to that gummy, sticky, gross texture air fryer baskets can get.

Shake or Flip Midway

Most foods cook more evenly if you:

  • Shake the basket a few times while cooking.
  • Flip larger items halfway through cooking.

If your air fryer has a reminder beep—use it.

Start Checking Early

Air fryers cook fast and vary by brand.

  • Check food 2–3 minutes before the recipe time
  • You can always add time, but you can’t undo overcooking

Use Air Fryer–Safe Tools

  • Silicone tongs or spatulas
  • Parchment paper (with holes) or air fryer liners
    Avoid metal utensils that can scratch the basket.

Clean After Every Use

Let the air fryer cool, then:

  • Remove crumbs and grease
  • Wash the basket and tray
    This keeps smoke away and helps food taste better next time.

Common Air Fryer Beginner Mistakes

  • Overcrowding the basket: Hot air needs space to circulate—crowding leads to uneven cooking.
  • Skipping oil completely: A light coating of oil helps food brown and crisp properly.
  • Not shaking or flipping: Many foods need movement halfway through for even cooking.
  • Using aerosol cooking spray: These can damage the nonstick coating over time.
  • Cooking strictly by time: Always check early—air fryers cook faster than ovens.
  • Forgetting to clean: Built-up grease can cause smoke and affect flavor.

Oven to Air Fryer Conversion Guide

If you want to try air-frying foods you’d usually make in the oven, you’re in for a treat! I always love how recipes turn out in the air fryer. I end up using it time and time again. Because it cooks faster, we need to adjust oven recipes slightly.

When converting oven recipes to the air fryer:

  • Lower the temperature by 25°F
  • Reduce cooking time by about 20–25%
  • Start checking early and add time as needed

Example:
Oven recipe: 400°F for 20 minutes
Air fryer: 375°F for about 14–16 minutes

Air Fryer Temperature Cheat Sheet

Use this as a general guide—air fryers vary by brand, so always check food early.

  • French fries (fresh or frozen): 380–400°F
  • Chicken wings or drumsticks: 375–400°F
  • Chicken breasts: 360–375°F
  • Steak or pork chops: 400°F
  • Fish fillets: 360–380°F
  • Vegetables: 375–400°F
  • Reheating leftovers: 320–350°F
  • Baked goods: 300–325°F

What to Cook in an Air Fryer

In truth, my family uses our air fryer more than we use our oven – for just about anything we’d normally bake. I don’t have a microwave, but we use our air fryer to reheat just about everything.

Beginner Air Fryer Foods Great For Your First Time Cooking in an Air Fryer

To test out your air fryer and get used to cooking in it, I recommend cooking simple things that are designed to be forgiving. A few of my favorites include:

Best and Worst Foods to Make In Air Fryer

Knowing what to cook in an air fryer is an important first step – a few of my favorite – and least favorite – foods below:

Best Foods

  • French fries and potatoes
  • Chicken wings, thighs, and drumsticks
  • Breaded foods (cutlets, nuggets, tenders)
  • Vegetables like Brussels sprouts, broccoli, and carrots
  • Reheating pizza, fries, and leftovers

Foods to Avoid

  • Wet battered foods (they drip and don’t crisp)
  • Leafy greens (they blow around and burn)
  • Large roasts (cook unevenly)
  • Foods with very loose cheese toppings (can melt and drip)
  • Anything extremely light without oil (can dry out)

My Favorite Air Fryer Recipes:

If you’re looking for delicious, easy Air Fryer Recipes, check our Air Fryer Recipe Index, or find some of my favorites below:

About Courtney

Courtney loves to share great wine, good food, and loves to explore far flung places- all while masting an everyday elegant and easy style at lifestyle blog Sweet Cโ€™s Designs. Sweet C's devoted to finding the best food and drinks you'll want to make or find, around the world!

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