I got my QVC addiction from my late and much-missed mother-in-law, but really we each watch for very different reasons. Mom was a shopaholic, so the entire channel was a vice, but as a foodie, I find myself drawn more to programs like "In the Kitchen with David" with the delightful David Venable. Recently from that show, and pitch man Eric Theiss, we purchased a Power Air Fryer, and we love it.
I had always been wary of some of the air fryers I had seen on TV, shopping oriented or not. They never seemed to cook the food all the way through, fries Looking soggy, etc. The first time I saw Eric on David's show with the Power Air Fryer, there was a sound the fries made when they hit the plate out of the inner fryer pot - the same sound fries make when shaken to disperse salt in a metal bowl - the sound of crispy fries. They had my attention.
After seeing them and the fryer on QVC a few more times, we made the purchase of, for an excellent price, the Power Air Fryer XL Pro. We passed on the cookbook by Eric, but we did also get the barrel pan and the grill rack with the package. In a few days the Fryer arrived, and we have been thrilled ever since.
Of course the first thing I made was French fries, Nathan's, which have been an air frying favorite ever since. Following the simple picture touch screen directions - 400 degrees for 18 minutes - for fries, they came out perfectly golden brown. I thought at first maybe a bit too brown, and that I had actually made charcoal, but no, they were perfect, crispy outside and soft and hot inside. Near perfection.
Over the next few days, hell, the next couple weeks, we had a whirlwind of experimentation, seeing what we could and could not cook in the Air Fryer, and there's really not much that you can't. I learned that with those wonderful Nathan's fries, if you shake them halfway, and use more uniform sizes (I cut the longer fries in half) so they cook more evenly. You can also adjust time and temperature as you wish as opposed to using the touch screen options. These techniques are good tips for almost anything you cook.
I tried many different frozen fries options - shoestrings, steak fries, potato wedges, curly fries, waffle fries, tater tots, crinkle cuts, regular cuts - and also tried onion rings, as well as other stuff not usually covered in this blog like hot dogs, biscuits, hot pockets, motz sticks, scallops, shrimp, chicken, steak, burgers, hush puppies, cakes, and corn on the cob, that last one a particular favorite.
There is of course a learning curve. As opposed to food being underdone as I assumed would be a problem, it's very easy to overcook, so keep an eye on what you're cooking. Onion rings especially are easy to overdo. You can even do handcut fries, which come out amazing. So far the handcuts are the only item to which I've added oil, and then only a quick spray if at all.
The Power Air Fryer has been one of the best things we've purchased since we've been down here in Florida, besides of course the grill, which is my baby. That said, I love my Air Fryer. I don't miss our deep fryer, which we left in South Jersey, at all. Thank you, QVC!
I had always been wary of some of the air fryers I had seen on TV, shopping oriented or not. They never seemed to cook the food all the way through, fries Looking soggy, etc. The first time I saw Eric on David's show with the Power Air Fryer, there was a sound the fries made when they hit the plate out of the inner fryer pot - the same sound fries make when shaken to disperse salt in a metal bowl - the sound of crispy fries. They had my attention.
After seeing them and the fryer on QVC a few more times, we made the purchase of, for an excellent price, the Power Air Fryer XL Pro. We passed on the cookbook by Eric, but we did also get the barrel pan and the grill rack with the package. In a few days the Fryer arrived, and we have been thrilled ever since.
Of course the first thing I made was French fries, Nathan's, which have been an air frying favorite ever since. Following the simple picture touch screen directions - 400 degrees for 18 minutes - for fries, they came out perfectly golden brown. I thought at first maybe a bit too brown, and that I had actually made charcoal, but no, they were perfect, crispy outside and soft and hot inside. Near perfection.
Over the next few days, hell, the next couple weeks, we had a whirlwind of experimentation, seeing what we could and could not cook in the Air Fryer, and there's really not much that you can't. I learned that with those wonderful Nathan's fries, if you shake them halfway, and use more uniform sizes (I cut the longer fries in half) so they cook more evenly. You can also adjust time and temperature as you wish as opposed to using the touch screen options. These techniques are good tips for almost anything you cook.
I tried many different frozen fries options - shoestrings, steak fries, potato wedges, curly fries, waffle fries, tater tots, crinkle cuts, regular cuts - and also tried onion rings, as well as other stuff not usually covered in this blog like hot dogs, biscuits, hot pockets, motz sticks, scallops, shrimp, chicken, steak, burgers, hush puppies, cakes, and corn on the cob, that last one a particular favorite.
There is of course a learning curve. As opposed to food being underdone as I assumed would be a problem, it's very easy to overcook, so keep an eye on what you're cooking. Onion rings especially are easy to overdo. You can even do handcut fries, which come out amazing. So far the handcuts are the only item to which I've added oil, and then only a quick spray if at all.
The Power Air Fryer has been one of the best things we've purchased since we've been down here in Florida, besides of course the grill, which is my baby. That said, I love my Air Fryer. I don't miss our deep fryer, which we left in South Jersey, at all. Thank you, QVC!
1 comment:
Thanks Glenn! I will definitely get one.
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