Hot Wings, Part Deux: The Air Fryer Investigation
We investigate the claim that the best “deep” fried wings come from an air fryer.
“If you know, you know,” the converts will preach, claiming air-fried hot wings are the be-all and end-all take on the Great American Dish™. Admittedly not an unreasonable assertion, but as I’ve yet to do a cross-comparison with the baked variety, it’s not something I’ve been fully willing to accept. Thus, having recently added a Philips HD9650/96 air fryer to the arsenal, I prepared a proper comparison.
For this recipe, I went with a dry rub based loosely on my pineapple hot wings. This is my current preferred flavor profile—which I usually bake in the oven—and it’s a good recipe for testing consistency and flavor.
This air fryer recipe is for a dozen or so wings—if you go with drumettes, you’ll want to add pinch-plus more of each ingredient.
1 tbsp olive oil
2 tbsp paprika
2 tbsp cinnamon
2 tbsp garlic powder
Salt and pepper
Mix the spices and toss them with a dozen wings or drumettes—let sit for about half an hour.
Place the wings in the air fryer basket for 20 minutes at 400 degrees.
Give the basket a shake and fry for 5-15 minutes at 325 degrees—on the lower side for wings and the higher side for drumettes.
And that’s it. The baked version is pretty much identical, though use a meat thermometer to be on the safe side.
If you know you know, and if you have ever tasted air-fried wings, it won’t surprise you that the zealots are right: Going back to backed wings is not going to happen.
The flavors are fairly comparable, but that is where the similarities stop. Where the baked version is a smidgen too dry, the air fryer gives the exterior a good bite with juicy interiors. And the wings are not greasy—fresher tasting than even the best conventionally fried variety.
A predictable finding? Certainly. But, there are many out there who have not heard the good word, and it seems suitable that I join in and try to convince the hold-outs: This is the only way to prepare wings.
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Where you’ll see highly engrossing content like this:
Really, though, I do see myself using the feature. A writer-centric Twitter-style environment may just work. And it has already helped me find two quality Substacks I previously wasn’t aware of: Today in Tabs and the charmingly titled shit you should care about, daily.
Can’t wait to try them. Hope you are cooking. :)
Coincidentally I tried air-fried wings for the first time the other week.
I used two random rubs I had — one with a citrus twist — and did just the 20 mins at 200C, and then some extra minutes (I stopped counting) until the temperature probe was happy. I’ll try your second fry at a lower temperature.
The wings were excellent nonetheless. It’s like these devices were made for them.