Most frozen foods cook in an air fryer without thawing first, but take 20–50% longer than fresh equivalents. The standard rule: add 5–8 minutes to the fresh cook time and reduce temperature by 10–15°F. Always check internal temperature for meat and fish, regardless of cook time.
Do you need to thaw food before air frying?
No — one of the air fryer's biggest advantages is that most foods can go straight from the freezer to the basket. The rapid hot air circulation thaws and cooks simultaneously. The exceptions are: very thick cuts of meat (over 2 inches), where the outside may overcook before the center reaches temperature; marinated proteins where the marinade needs to penetrate thawed meat; and delicate items like thin fish fillets that benefit from a 30-minute fridge thaw for texture.
How much longer does frozen food take?
As a general rule, frozen foods take 20–50% longer than the same food cooked fresh or thawed. For example: fresh chicken breast at 375°F for 18–22 minutes becomes frozen chicken breast for 25–30 minutes. The first few minutes of cook time are spent thawing the outer layers. Shake or flip the food at the halfway mark — this is especially important for frozen foods to ensure even cooking.
Temperature adjustments for frozen food
You generally do not need to change the temperature significantly for frozen foods — the same temperature as the fresh version works. However, for thick frozen proteins, you can start 25°F lower for the first half of cooking to allow the center to come up to temperature more gently, then raise the temperature for the last few minutes to brown the outside. This prevents a burnt exterior with a cold center.
Reference times for common frozen foods
Frozen french fries: 380°F for 12–18 minutes, shake halfway. Frozen chicken nuggets: 400°F for 10–14 minutes, shake at 7 minutes. Frozen fish fillets: 400°F for 12–15 minutes, flip at 8 minutes. Frozen pizza rolls: 380°F for 6–8 minutes, shake at 4 minutes. Frozen potstickers: 380°F for 10–13 minutes. Frozen vegetables: 375°F for 8–12 minutes, shake halfway. Always adjust based on your specific air fryer and the brand's package instructions.
Häufig gestellte Fragen
Do you need to thaw food before putting it in the air fryer?
Usually no — most frozen foods cook better from frozen in the air fryer. Thawing first often makes coatings soggy (frozen fries, nuggets, fish sticks), causes delicate items to fall apart (mozzarella sticks), or makes the food go limp (burritos, spring rolls). The main exceptions: thick raw proteins like chicken breasts or pork tenderloin cook more evenly from thawed; very large items (whole frozen chicken) take impractically long from fully frozen. For most commercially frozen convenience foods, straight from the freezer produces the best results.
How much longer does frozen food take in the air fryer compared to fresh?
For raw proteins, frozen adds roughly 40–60% more time than fresh: a fresh chicken breast takes 12–15 minutes; a frozen one takes 20–25 minutes at the same temperature. For thin or small items (shrimp, fish fillets), the difference is 5–8 minutes. For pre-cooked frozen convenience foods (nuggets, fries, spring rolls), they cook only from frozen and the times on the packaging are already calibrated for cooking from frozen in an oven — in an air fryer they typically cook 20–25% faster. Always verify with a thermometer for raw proteins.
Why should you shake frozen food halfway through air frying?
Frozen foods clump together as they begin to thaw, and pieces that are touching each other will steam against each other rather than crisp. Shaking or tossing the basket at the halfway point separates pieces, exposes fresh surfaces to the circulating hot air, and ensures even browning all around. This one step is the difference between a batch of perfectly crispy fries and a batch where the pieces that were stuck together remain pale and soft.