Super Bowl
Air Fryer vs. Deep Fryer: Which Super Bowl wing wins?
A Buffalo, New York native decides once and for all which homemade chicken wing gets the crown.

To the permafrost people of Western New York, chicken wings arenât just delicious, hot sauce-slathered fried food, theyâre a full-blown, farm-raised, identity.
I should know, having grown up in the Canada of New York myself. If chicken wings are the regionâs religion, the Anchor Bar (the birthplace of the Buffalo wing) is its most vaunted house of worship, even if you (correctly) prefer Duffâs.
As an acolyte of the chicken wing, Iâm predisposed to not only sing its praises, but to call out blasphemy when I see them defiled by methods like baking, breading, or god forbid, steaming (shame on you, Alton Brown). Chicken wing law, if it were to exist on paper, dictates there is only one, true, preparation: the deep fry.
Yet, despite years of delicious fried wing tradition, alternative preparations continue to crop up, most recently in the form of everyoneâs darling, new kitchen essential, the air fryer â a device that inspires in me the sort of skepticism most might reserve for an âunknown callerâ ID or white powder in an unmarked envelope.
As skeptical as I am of the air fryer, and kitchen gadgets in general, Iâm equally as lazy, and if the air fryer stans claims are true, kitchen technology (yuck), might save me time, cleanup, and probably a massive coronary. So, with Super Bowl LVI around the corner, and all of the delicious wings that it brings, my curse of traditionalism can be your gift.
Letâs decide once and for all â air fry vs. deep fry: Which wing wins?
The game
Preparation â The goal for chicken wings is always maximum crispiness without any dryness. To achieve that end, I always prep wings in advance by salting them and popping them into the fridge on top of a cutting board thatâs wrapped in wax paper.
The salt, through osmosis (cool), draws water out of the chicken and flavors your wings, while the fridge, with all of its cool, dry, fan-driven air serves to dry the skin out even more. Both of those things add up to a dry wing skin thatâs primed for crispness in any preparation. Moisture, after all, is always the enemy of Maillard â the sacred reaction between food and heat source that creates browning.
The teams
Deep fry â Letâs rewind: I donât even own a deep fryer. Thatâs not because theyâre too expensive, or too big, or because Iâm afraid of going all Ark of the Covenant in a vat of hot oil, itâs because I have a secret weapon â a big-ass, eff off, cast iron wok that absolutely slays fried foods.
While you donât need a wok to deep fry (a heavy-bottomed cast iron pot, i.e. Dutch Oven, will do) its unique shape allows for optimum frying power if youâre using a gas range. Since wokâs are curved, they allow flames (and heat, duh) to creep up along the sides, meaning your oil gets ripping hot and and your heat is more evenly distributed. The concave shape also allows you to use oil more economically compared to a wide-bottomed pot or oven too. Youâll be grateful for that bit when it comes time to clean up, trust me.
Iâve deep-fried lots of wings sans fryer in my day, and the wok has a leg up on any pot or pan Iâve ever used.
Air Fry â There are no shortage of air frying options nowadays, but Philipsâ XL Digital Air Fryer consistently ranks among the top tier. This three-quart air fryer goes for $250 and has granular temperature controls in addition to âfat removal technologyâ â Philips claims its fryer creates a âtornadoâ of hot air that helps whisk away excess fats from your food.
All of the innards are non-stick, and the fryer doesnât even need to be preheated, meaning you get to just pop your food in, set the temperature and the time and let the machine do the rest.
Regulation
With wings cut, salted and primed for crispness via a few hours in the fridge, itâs time to get cooking. I divide the wings equally, with 12 going in the wok to deep fry and 12 going in the air fryer. As per usual, I pour a disturbingly large quantity of oil into the wok and start to preheat, cranking my biggest burner high enough so that the flame tongues the sides of the wok.
Since Iâm no air fryer expert, I reference a highly rated recipe for wings on the Food Network that suggests cooking the wings for 12 minutes at 360 degrees, turning them over, and re-inserting for another 12 minutes only to eventually finish them off at 390 degrees for 6 minutes.
I oblige and pop the wings into the non-stick basket and set the time and temperature (increments on the Philips fryer only move in increments of 25, so I set the fryer to 375 degrees). The basket, itâs worth noting, barely fits all 12 wings â and this is apparently the XL version.
With the wok oil up to temperature, I (with no caution exercised) start to submerge the second batch of wings in the wok. Satisfying fry noises ensued. As both batches do their thing, itâs a waiting (and flipping) game.
The score
There are a few important metrics to judging chicken wing superiority that encompass not just how the final product tastes, but the texture, appearance, and just how difficult it was to bring the wing to its desired form. First and foremost, letâs talk about texture.
Round 1: Crispiness
Deep fry â Crispiness is probably the biggest reason why I prefer to deep fry wings over baking or broiling. Iâve tried both, but neither gets to that satisfying level or crunch like a boatload of dangerously hot oil.
So, how did the deep fry perform its duties? Listen to the video below:
Air fry â Before I even start to talk about how Philipsâ lauded air fryer performs in its task of crisping up wings, I want to reiterate how deeply skeptical I am of trendy kitchen gadgets, which oftentimes fall short in their goal of mitigating cooking âinconveniencesâ that can actually just be improved with a little practice, technique, and some sharp knives.
With that out of the way, however, Iâd like to officially say I was blown away with just how well Philipsâ air fryer performs in its crispy wing assignment. Listen to the crunch from a sauceless air fried wing below:
The point goes to... DEEP FRY.
While I was impressed by how well Philipâs air fryer performs, the wings fried in my cast iron wok still take the crispy crown. Even with the point going to deep frying in this case, the contest is still a close one and the fact that you can actually brown a chicken wing using only hot air is, on its face, pretty damn cool.
Round 2: Convenience
If weâre comparing cooking methods, factoring in how difficult (or not difficult) the process makes your life is critical. Confit is delicious, for example, but when it comes to Super Bowl snacks, I think spinach artichoke dip will do just fine.
Deep fryer â In case you had any question, let me be very clear: frying things in a vat of oil is incredibly messy. Thereâs the splatter; the smell; the inherent danger of having that much volcanic oil in your home; and the ultimate letdown â the cleanup aftermath.
As amazing as your fried wings may be (and boy are they amazing) returning to your stove to find enough biohazard to fill a small bathtub is not fun. What exactly does one do with that much-used canola? Definitely not drain-worthy. The garbage? Probably too leak-prone. Maybe you go full-blown environmental catastrophe and dump it into the East River. In any case, the only options are bad ones.
Timing wise, the deep fry did cook 12 wings at a brisk 15 minutes, though thereâs the preheating factor, which took at least 5 minutes.
Air fryer â Not to go full anti-climax on you, but out-conveniencing a deep fry isnât actually hard work. The level to which Philipsâ digital air fryer exceeds in this department, however, is worth expounding on.
As I mentioned previously, Philipsâ fryer doesnât preheat, so cooking the wings is as easy as dropping them in the basket, punching in a temperature and time, and waiting. All of the components inside are non-stick so any leftover grease from the chicken is easily wiped away.
Since the air fryer doesnât use oil, there isnât much smell to contend with other than the scent of a chicken cooking. It goes without saying that the danger levels are obviously non-existent compared to burning yourself with a quart of flaming canola.
It takes 30 minutes to get wings to maximum crispiness, which may sound like a downside, but when you consider how inactive the cooking process is, 30 minutes feels more like 10.
The point goes to... AIR FRY.
This is an easy category for air frying given the inherent mess of dealing with all that hot, delicious, oil. I knew using Philipsâ machine was going to be easy, but am still surprised at how easy it really is.
Round 3: Taste
Deep fry â People deep fry things for a reason, the most obvious reason for which is that it makes stuff incredibly delicious. Fatty foods, however bad for you, taste amazing, and it comes as no surprise that chicken wings arenât any different. Even sauceless, my wok-fried wings taste amazing, especially since I bothered to salt them in advance.
Air fry â Air-fried wings arenât just easier to make and lower in fat, theyâre actually extremely well-browned. Browned foods â protein in particular â just taste better, and although fried wings bring an umami x-factor given their journey through a sea of bubbling fat, when sauces are involved (as it almost always is) itâs hard to tell the difference.
The point goes to... TIE.
This one is too close to call in regulation, folks. Weâre going to have to go to overtime to decide a winner.
OVERTIME
Iâm going to level with you all: I love chicken wings. I know thatâs probably a shock to you after reading 1,700+ words from me on the subject, but itâs the truth. I love chicken wings so much that Iâm willing to suspend years of tradition and bodily instinct that scream air fryers are inferior, and give technology a fair shake. I did this for you; I did this for science; I did this for The Wing.
But hereâs the bottom line: Deep-fried wings are better. They taste better; theyâre crispier; and they hold up when slathered in wet, sticky, sauces, and with all those superiorities in mind, for the purposes of this scientific test, I have to declare the winner... the air fryer. Sorry.
The Buffalo Billâs Scott Norwood missing a field goal wide-right to lose the Super Bowl.
Despite all the superiorities of deep-fried wings, there are some realities to deal with when it comes to making them at home. Number one: youâre making wings at home. The frying; the smell; the mess; all of those factors are tremendous hassles, and on a belly full of fried chicken and hot sauce, I need things to be easy.
Secondly, thereâs the sauce. Alone, the deep-fried wing tastes better, but after everything is gussied up in over-powering sauces (in the case of my test, Buffalo sauce or teriyaki) itâs nearly impossible to discern the difference between a deep-fried or air-fried wing â even if youâre really trying, and believe me, I was.
I have to declare the winner... the air fryer.
It shakes me to the core to be conveying these thoughts, but I stand by my words. Do I think deep-fried wings deserve to win? Of course. But in sports, just like in wings, there is no deserve, just a time, and a place, and a set of rules punctuated by a few bad calls. Ultimately fans and players are left with either pain or triumph, or in this case â a belly full of hot sauce, a plate full of chicken bones, and the realization that traditions were actually made to be broken.
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