Find anything you save across the site in your account
All products are independently selected by our editors. If you buy something, we may earn an affiliate commission. Multi function pressure cooker
I purchased my first air fryer in 2020 as a way to alleviate the stress of making every single meal at home during the early months of the pandemic. Though it would later get recalled for literally catching fire, the Cosori Air Fryer Max XL was all the rage in my feed, and the Instagram girlies swore it was the key to making easy, nutritious meals. I hopped on the air fryer trend fast. I even got an air fryer cookbook. But the novelty of making “healthier” versions of fried food wore off, and, more importantly, my air fryer stopped working about six months in.
I had no plans to bring another air fryer into my life until I got assigned to test three of them for Bon Appétit. The trio included the Ninja Air Fryer Max XL, and I’m glad it was in the bunch. Two years later I still use it almost every day. I reach for it to reheat frozen lumpia and chicken nuggets, to make crispy-skinned salmon, and to roast vegetables. After my earlier failed interlude, I credit this machine with morphing me into a full-blown, loud-and-proud Air Fryer Person.
Ninja Max XL Air Fryer
Here’s what I’ve learned about the Ninja Air Fryer Max XL after using it to make breakfast, lunch, and dinner dozens and dozens of times.
The Ninja Air Fryer Max XL is a 5.5-qt. basket-style air fryer, which means you slide a tub for whatever you’re cooking into an opening in the machine, as opposed to an oven-style air fryer which looks like a giant toaster oven. Like all air fryers, it uses convection heating, a little built-in fan that circulates hot air around your food to cook it more quickly and evenly. This particular air fryer has seven cooking functions, which change the balance of top and bottom heating elements. Broil uses the top element, roast uses the bottom, for example. But it also has a very useful temperature boost Ninja calls Max Crisp that most air fryers don’t. Most basket-style air fryers top out at 400°F, but Max Crisp jacks the Ninja’s temperature up 450°F, allowing your food to get even crispier, faster. Do note that you shouldn’t confuse the Ninja Air Fryer Max XL with the plain old Ninja Air Fryer XL, which lacks this Max Crisp option.
The Ninja Air Fryer Max XL produces stellar results for typically fried dishes, like chicken tenders, crab cakes, and spiced potato wedges. I’ve used a number of basket-style air fryers, including the test kitchen favorite from Philips, and none of them turned out better results for chicken wings or fish milanese, which came out so crisp and golden brown from the Max XL that they looked like they were fried in a pan of piping hot oil.
This air fryer is versatile too. I use it to cook burger patties, breakfast sausage, dinner sausage (they are different!), as well as roasted veggies galore. Honey-butter brussels sprouts, blistered asparagus, and garlicky green beans are among my faves. I also turn to my air fryer for easy, weeknight pollo asado and make-ahead shrimp and steak for tacos, stir-fries, and rice bowls throughout the week.
Essentially, I turn to this air fryer to cook anything I used to cook in the oven or on the stove. It makes every task less messy, especially when I’m cooking meat and fish. I don’t have to worry about oil splatters, fuss with flipping salmon fillets, or stress over whether my food cooked evenly. I like that it only takes a couple minutes to preheat, and that air-frying really does speed up the cooking process. Meals in the Ninja never take me more than 20 minutes to cook.
This air fryer’s interface is also very easy to use. To start cooking, all you have to do is select a preset button, and the machine will automatically set the temperature and cooking time. For instance, the “Air Fry” button will set the temp to 390°F and time to 20 minutes. If you don’t want to use any presets, you can set your own temperatures anywhere between 105°F and 450°F. Unlike lots of other basket-style air fryers, this one doesn’t use a perforated “inner basket” within a larger basket for cooking, which can be bulky and finicky to install; instead, it comes with a nonstick, slotted plate that sits inside of the basket to allow air to circulate all around the food. Because it’s flat, the plate is easier to clean than the inner baskets you’ll find in air fryers from brands like Cosori or Philips, but it works just as well in terms of allowing air to circulate. The cooking basket and inner plate are also dishwasher-safe.
The biggest drawback of the Ninja Max XL is that it doesn't seem very XL. While it has a 5.5-qt. capacity (similar to most other air fryers labeled either “large” or “XL”), the inside feels a lot smaller. That’s because the basket is circular, not square.
The round basket makes this feel a smidge smaller than it actually is.
In my air fryer testing I’ve found square-shaped baskets provide some extra corner space that can fit more food. Even though Ninja calls this air fryer family-size, it’s more suitable for just two to three servings at a time. That said, you can purchase a special mid-level rack to stack inside the basket and add an extra layer for cooking.
The Ninja Air Fryer Max XL has a wide temperature range and gets much hotter than most basket-style models, allowing it to churn out particularly crispy versions of dishes you’d otherwise cook or reheat in the oven. Honestly, if it wasn’t for this little countertop appliance, I wouldn’t make breakfast, lunch, or dinner at home as often as I do.
More from Bon Appétit
Electric rice cooker © 2024 Condé Nast. All rights reserved. Bon Appétit may earn a portion of sales from products that are purchased through our site as part of our Affiliate Partnerships with retailers. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Condé Nast. Ad Choices