
Tefal ActiFry Genius XL
The ActiFry uses a paddle that gently stirs food while hot air circulates, which means your fries actually toss in the spoonful of oil rather than sitting in a basket. The result is the closest air-fried fries get to the real thing. Capacity is generous enough for a family of four, and the lid latches tight so spatter is non-existent. The paddle pops out for dishwasher cleanup, which is the feature I appreciate most.
I have fried wings and fries in everything from a big oil bath to a tiny air fryer. These five low-oil fryers actually deliver crispy results.
I have been frying chicken, fries, and tempura at home for years, and the constant tension is always between flavor and the gallon of oil that traditional fryers demand. Low-oil deep fryers and high-heat air fryers have closed the gap dramatically. The best ones now turn out crispy fries, juicy wings, and even crunchy schnitzel using a fraction of the oil, with cleanup that does not ruin the rest of the evening. These are the five I have actually used in my kitchen.
| Fryer | Oil Capacity | Type | Best For |
| — | — | — | — |
| Tefal ActiFry Genius XL | 1 tbsp | Rapid air | Family-size fries |
| Ninja Foodi Dual Zone | 1 tbsp | Air fryer | Two foods at once |
| Cuisinart CDF-100 | 1.1 L | Compact deep | Battered foods |
| Philips Premium XXL | 1 tbsp | Rapid air | All-purpose air fry |
| Presto FryDaddy | 4 cups | Mini deep | Small batches |
Our testing process
We compare every pick against the field on real specifications, certifications, and aggregated owner reviews. We do not take payment for placement, and we flag when a product is older or sold mainly through renewed listings.
Quick comparison
| Pick | Best for | Score | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tefal ActiFry Genius XL | 1 tbsp | Check price | |
| Ninja Foodi Dual Zone | 1 tbsp | Check price | |
| Cuisinart CDF-100 | 1.1 L | Check price | |
| Philips Premium XXL | 1 tbsp | Check price | |
| Presto FryDaddy | 4 cups | Check price |
Reviewed in detail

Tefal ActiFry Genius XL
The ActiFry uses a paddle that gently stirs food while hot air circulates, which means your fries actually toss in the spoonful of oil rather than sitting in a basket. The result is the closest air-fried fries get to the real thing. Capacity is generous enough for a family of four, and the lid latches tight so spatter is non-existent. The paddle pops out for dishwasher cleanup, which is the feature I appreciate most.

Ninja Foodi Dual Zone
When I want wings in one basket and fries in the other, the Dual Zone is what I reach for. The two baskets cook independently with different time and temperature, and the sync button finishes them together. Crispiness on chicken thighs is excellent thanks to the high-power fan, and a teaspoon of oil tossed on potatoes gets you genuine restaurant-style fries. Cleanup is easier than my old oil fryer by a mile.

Cuisinart CDF-100
For battered fish, onion rings, or anything that needs to fully submerge, you still need a small traditional fryer, and the Cuisinart CDF-100 uses only 1.1 liters of oil. That is a fraction of a typical 3-liter unit, and it heats up in five minutes. The basket is small but the temperature recovery is fast, so you can do batches without the oil dropping below frying temp. Excellent for a couple or small family.

Philips Premium XXL
The Philips XXL is the original rapid-air fryer and still one of the best. The bowl is large enough for a whole chicken, the temperature range goes up to 400 degrees, and the airflow pattern is engineered well enough that you barely need to shake the basket. It costs more than the Ninja or budget air fryers, but the build quality and consistency justify the price for daily users.

Presto FryDaddy
When I want classic French fries or hush puppies for two people, the FryDaddy is my answer. It uses just four cups of oil, heats in eight minutes, and you can leave the oil right in the unit covered between uses. It is not fancy, has no digital controls, and there is no thermostat dial. It heats to a fixed 375 degrees and that is the whole interface. Sometimes simple is the right answer.
Common questions
Air fryers and rapid-air models get close to 90 percent of the texture for breaded foods and french fries. For battered foods like fish and chicken, a small-capacity traditional fryer still wins because the batter needs to float.
Every six to eight uses for clean foods like fries. Sooner if you fry breaded or fishy items. Strain through a coffee filter between sessions to extend life and reduce off-flavors.






