23 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Perfect deep fryer for a large family, March 15, 2006
This review is from: Oster 0DF540 Classic Stainless-Steel Immersion Deep Fryer (Kitchen)
This deep fryer is large enough to cook enough fried food for a family of 6. It has a quick return to cooking temp when you need to make a second batch of food. The unit is light weight and clean up is very easy. I was a little hesitant at first because the temp only goes to 375 but everything that I've cooked (fries, wings, nuggets, etc..) have cooked fine. The food always fries crisp - battered/breaded items are not soggy.
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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Worth your consideration, January 11, 2007
This review is from: Oster 0DF540 Classic Stainless-Steel Immersion Deep Fryer (Kitchen)
I decided to buy a new fryer after I spent 45 minutes trying to fry up some beer battered zucchini sticks in my tiny Fry Baby (cooking class, small vegetable-averse kids, you do the math). I don't fry often (maybe once a year?), but when I do I don't want to spend all night in the kitchen churning out small batches of greasy, floppy food, which is what I ended up doing with the Fry Baby.
Cooks Illustrated sister publication, Cook's Country, rated this immersion fryer highly and that's part of the reason I picked it. The element goes right in the oil and it's supposed to maintain the oil temperature well and recover quickly after batches. That should keep food from getting overly saturated due to frying temps that are too low. It's also huge, so I thought I'd batch food more quickly and actually get to sit down and eat something that's still hot.
I've only used it once (hey, I only fry once a year, but potentially more now) and it worked great. Let's do the pro and con thing:
Pros: * Big fryer (3 quarts if I'm recalling correctly), so get in and get out of the kitchen and eat with everyone else
* Immersion heating element did keep oil more consistently at selected frying temp
* Could actually PICK a frying temp
* Most all parts pull apart and can go in the dishwasher (WAY better than my poor old Fry Baby)
* Has a lid on it, significant reduction in oil splatter compared to past experience
* Relatively inexpensive
Cons: *Big fryer (whoops, yep) Trying to figure out where to store it in my frugal bungalow kitchen; has been sitting in a chair at our kitchen table for the past 6 weeks. It's part of the family now.
*Big oil consumer. Buy the gallon jug of oil to fill this up. I put quart or so of excess in a smaller, already open oil bottle we had and put cooled, used oil back in the gallon jug for storage.
*No oil filtration system. DON'T try and use a coffee filter in a funnel to put used oil in a storage container. (Manual actually says just pour into storage container, slow down toward the bottom where all the gunk accumulates and just get rid of that stuff.) I thought I was being super handy with my funnel, but it took an entire Saturday to filter the entire fryer out.
*Dishwasher safe, but... If you've ever fried anything or baked with oil, etc. you know oil gets freakishly sticky/tenacious. Most of the fryer parts ARE dishwasher safe, but I don't know of any dishwasher that's good enough to handle sticky oil. I had to Clorox Clean-up the sticky parts with some reservations about having future food taste like Clorox. (The sticky oil will happen with any fryer, though. Not a deal breaker)
*Frying odors not eliminated - I did hold some hope that the lid and the "filter" in the lid would cut down dramatically on the fryer odors that fill my house after I fry. No such luck. Everything still smelled like a hibachi restaurant a week after the cooking. (Hide your dry cleanables.) Definitely fry near an exhaust vent and crank that fan up.
* Lacks heft - The frying bowl sits in a thin-sided metal housing that has a few metal straps across an open bottom; metal lid has unrolled, thin metal edges. A little disconcerting given that I could potentially burn my house down, but I can imagine any disaster if you give me a scenario. I may be overly dramatic. Have decided to just be careful.
All-in-all, would have to say that the fryer has done what I really wanted from it, which is get lots of food fried without the time commitment required with the Baby. Other more expensive fryers rotate foods in and out of the oil, have on-board oil filtration systems, etc., but I didn't think I could honestly justify the significantly higher price for something I still would only use maybe once every 3-4 months at best.
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