Could Your Nonstick Air Fryer Basket Make You Sick? Here’s What You Need to Know


Air fryers have surged in popularity over the last decade, with some 70% of US households either owning an air fryer or planning to buy one within the year. Air fryers offer a faster way to cook a wide range of foods with less oil. While avoiding excess cooking oil can be a boon for your health, most air fryers are manufactured with chemical nonstick baskets, which raises questions about the health risks of using them.

Home Tips

Quality Teflon and synthetic fluoropolymers are considered food-safe when used properly — namely, not heating above a certain temperature or damaging the surface and flaking it off into food — so there’s no need to hit the panic button. There are, however, best practices for using an air fryer or other chemical nonstick-coated cookware to avoid Teflon Flu and other health hazards.

So is your air fryer at risk of releasing toxic emissions that could cause Teflon Flu?

What is Teflon Flu?

teflon pan with caution tape above it

An elevated number of Teflon Flu cases were reported in 2023, according to a recent Washington Post investigation.

CNET

Polymer fume fever or commonly known as “Teflon Flu,” is an illness that occurs when noxious fumes from a Teflon or chemically-treated nonstick pan are inhaled. These fumes are emitted when nonstick pans overheat or burn. 

With normal use, nonstick coatings aren’t thought to cause a health risk, but when heated to above 500 F, there are increased emissions and the resulting polymer fume fever. Polymer fume fever causes a range of reported symptoms including fever, chills, muscle tension and headache. Symptoms of Teflon flu are temporary and generally start within 12 hours of exposure, but can take up to 24 hours to take hold.

Nonstick cookware is made with polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE). PTFEs are known as “forever chemicals” because they can take decades, or even hundreds of years, to break down. 

Do air fryers still have Teflon coating?

hot dogs in air fryer basket

Most air fryer baskets are coated with Teflon or a similar nonstick coating.

David Watsky/CNET

The majority of air fryers in the market today have Teflon or nonstick-coated cooking baskets. They function similarly to nonstick cookware in that they release food easily and can be cleaned frequently with just hot, soapy water. As with Teflon and nonstick cookware, air fryer baskets will chip when exposed to hard metal cooking utensils or wire scrub brushes.

Air fryer manufacturers are moving away from nonstick baskets

air fryer shot from the side with bacon on crisping tray

Glass and ceramic air fryer baskets are becoming increasingly popular, though they tend to be more expensive.

David Watsky/CNET

A recent surge in air fryers with baskets made from 100% nontoxic materials has caught our attention. In fact, Ninja’s glass-bowl Crispi is our top pick out of dozens of air fryers we tested. Other air fryer producers, including Cosori and Fritairre, have released models with baskets crafted from glass, ceramic and other materials that contain no PFAS.  When I visited Ninja’s headquarters last year, a product rep for the brand told me they were phasing out all chemical nonstick-coated air fryer baskets and replacing them with nonstick ceramic or glass. 

So can your air fryer cause Teflon Flu?

hand pushing ninja air fryer button

Most air fryers don’t go above 450 F. If yours does, keep the temperature at 450 F or below and you may want to consider replacing it altogether.

Ninja

Technically, an air fryer basket could cause Teflon Flu if the surface were heated to 500°F or higher for an extended period, but most air fryers don’t exceed 450°F for that very reason. Many of the air fryers we’ve tested only reach a maximum temperature of 400 F.

It’s also important to avoid damaging your nonstick air fryer basket to avoid bits of the chemical coating flaking off into food. Always use soft utensils, such as wooden or food-safe silicone, when handling food inside the basket, and never scrub your basket with coarse sponges or wire scrubbies. 

What to do if your air fryer goes to 500 F

If your air fryer has a setting that allows it to reach temperatures above 500 F and a nonstick basket, avoid cooking at such high temperatures. You may consider replacing your air fryer with one that doesn’t just to be safe. If it’s capable of hitting 500 F, it might do so just from natural temperature fluctuations and is probably not worth the risk.

If you’re still worried about Teflon Flu or other complications associated with nonstick, there are air fryers with ceramic, stainless-steel and glass cooking chambers.

glass bowl air fryer sits on stylish countertop

This self-cleaning Fritaire air fryer features a glass bowl.

Fritaire

For more air fryer safety tips, see our guide to using these trendy countertop cookers safely. 





Source link

Leave a Reply

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Get our latest articles delivered straight to your inbox. No spam, we promise.

Recent Reviews


Google Gemini

Lance Whitney/ZDNET

Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google.


ZDNET’s key takeaways

  • Google is downloading a 4GB file to the PCs of many Chrome users.
  • The file is harmless and is used for the Gemini Nano on-device LLM.
  • You’ll see it if you’ve opted into the on-device AI setting in Chrome.

Google is silently saving a Chrome-related file to many computers. That’s nothing earth-shaking. But this file is a hefty 4GB in size, which has caught the attention of some Google watchers. What is the file, why is it being installed, and how can you check for it?

Also: I let Chrome’s AI agent shop, research, and email for me – here’s how it went

In a new blog post, computer scientist Alexander Hanff, aka the Privacy Guy, pulled back the curtain on this mysterious file. Named weights.bin, the file is being downloaded deep within the user data folder of many Chrome users. The file itself is related to Gemini Nano, which Google is using as the on-device AI model for Chrome users.

If you delete the file, it comes back

Though there’s nothing risky or dangerous about the file, Hanff and others have expressed concerns that it’s being downloaded without users’ knowledge or permission. And if you delete the file, it eventually comes back, Hanff said. That by itself is hardly alarming; that’s part of any software update. Rather, some of the criticism centers on the file’s size. If you have ample hard disk space, then 4GB is likely not a big deal. But if you’re running low, that big a file might chew up space you can’t spare.

Traditionally, AI models like Gemini use the cloud to interact with you. Submit a request, ask a question, or kick off a conversation, and the AI taps into its online data and resources to respond. But that method can be slow and naturally requires that you be connected. By traveling between your device and the cloud, your data can also be exposed.

A trend has emerged in which companies are experimenting with locally stored LLMs (large language models). That not only speeds up the process, but it also means you can use the AI offline and more securely. Gemini Nano has already been in play on Google’s own Pixel phones.

That explains why the file is so large; it has to pack in a lot of data. In this case, a weights file contains numbers that measure the level of importance an AI model assigns to your input. The AI uses these values to determine what should come next. For example, let’s say you start typing the phrase “Why did my new phone cost me an arm and a…” at the prompt. The AI assigns weights to your input to help it predict that the next word would be “leg.”

Also: This powerful Gemini setting made my AI results way more personal and accurate

How can you tell if the file has been downloaded to your PC? First, open Chrome, go to Settings, and select System. On the System screen, check whether the On-device AI option is turned on. If so, then you probably have the file or will soon get it.

To double-check, you’ll have to navigate to the user folder on your PC. That location varies based on your operating system. On my Windows 11 PC, I ran a search in File Explorer for weights.bin. The search took a long journey through the following path: C:\Users\lance\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\OptGuideOnDeviceModel\2025.8.8.1141. At that final location, the weights.bin file appeared, measuring 4GB.

Since the file is downloaded again if you simply delete it, you’ll have to take an extra step to get rid of it permanently. After you delete the file, go back to Settings in Chrome and select System. Then  turn off the switch for On-device AI.

But as long as you have enough disk space (and if you can’t spare 4GB, then it’s time to clean up your drive), the file is little cause for concern. Just forget about it, especially if you’re keen to try on-device AI, and we’ll see what the future holds for Gemini Nano.





Source link