It's not your fault, it's physics.↓ Try it first
One dial. Four textures. Juicy. Tender. Crispy. Crunchy. Tap to try each one.

Browned specks, crisped edges. Clear crunch on the outside, juicy inside.
Every regular air fryer gives you one control: a temperature dial. You set it once — that temperature runs the entire cook, from start to finish.
One fixed temperature can't do all three. Texture Control can.
Instead of one fixed temperature, Texture Control shifts through three — each tuned to what your food needs at that exact moment.
Let's walk through Crispy — to see how the three stages work.
Low heat conducts inward layer by layer. Centre reaches temperature — inside fully cooked, surface still pale.
Heat steps up. Surface moisture evaporates evenly — a uniform shell builds, firm but not yet browned.
Full heat, short burst. Surface crosses 120°C — Maillard browning kicks in. Deep golden colour, clear crunch.
Same three stages — but the temperature at every step is higher.
Stage 1 still cooks the inside through, but at higher heat. Stage 3 gets a longer, hotter finish — the outer layer fully dehydrates and browns deeply. Same structure. Higher register.
Why the middle stage matters: Think of drying clay before firing it. Fire wet clay at high heat and it cracks unevenly. Dry it first, step up the heat, and it hardens uniformly. The middle stage lets the entire surface reach similar moisture levels before the final crisp — thicker, more uniform, more satisfying crunch.

One ingredient. Four outcomes. All from the same air fryer — just turn the dial.




Each texture setting runs a different version of the three-stage cook — varying temperatures and durations across the stages:
Same food. Same air fryer. The dial changes how aggressively each stage runs.
Texture Control — the third setting your air fryer was missing.