Martin Lewis warning to state pensioners using air fryer instead of oven | Personal Finance | Finance


Money expert Martin Lewis has warned anyone who uses an air fryer instead of an oven which could be especially useful for state pensioners surviving without their £300 Winter Fuel Payment this winter.

The trendy kitchen appliance has become a bit of a sensation in recent years as people look to find cheaper ways of cooking their dinner than running a big traditional oven.

But Martin Lewis has tried to outline that it’s not always better to use an air fryer or a microwave over a traditional oven.

Speaking on his BBC and Spotify The Martin Lewis Podcast, the finance expert set out exactly how and when you should and shouldn’t use an air fryer when cooking the dinner using his ‘rule of thumb’.

Martin Lewis said: “Let me give you my simple rule of thumb.”

“First of all, find the wattage of the appliance you’re using. If you’ve got a heated gilet, it might be 50 watts. When I talk about ‘heating the home’ it is a lot cheaper to have a heated gilet or something that just heats you rather than heating the whole room.”

“Then remember 1,000 watts is a Kilowatt. And you pay roughly 34p per Kw per hour.”

“So if you had a heated gilet on for an hour, it’s around a 20th of 34p which is around 1.7p per hour.”

“Now an oven is typically 1-2000w so you’re paying around 34p or 68p an hour.”

“An oven isn’t always using all the wattage as it’s heating up and then topping up.”

“A microwave is also 1000W so per minute it’s the same cost as an oven, but things done in the microwave when you’re cooking a one-off, a one off jacket potato for example, is far more efficient because it’s 10 minutes in the microwave, it might be an hour and a half in the oven.”

“So if you’ve got a turkey in there that may well be effective if you’re cooking lots of stuff in there and it’s on for a couple of hours. That may well be effective if you’re cooking lots of stuff.”

“But if you’ve got something small and simple in there, it’s probably cheaper and that’s where the microwave and also the air fryers tend to come into their own because they’re better at cooking single objects.”

He also talked about a method to cook a chicken or turkey that was outlined by a caller, called ‘spatchcocking’, otherwise known as ‘butterfly’. This is when you break the bird’s bones and spread it out instead of cooking it whole.

By doing so, you can reduce the amount of time the chicken takes to cook, thereby saving more money on running your oven (or air fryer!).



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