My Banquet brand links don't have casings and are approx' 1/2" D x 3" long .
I cooked them in the Cuisinart toaster/broiler/air fryer for 8 minutes @ 400°F. This was also a test of the silicone cooking mat that I lined the bottom of the basket with to make cleanup easier. Due to that the links didn't have full air circulation. The first batch I flipped after 5 minutes and cooked for another 3 minutes. The second batch I didn't flip. I don't think it's worth flipping them and I won't flip them anymore. I'd fry sausage this way again in a heartbeat. They came out nicely browned. Of course you'll need to adjust for your air fryer. Now that I know and trust it to do it's thing I can be off elsewhere in the kitchen doing something else.
The silicone mat? It definitely kept the basket clean and the clean up of it was easy. But it's too early to state if I like it more than throw away parchment paper. It expanded under the heat and that was a PITA. But it isn't "fly away" as the paper has been in the past under the fan. I once had the paper go up against the heat bars and start to burn (no flames, not that type of burning).
When I become impulsive enough I'll try a sausage with a casing. But they can burst and do burst in a frying pan and that potential mess has kept me from trying them. It has been suggested to me that I could slice or puncture the sausages to prevent bursting. That concept of deliberately releasing the juices in a casing sausage is so foreign to me that it never occurred to me. But I'm going to give it a try.
The air fryer experiment has been interesting and while I don't think they're good for everything (as some online folks [not here] appear to think they are ) they definitely work fine for some things. So far I'm glad I replaced our old T/B with one with AF capability.
Cleanup of ours was a chore at first, but I solved that problem with parchment paper and now the experimental silicone mat.
I cooked them in the Cuisinart toaster/broiler/air fryer for 8 minutes @ 400°F. This was also a test of the silicone cooking mat that I lined the bottom of the basket with to make cleanup easier. Due to that the links didn't have full air circulation. The first batch I flipped after 5 minutes and cooked for another 3 minutes. The second batch I didn't flip. I don't think it's worth flipping them and I won't flip them anymore. I'd fry sausage this way again in a heartbeat. They came out nicely browned. Of course you'll need to adjust for your air fryer. Now that I know and trust it to do it's thing I can be off elsewhere in the kitchen doing something else.
The silicone mat? It definitely kept the basket clean and the clean up of it was easy. But it's too early to state if I like it more than throw away parchment paper. It expanded under the heat and that was a PITA. But it isn't "fly away" as the paper has been in the past under the fan. I once had the paper go up against the heat bars and start to burn (no flames, not that type of burning).
When I become impulsive enough I'll try a sausage with a casing. But they can burst and do burst in a frying pan and that potential mess has kept me from trying them. It has been suggested to me that I could slice or puncture the sausages to prevent bursting. That concept of deliberately releasing the juices in a casing sausage is so foreign to me that it never occurred to me. But I'm going to give it a try.
The air fryer experiment has been interesting and while I don't think they're good for everything (as some online folks [not here] appear to think they are ) they definitely work fine for some things. So far I'm glad I replaced our old T/B with one with AF capability.
Cleanup of ours was a chore at first, but I solved that problem with parchment paper and now the experimental silicone mat.
Brian. Lover of SE razors.