No, an Instant Pot cannot deep-fry food; it sautés and pressure cooks, while true frying needs lots of hot oil and dry, high heat.
The cooker wears many hats. It slow cooks, steams, pressure cooks, and browns. That range makes people assume it can fry. For deep oil cooking the answer is no. You can sear or shallow pan-fry small amounts on Sauté, and some models accept an air-fryer lid for a crisp finish.
Instant Pot And Frying: What’s Actually Possible
Deep oil cooking submerges food at about 175–190°C (350–375°F). The hot oil pushes out moisture and sets a crunchy crust. A pressure cooker traps steam to speed wet heat cooking. That humid chamber fights the dry conditions needed for shatter-crisp results.
What The Sauté Mode Can Do
Sauté heats the base so you can sweat onions, brown meat, reduce sauces, or shallow pan-fry thin cutlets in a little oil. It does not turn the multicooker into a countertop deep fryer, and the manufacturer says not to use it for that purpose.
Manufacturer Safety Guidance
Instant Brands warns users not to deep fry or pressure fry in the cooker with oil. You can see the wording in the Duo manual here: “Never deep fry or pressure fry in the cooker with oil.” For models that accept an air-fryer lid, the separate lid manual lists air-fry temps and times because that lid uses a top heater and fan, not submerged oil: Air Fryer Lid manual.
Quick Capability Map
Match popular crisp recipes with the right setting using this table.
| Cooking Method | Works In Instant Pot? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Deep frying (submerged oil) | No | Manuals ban deep or pressure frying with oil. |
| Shallow pan-frying on Sauté | Yes | Use a thin oil layer; flip once; small batches. |
| Searing before pressure cooking | Yes | Brown in batches, then deglaze to avoid burn alerts. |
| Air-fry with add-on lid | Yes, on supported models | Top heater plus fan; crisp without a pot of oil. |
| Oven-style broiling | No | No top element in the stock lid. |
| Stovetop style shallow fry in lots of oil | Not advised | Large oil volumes fight the product’s design. |
Why Deep Oil Cooking Fails In A Pressure Cooker
Large oil volumes need space and steady dry heat. The pot is tall with a small base, so heat input is limited. Lids and gaskets keep steam inside. Water from foods steams back into the oil, dropping temperature and softening crusts. Big oil volumes also add fire risk that home pressure cookers are not built to handle. Manuals flag this for a reason.
How To Use Sauté For Crispy Results
Many meals only need color and a thin crust. The flat bottom can handle that if you set up your workflow well.
Heat And Batch Size
Preheat on Sauté for two minutes. Add just enough oil to film the pan. Keep pieces thin in size. Avoid crowding. Two or three chops at a time beat six. If smoke rises hard, drop to a lower Sauté level.
Oil Choice
Pick neutral oils with higher smoke points for pan-fry jobs. Canola, peanut, rice bran, and refined sunflower are solid. Save extra-virgin oils for dressings or a drizzle at the end.
Moisture Control
Pat proteins and vegetables dry. Water on the surface fights browning. Salt draws out moisture, so season before food hits the heat. After browning, remove the food, then deglaze with a splash of stock for a quick pan sauce.
Air-Fryer Lid: A Crisp Finish Without A Deep Fryer
Some models accept a lid that brings a heater and fan to the top of the pot. That turns the unit into a top-down hot air oven. Wings, fries, vegetables, and cutlets come out crisp without quarts of oil. Use the stand and basket so air can move. Follow the lid charts and keep temperatures in range. If food is greasy, line the basket with perforated parchment to catch drips and keep air moving.
Pressure Then Crisp Workflow
For fall-apart meat with a crisp jacket, cook under pressure first, dry the surface, then finish under the air lid. Think pork shoulder chunks for tacos, chicken thighs, or shredded beef croquettes formed and chilled after pressure cooking.
Pan-Frying Playbook For The Inner Pot
- Preheat on Sauté; keep tongs, a sheet tray, and paper towels nearby.
- Use 1–2 tablespoons of oil per batch.
- Lay food in a single layer; let a crust form, then flip once.
- Remove to a rack and finish the sauce in the pot.
When You Actually Want Deep Oil Crisp
Crave hand-cut fries, tempura, or doughnuts? Use a dedicated countertop fryer or a heavy Dutch oven with a clip-on thermometer. Those tools hold oil volume and heat better, and they keep moisture out. Hold oil between 175–190°C (350–375°F) for most foods and work in small batches. Hot oil can exceed 204°C (400°F); keep a lid nearby and never add water.
Oil Smoke Points You Can Use
Pick the right oil for pan-fry jobs in the inner pot and for finishing under an air lid. Here are common choices and general ranges.
| Oil | Approx. Smoke Point | Best Use |
|---|---|---|
| Canola (refined) | ~205–230°C / 400–450°F | General pan-fry; air-fry spray |
| Peanut | ~220–230°C / 428–446°F | High heat sear; wok style |
| Sunflower (refined) | ~225–230°C / 437–446°F | Neutral flavor; browning |
| Rice bran | ~232°C / 450°F | Clean taste; stable |
| Extra-virgin olive oil | ~160–190°C / 320–375°F | Light sauté; finish |
Troubleshooting Sauté Browning
Seeing pale results? Start with moisture. Pat ingredients dry and let chilled meat sit out for ten minutes so the surface warms. Preheat on Sauté a bit longer, then add just enough oil to lightly coat the base. Drop the batch size so pieces do not steam one another. Leave space, resist stirring, and flip once. If the display throws a Burn alert, cancel Sauté, add two tablespoons of stock, and scrape up the fond. Return heat only after the base is clean. For breaded cutlets, use a light cornstarch coat so crumbs stay put and brown evenly.
Practical Paths To Crispy Dishes
Wings Night
Pressure cook wings with a splash of stock for eight to ten minutes, drain and dry, then finish under an air lid until browned and blistered. Toss with sauce after the crisp pass so the skin stays snappy.
Cutlets And Patties
Pound chicken breasts thin, dredge in seasoned cornstarch, and pan-fry on Sauté in two batches. Rest on a rack and finish with lemon. For salmon patties, chill the mix so it holds shape, then brown gently and keep the base heat steady.
Safety Tips When Cooking With Oil
- Keep children and pets away from the counter during hot oil work.
- Use a thermometer and hold deep oil in the 175–190°C range.
- If oil smokes hard, cool it down. Do not toss water into hot oil.
Bottom Line
A multicooker is great for browning and for crisp finishes with a top heater lid. It is not a deep fryer. For submerged oil cooking, use a dedicated fryer or a wide heavy pot and follow safe oil temps. Pick the tool that matches the texture you want and you will get better crusts, less mess, and a safer kitchen.