Mushrooms in the air fryer come out golden, tender, and concentrated in flavor — none of the watery, grey result you often get from a crowded frying pan. The key difference is airflow: the circulating heat evaporates surface moisture rapidly, browning the mushroom rather than steaming it. Ten to twelve minutes and you have one of the best effortless side dishes an air fryer can produce.
| Mushroom Type / Style | Temperature (°F) | Cooking Time | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Button mushrooms (whole, small) | 375°F | 8–10 min | Shake halfway |
| Button mushrooms (whole, large) | 375°F | 10–12 min | Shake halfway |
| Sliced mushrooms | 375°F | 7–9 min | Shake halfway; check at 7 min |
| Cremini / chestnut mushrooms | 375°F | 10–12 min | Shake halfway |
| Portobello caps (whole) | 375°F | 10–14 min | Flip halfway; brush with oil |
| Shiitake mushrooms | 375°F | 8–10 min | Remove stems first; shake halfway |
| Stuffed mushrooms | 360°F | 12–15 min | Lower temp; don't shake |
| Oyster mushrooms | 375°F | 7–9 min | Tear into pieces; check early |
Mushrooms are done when they're deeply golden on the outside, visibly shrunk from their raw size, and tender when pressed. They should look roasted — concentrated and slightly dry on the surface — not pale, wet, or steaming. If there's still moisture pooling in the basket after the minimum time, give them 2 more minutes uncovered.
Ingredients (2 servings): 250g button or cremini mushrooms, 1 tbsp olive oil, 1 tsp garlic powder, ½ tsp dried thyme or Italian herbs, salt and black pepper. To finish: 1 tbsp butter, 2 cloves fresh garlic (minced), fresh parsley, squeeze of lemon.
Cooking other vegetables or converting an oven recipe? Use our Air Fryer Calculator to get precise time and temperature conversions for any recipe — accurate and fast every time.
Whole button and cremini mushrooms take 10–12 minutes at 375°F. Sliced mushrooms are done in 7–9 minutes. Portobello caps need 10–14 minutes with a flip halfway. Shiitake and oyster mushrooms take 7–10 minutes. Always check at the lower end of the range — the goal is golden and dry on the surface, not pale and wet.
The two main causes are washing mushrooms under water before cooking (they absorb it rapidly) and overcrowding the basket. Mushrooms release a significant amount of their own moisture during cooking — in an overcrowded basket, that moisture can't evaporate fast enough and the mushrooms steam in their own liquid. Wipe clean with a paper towel instead of washing, and cook in a single loose layer.
After. Salt draws moisture out of mushrooms through osmosis — salting before cooking causes them to release water before they've even gone into the air fryer, making it much harder to achieve a golden, dry exterior. Season with garlic powder and dried herbs before cooking, add salt and fresh herbs only when the mushrooms come out.
Yes — portobello caps cook beautifully in the air fryer. Remove the stem, scrape out the gills if desired (they can be slightly bitter and make fillings wet), brush the cap generously with olive oil on both sides, and cook at 375°F for 10–14 minutes with a flip halfway. The edges char slightly while the cap stays meaty and tender.
Yes. Fill large button or cremini caps with your preferred stuffing (cream cheese and herbs, sausage and breadcrumbs, spinach and parmesan), place carefully in the basket without shaking, and cook at 360°F for 12–15 minutes. The slightly lower temperature prevents the filling from burning before the mushroom cap is cooked through. Don't shake the basket — the filling will spill.
Cooking times vary by air fryer model and mushroom size. Never wash mushrooms under running water before cooking. Always cook in a single loose layer and season with salt only after cooking.