With Thanksgiving approaching, now's the time to start planning your meal. Even if your gathering will be smaller this year, you want to avoid the usual predicament: The bird is browning in the oven while a half-dozen uncooked side dishes await their turn to sizzle. And, of course, each recipe calls for a different oven temperature. What to do?

Make use of your countertop appliances. That way, the turkey, stuffing, and vegetables can all hit the table hot at the same time. 

"Small-appliance technology has gotten so advanced that some can do just about everything an oven can do, just on a smaller scale," says Emilio Gonzalez, associate director of lab operations at Consumer Reports. "Their various specialized functions can produce casseroles and veggies just as well as your oven can." 

More on Countertop Appliances

Before plugging in your high-wattage helpers, make sure to run them on separate circuits or at least not at the same time. You don't want to trip a breaker just as your guests are gathering around the table. Try not to exceed 1,920 watts on a 20-amp circuit and 1,440 watts on a 15-amp circuit, Gonzalez says. 

Here's how to adapt classic Thanksgiving side dishes for cooking in air fryersmulti-cookersslow cookers, toasters, and waffle makers. We also included blenders for making soup, just in case your stovetop is overwhelmed. If you're looking to purchase any new countertop appliances, we've included some top-performing models from our tests.

Air Fryers • Blenders • Multi-Cookers • Slow Cookers • Toaster Ovens  • Waffle Makers

Air Fryers

Air fryers aren't limited to crisping up frozen fries and chicken nuggets. With just 1 or 2 tablespoons of olive oil, vegetables come out tender yet irresistibly crispy and caramelized—perfect for veggie sides on Thanksgiving.

Just keep in mind that because air fryers rely on fans to circulate hot air to cook food, they work more quickly and with more intense heat than traditional ovens do. So when adapting oven-roasting recipes for the air fryer, lower the temperature by 25° F to achieve similar results and check for doneness about two-thirds of the way through the suggested cooking time. 

With vegetables (as opposed to breaded foods), you can load the basket almost to the top, but a fuller basket of veggies will require more time to cook and the results may be less crispy than if you cooked them in batches. Either way, you'll want to give the basket a shake every 5 minutes or so to toss the food and make sure it browns evenly.

Brussels Sprouts
Toss trimmed brussels sprouts with just enough olive oil to coat. Season with salt and pepper and air-fry for 20 minutes at 360° F.

Carrots
Toss cut-up carrots with a bit of melted butter and honey, season with a sprinkling of salt, pepper, and coriander (or whatever spices you feel like using), and air-fry at 400° F for 30 minutes.

Roasted Potatoes
An air fryer will yield golden taters that are crisp on the outside and creamy on the inside. Toss fingerling or marble potatoes with just enough olive oil to coat them, and season with a touch of salt and black pepper. Air-fry at 400° F for 15 to 20 minutes.

Here are the top air fryers for large batches:

Quick Take

Price: $130

Controls
Cleaning
Noise

With a measured capacity of 5.8 quarts, the CR-recommended NuWave 37001 air fryer boasts one of the largest capacities of models we tested. That's plenty of room to cook portions that can feed a crowd. Our testers found its preprogrammed settings to be among the easiest to use. The inside and outside of the appliance are a cinch to clean, but cleaning food out of the holes in the basket takes a little extra effort. Know that this air fryer is on the noisy side, too. The fan is about as loud as a microwave.

Quick Take

Price: $115

Controls
Cleaning
Noise

The Power AirFryer XL also has a large capacity, at 5.3 quarts. Its controls are intuitive, and it scores an Excellent rating for being easy to clean, thanks to its nonstick coating. Like the model above, this air fryer makes some noise when in use, so it might be a little hard to converse with guests in the kitchen while it's working.

Blenders

Sure, blenders are great for smoothies, but you can also use them to make a velvety purée or sauce to go with your favorite foods. Some can even heat ingredients using the friction of the blades or a heater in the base, so you can free up space on your stovetop for cooking other dishes. 

Beware: Hot ingredients can cause some blenders to malfunction, so check your blender's manual to see whether hot ingredients can be used. If the blender lid doesn't have a vent hole, heat will build up pressure, which can cause the lid to pop off.

Curried Squash Soup
If you have a high-performance blender that heats, toss in cubes of raw or roasted squash, some broth, garlic cloves or shallots, carrots, celery, curry powder, and any other seasonings you'd like. Start the blender on its lowest speed, then increase to its highest speed and blend for 6 minutes, or until steam escapes from the vented lid. If you have a traditional blender, roast or sauté the ingredients first, blend, then heat on the stove.

These blenders can handle the heat:

Quick Take

Price: $300

Puree
Icy drinks (Smoothies)
Convenience

Vitamix's entry blender aces our purée test and at nearly half the price of the brand's top-tier models. The high-powered motor can heat up soup while blending, using just the friction from the whirling blades. It's a bare-bones model, meaning you won't get any presets, a pulse button, or fancy attachments, but it certainly doesn't lack the ability to prep all kinds of foods, from hot soups to sauces.

Quick Take

Price: $150

Puree
Icy drinks (Smoothies)
Convenience

GoWise's heating blender has a heater built into the base that can heat up puréed soups. You can use it to sauté raw vegetables before puréeing, too, for more depth of flavor. It also has a keep-warm setting and a preset for frozen treats for when you're in the mood for something cooler.

Multi-Cookers

In pressure-cook mode, multi-cookers can tenderize a green bean casserole and make mac and cheese faster than an oven can. The only shortfall is that most models can't crisp up food (except for the Ninja Foodi, below, which comes with a separate broiling lid). But you can use your microwave or toaster oven to crisp toppings such as breadcrumbs and fried onions, then add them after your food is done in the multi-cooker.

Macaroni and Cheese
Baked mac and cheese has a top layer of crunchy breadcrumbs, but you can fake it with a multi-cooker and microwave. Because liquid doesn't really evaporate in a multi-cooker, use less water to cook the macaroni: 1 quart per pound of dry pasta. Cook it for 4 minutes on high pressure to render macaroni al dente, then quick-release the pressure, switch to the sauté setting, and add milk, butter, and cheese. Don't add dairy ingredients during the pressure-cooking phase or it will turn into a coagulated mess. For the topping, toss a handful of panko breadcrumbs with a little olive oil, and microwave, stopping to stir every 30 seconds until crumbs are golden brown.

Wild Rice and Mushrooms
Use the sauté function on your multi-cooker and cook chopped onions and garlic until soft. Add a couple handfuls of sliced mushrooms, 1 cup of wild rice, 1 cup of brown basmati rice, and 2 cups of water or low-sodium broth. (Some multi-cooker manuals advise against using only wild rice and suggest blending it with white rice or brown rice for best results.) Stir to combine, and cook on high pressure for 30 minutes. Manually release the pressure after 15 minutes, then top with chopped parsley and toasted pine nuts.

These multi-cookers are recommended by CR:

Quick Take

Price: $160

Pressure cooking
Rice cooking
Convenience

The 6-quart Zavor Lux LCD gets perfect scores in our tests for pressure-cooking, steaming, and slow-cooking (a test most pressure-cook models don't excel at). It scores a Very Good rating for making rice, too. The 1,000-watt cooker has a stainless steel insert, which proves to be more durable than nonstick-coated inserts in our tests.

Quick Take

Price: $230

Pressure cooking
Rice cooking
Convenience

This cooker has a lid for pressure-cooking plus a separate crisping lid that houses a convection fan to facilitate air-frying. So unlike with most multi-cookers, you can get tender, pressure-cooked food that's crisp on top. This model isn't very easy to move around, though. It weighs 21 pounds without its removable 3-pound pressure lid, making it 9 pounds heavier than the Zavor above. And because the crisping lid can't be removed from the pot, cleaning it is tricky.

Slow Cookers

It'll take half a day to make one side dish in a slow cooker, but you can pretty much set it and forget it while you tend to other things. You can even place it in another room to free up counter space in the kitchen because you don't have to keep an eye on it while it's cooking.

Collard Greens
Combine greens, pork, vinegar, salt, sugar, and pepper, then cover and cook on low for 9 hours. If your recipe includes ham hocks, carefully take them out and remove all fat and bone before stirring the meat back into the greens.

Scalloped Potatoes
Because the slow cooker retains a lot of liquid, and dairy can separate during long cooking periods, add ¼ cup of flour to the cream sauce in your scalloped potato recipe to help thicken it and keep it from separating. Grease the insert and layer the potatoes and cheese as you normally would in a casserole dish. Cook on the high-heat setting for 4 to 5 hours, until the potatoes are tender. About 20 minutes before dinner, remove the lid, turn off the slow cooker, and let the potatoes sit so that the sauce thickens up. If the oven frees up in time, you can pop the slow cooker insert (if it's oven-safe) under the broiler to brown the top just a bit.

Stuffing
Whether you prefer the extra-crunchy toasted bits of stuffing or the squishy pieces that have absorbed their fill of herby broth, the slow cooker delivers. The difference between cooking stuffing in a slow cooker and using an oven is just that the crunchy part is on the bottom and sides rather than on top. 

Prepare your favorite stuffing recipe as you normally would, but spread the stuffing in an even layer in a greased slow cooker instead of a baking dish. Cook on the low-heat setting for 3 to 4 hours, until the edges crisp up.

Southern Fried Apples
Slice up several Granny Smith apples and place them in a slow cooker with melted butter and the juice from one lemon. Add a couple of tablespoons of cornstarch to a cinnamon-sugar mixture and sprinkle it over the apples. The starch will help thicken up the sauce, which would otherwise be too runny. Cook on high for 3 to 4 hours, until apples are tender but not mushy.

These slow cookers are recommended by CR:

Quick Take

Price: $70

High
Low
Convenience

This 6-quart slow cooker earns Excellent ratings in both high-temp and low-temp cooking settings in our tests, so it'll handle either of the above dishes beautifully. Its locking lid makes it easier to transport, too, in case you're going to someone else's feast. This model also has a temperature probe, which will come in handy for future roasts. It monitors the internal temperature of large cuts of meat and prevents overcooking by automatically switching to keep-warm mode when it's done.

Quick Take

Price: $75

High
Low
Convenience

This Kalorik slow cooker also earns Excellent ratings in both high-temp and low-temp cooking settings in our tests. It's also one of the largest we test, with a capacity of 8 quarts, so it can make enough food to feed a lot of guests. Its locking lid makes it easy to transport, too, if need be.

Toaster Ovens

toaster oven can do far more than reheat leftovers and toast slices of bread. Some newer toaster ovens even have features such as air frying, convection, and slow cooking. And there's no need to preheat toaster ovens. Before you get baking, you may also want to test the accuracy of your toaster oven's temperature settings by using an oven thermometer, then adjust the controls as needed to cook at the required temperature. 

Rolls or Cornbread
If your toaster oven can fit an 8-inch cake pan, it can make dinner rolls. You can fit 10 to 12 balls of fresh dough in a pan. Bake at 375° F for 20 minutes, until golden brown. Cornbread also bakes up nicely in the toaster oven. Try whipping up a batch in a muffin tin, like we do in our lab tests, for perfectly portioned pieces.

Sweet Potato Casserole
Mash boiled or roasted sweet potatoes (which can also be cooked in the toaster oven) with a little milk, butter, salt, lemon juice, brown sugar, and whatever spices you like. Because what you're making is a smaller portion than what you'd make in an oven, you can skip the egg that's in most recipes. Spread the mixture in a buttered baking dish (make sure it fits in your toaster oven first), top with chopped nuts (or marshmallows, if you must), and bake at 350° F until heated through and the topping is toasted. 

These are the top toaster ovens that can bake:

Quick Take

Price: $190

Baking
Color range
Ease of use

This Breville toaster oven is priced well below its top-of-the-line brandmates but still earns a spot as a top performer in our ratings. It earns a Very Good rating in our baking tests, evenly cooking up batches of corn muffins. It's roomy enough for a 12-inch pizza or 4½-pound chicken, which means you can pop most casserole dishes and small baking pans in there, too.

Quick Take

Price: $180

Baking
Color range
Ease of use

This Cuisinart toaster oven also snags a Very Good rating for baking, turning out corn muffins (and sugar cookies) that were done in the center and golden on top and bottom. You can fit a 12-inch pizza, and there are three rack positions.

Waffle Makers

Don't let this little appliance sit idle in the cabinet during Thanksgiving. Use your waffle maker to cook stuffing! It's a nontraditional concept, yes, but if your guests fight over the crispy, crunchy bits of stuffing, they'll love stuffing waffles. You get the crispy texture all over each waffle—plus, you get gravy wells built-in!

Stuffing Waffles
Any classic stuffing recipe will work. Just skip the last step when you would bake it in a casserole dish. Instead, lightly grease a Belgian waffle maker and evenly pack the waffle iron with stuffing. Cook it until it reaches your preferred level of brownness. 

Here are the waffle makers that brown the best:

Quick Take

Price: $250

Even browning
Color range settings
Ease of use

This Breville is the crème de la crème of waffle makers. It aces our test for even browning with an Excellent rating. The extra-large grid can fit twice the amount of stuffing that you can fit in a standard round iron. It sounds an alert when waffles are done, has a countdown timer, and comes with a batter cup for exact portioning without overflow.

Quick Take

Price: $40

Even browning
Color range settings
Ease of use

The Chefman was the only waffle maker we tested to snag a CR Best Buy designation. For far less money than most of the competition, this machine churns out evenly browned round waffles and will do the same for your stuffing. It garners a Very Good rating for its color-range settings, meaning there's a noticeable difference between waffles made on the darkest setting (brown and crispy) and lightest setting (blonde and fluffy). An indicator lets you know when the waffles are ready, and it even comes with a measuring cup for precise portioning.


Cooking With Countertop Appliances

Countertop appliances have come a long way over the years. On the "Consumer 101" TV show, Consumer Reports expert Sara Morrow shows host Jack Rico how it's possible to cook an entire meal without using your oven or range.