Haven’t used it yet. I wish there was more instructions regarding cooking meat, like chunks of chicken. It shows instructions for a rotisserie chicken but not smaller piecesExelenteVery small. Not well made. I’ll keep this one but won’t order againI love my air fryerDifficult to use, randomly shuts off. Do not recommendYou can call this an oven and it may even look like an oven, but all it really is is an oversized air fryer. It does work like an oven, too, but if you want to call it an oven call it the smallest oven in the world. That's what surprised most about this 'cough' oven when I received: just how small it is. I was expecting bigger from looking at the pictures. It's pretty good I guess if you live in a dorm room or have a tiny kitchen with no conventional oven. It would probably be alright if you were to take this on an extended trip or vacation, assuming you have enough room to haul it in your vehicle.I haven't really cooked much in it other than pizza, chicken, fries and tater tots. They did taste really good in it, but nothing more than a regular oven. I do need to start using it a bit more. I'll have to try cooking fish in it next. It took about an hour for me to figure out how to cook with it, so not the easiest, but with a little patience you'll figure it out because the directions aren't bad. It can be somewhat difficult to clean, particularly the rotisserie basket and the black baking pan. Stick, stick, stick! Even using Canola spray!If you take in account exactly what you're getting and the price it's not a bad little 'cough' oven to own if you're in a location or are going to a location that doesn't have a conventional oven.Just opened up this item and tested it out with some tator tots.First off the inside of this is very small, touching side to side on the inside is 10" x 10" and at most 7" high of useable space. I cannot see it fitting this 2.7 pound chicken they speak of, chickens around here are 3-5# on average.So maybe a 9x9x7", or space of roughly 565 cubic inches, to cook in... Certainly not large by any means.Are they talking about Cornish hens or partridge when they say can cook an entire chicken, a normal sized chicken would hit both elements and likely not slide over the spigot, or be held on by the thin forks, then burn before it fully cooks being so close to heating elements.Well after I pressed buttons for a few minutes I figured out how to set it to Fries-Preheat and it beeped when heated, less than 5 minutes, and I inserted a half bag of Orieda's in there, 360 degrees at the 9 minutes they recommended for an Air Fryer. I had other things going on so when it ended I just left inside and powered off while finishing up other things, porterhouse brats, etc..The tots were nearly done, another minute or 2 they would have been crispy, but they had a crunch and were brown and I was ready to eat. I could have added a few minutes and did them right but they were fine as they were.After dinner was over and the cleaning began, I went to wash that basket out, I spent 15 minutes and many gallons of water and there are still pieces of food trapped inside. I soaked it for 10 minutes, used soft bristle brush, pressure from faucet, there always seemed to be something left inside the cage.I was tempted to fire it back up and see if could shrink the stuff and get it to fall out..So this basket deal is only good if nothing you make will break into small pieces and either wedge into the grate or get stuck to it, maybe french fries, but could you imagine chicken wings if breaded, probably tear off breading and have breading n chicken stuck to it?I am being generous giving it 3 stars, perhaps some dorm room kids may find this handy, but inside is so small, maybe a tiny personal pan pizza may fit, or a slice if you put foil down to avoid any messes over the drip pan, but I cannot see it ever cooking a whole chicken, a pie, a pizza, or most things I had hoped to cook inside this..It is just to small... That bottom convection toaster oven can cook a frozen pizza in it, the little window of this item is the most you can fit inside it.The top has a round coil which I do like over having the bars like on bottom, so not dropping to the 2 it deserves for that.. Wish my other had that so did not have to rotate pizzas while cooking...As far as it cooking for an entire family, I just do not see that, maybe a small chicken would fit in it, but to share that with 5 hungry people, come on... would have to make a lot of sides on your stove..This is a large unit (fits under the cabinet with a bit to spare) that comes with an impressive amount of accessories to use it. The functionality and use is more like a toaster oven but with a fan and a rotisserie function. (I'm not ever used any dehydration function on any unit)The operation of the unit is pretty intuitive from pressing buttons, to manually adjusting the knobs.When using the Rotisserie basket, it's a little awkward. I'd recommend getting used to using the metal tongs to place and remove the basket prior to actually trying it out. As far as the basket goes if its not completely filled I found anything with breading had a lot fall off is it flops around. When its hot, the clasp to remove the opening in the cage can also take some coordination.While I've not tried a chicken yet, the instructions kind of put me off. Only a 2.7lbs chicken can be used, otherwise for larger bird it has to be stuffed in the basket (which I think would be difficult for a chicken also greater than 2.7lbs).While cooking french fries in the basket, it was better than oven cooked but not as crispy as my other ninja air fryer.Cleaning - My other air fryer is much easier to clean as you can plop the parts in the sink. You'll have a lot of splatter inside the unit that has to be cleaned out after a use.Overall if you are more comfortable using a toaster oven, which a few extra options this might be for you. I did find it warmed up quickly and seems to have even cooking.