Air fryer crispy mini blooming onions — the addictive appetizer you’ll make on repeat

Total Time: 40 mins Difficulty: Intermediate
Shatteringly crispy, perfectly seasoned mini blooming onions made in the air fryer with a creamy smoked paprika dipping sauce
Overhead view of a white platter piled with golden crispy mini blooming onions garnished with fresh chives, with a small bowl of creamy smoked paprika dipping sauce in the center, styled on a dark wooden surface pinit

Let me tell you about the first time I made these. It was a Saturday afternoon, I had a bag of small onions sitting on my counter, and I was craving something crispy and ridiculous. You know that specific craving — the one that only a deep-fried appetizer from a steakhouse can usually fix.

Except I didn’t want to deal with a pot of hot oil, the smell lingering in my house for three days, or the guilt that comes after eating half a blooming onion by yourself at Outback. Not that I’d know anything about that. :/

So I grabbed my air fryer and started experimenting. The first batch was decent. The second batch was better. By the third batch I had something that genuinely stopped my family mid-conversation.

Golden, shatteringly crispy petals, a perfectly seasoned coating, and that creamy spiced dipping sauce on the side. All the restaurant magic, none of the deep-fry drama.

The mini version is honestly better than the full-size blooming onion in every practical way. They cook faster, they get crispier all the way through, and everyone gets their own individual one — which eliminates the table politics of sharing a single blooming onion. If you’ve ever been at a table where two people both reach for the last crispy petal at the same time, you know exactly what I’m talking about.

Why you’ll love this recipe

  • All the crunch, none of the oil mess. The air fryer gives you that deep-fried texture without filling your kitchen with hot oil smoke or leaving you with a pot of used oil to deal with.
  • They’re mini, which means they’re better. Individual portions mean maximum crispiness on every single petal. No soggy center, no uneven cooking. Every bite is golden.
  • The seasoning is incredible. Smoked paprika, garlic powder, cayenne, and a few other pantry staples create a coating that tastes like it came from a professional kitchen.
  • That dipping sauce though. A quick creamy horseradish and smoked paprika sauce that takes about two minutes to make and tastes like it belongs in a restaurant. You will dip everything in this sauce from this point forward.
  • Perfect for entertaining. Pile them on a platter, put the dipping sauce in the center, and watch them disappear. They are genuinely one of the most impressive-looking appetizers you can make at home with minimal effort.
  • Healthier than the deep-fried version. You get all the flavor and texture of a classic blooming onion with a fraction of the oil. Your body will appreciate the upgrade even if it doesn’t immediately say so.

Ingredients and key notes

The onions

  • 8-10 small yellow onions (pearl onions or small sweet onions, about 2-3 inches in diameter) — Size matters here more than you’d think. You want onions small enough that the petals cook through completely in the air fryer without the center staying raw. Small sweet onions or large pearl onions are ideal. If you can only find medium onions, they’ll work — just add a few minutes to the cook time. Avoid large onions entirely for this recipe. They won’t cook evenly in the air fryer and the petals won’t get properly crispy.

The coating

  • 1 cup all-purpose flour — Your base coating. It creates the structure that the egg wash clings to and gives the final crust its body.
  • 2 large eggs — Your binding agent. The egg wash is what makes the seasoned flour stick to the onion and creates that battered texture.
  • 1/2 cup buttermilk — Mixed with the eggs to create a richer, slightly tangy batter that adheres better than plain egg alone. If you don’t have buttermilk, mix half a cup of regular milk with half a teaspoon of white vinegar and let it sit for five minutes. Same result.
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika — Goes into both the flour coating and the dipping sauce. It’s the signature flavor of this recipe so don’t substitute with regular paprika if you can help it.
  • 1 tsp garlic powder — Adds savory depth to the coating.
  • 1 tsp onion powder — Doubles down on the onion flavor in the best possible way.
  • 1/2 tsp cayenne pepper — Adds background heat. Reduce to a quarter teaspoon if you’re cooking for kids or spice-sensitive guests.
  • 1/2 tsp dried oregano — Adds an herby note that rounds out the coating.
  • 1 tsp salt — Season the coating generously. Underseasoned breading is one of the most common mistakes people make with recipes like this.
  • 1/2 tsp black pepper
  • Cooking spray — Essential for achieving that golden crispy finish in the air fryer. Don’t skip this step or your coating will dry out rather than crisping up.

The dipping sauce

  • 1/2 cup mayonnaise — Your creamy base.
  • 2 tbsp ketchup — Adds sweetness and that characteristic pink-orange color.
  • 1 tbsp prepared horseradish — This is what makes the sauce. It adds a sharp, zingy heat that cuts through the richness of the mayo beautifully. Start with one tablespoon and add more if you want more kick.
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika — Ties the sauce back to the coating flavors.
  • 1/2 tsp garlic powder
  • 1/2 tsp Worcestershire sauce — Adds depth and umami to the sauce.
  • Salt and black pepper to taste
  • Pinch of cayenne — Optional, for extra heat.

Step-by-step instructions

Step 1: Prep and cut the onions

This is the step that makes or breaks the blooming onion so pay attention here. Peel the onions and slice off the very top — the pointed tip — leaving the root end completely intact. The root is what holds the whole flower together during cutting and cooking. Do not cut the root off.

Place the onion cut-side down on your cutting board. Starting about half an inch from the root, make a straight cut down through the onion. Rotate the onion slightly and make another cut parallel to the first. Keep rotating and cutting until you have made cuts all the way around the onion — aim for about 12-16 cuts on each onion depending on its size. The more cuts you make, the more petals you get and the crispier the final result.

Gently flip the onion over and use your fingers to carefully separate and spread the petals apart. Be gentle — you’re not trying to pull the petals off, just opening them up so the coating can get between them. Soak the cut onions in a bowl of cold water for 15 minutes. This helps the petals open further and removes some of the sharpness from the raw onion.

Step 2: Make the batter and coating

In a medium shallow bowl, whisk together the flour, smoked paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, cayenne, dried oregano, salt, and black pepper. Mix well so the spices are evenly distributed throughout the flour — you don’t want pockets of plain flour or concentrated spice in the coating.

In a separate bowl, whisk together the eggs and buttermilk until fully combined. This is your egg wash. Set both bowls side by side and line up a wire rack or parchment-lined tray next to them to place the coated onions on before they go into the air fryer.

Step 3: Coat the onions

Pat the soaked onions dry with paper towels. Excess water will prevent the coating from adhering properly — dry them well.

Working one at a time, dip each onion into the seasoned flour first, making sure to get the flour between as many petals as possible. Shake off the excess. Then dip it into the egg wash, letting it drain slightly. Then back into the seasoned flour for a second coat, again pushing the flour between the petals. This double-coating is what creates that thick, satisfying crunch on the finished onion. Place each coated onion on the rack or tray while you finish the rest. Once all the onions are coated, spray them generously all over with cooking spray — get into the petals as much as possible.

Step 4: Air fry the onions

Preheat your air fryer to 375 degrees Fahrenheit for 3 minutes. Place the coated onions in the air fryer basket cut-side up, petal-side facing upward. Don’t overcrowd the basket — work in batches if needed. Overcrowding kills crispiness. Air fry for 12-15 minutes until deeply golden and crispy on the outside. At the halfway point, around 6-7 minutes, spray the tops lightly with cooking spray again to encourage even browning. The onions are done when the petals are golden brown and crispy and the inside is tender when tested with a toothpick. Every air fryer runs slightly differently so start checking at 12 minutes.

Step 5: Make the dipping sauce

While the onions are air frying, combine all the dipping sauce ingredients in a small bowl and whisk together until smooth. Taste and adjust — more horseradish for heat, more ketchup for sweetness, a pinch more salt if needed. Cover and refrigerate until ready to serve. The sauce can be made up to 3 days ahead and stored in the fridge — the flavor actually improves overnight as everything melds together.

Step 6: Serve

Transfer the finished blooming onions to a serving platter while still hot. Sprinkle with fresh chopped chives for color and a little freshness. Place the dipping sauce in a small bowl in the center of the platter. Serve immediately — crispy things wait for no one. These are at their absolute best straight out of the air fryer, so time them to come out right when you’re ready to eat.

Serving suggestions

These mini blooming onions are a star on their own but here are some ways to serve them that take the whole experience up a notch:

  • As a game day spread centerpiece. Pile them on a large platter surrounded by other finger foods — chicken wings, sliders, potato skins. They hold their own in any company.
  • As a starter before a steak dinner. This is the classic steakhouse move and it works for a reason. The crispy, savory appetizer primes your appetite perfectly before a main course.
  • With multiple dipping sauces. The smoked paprika horseradish sauce is the hero, but ranch dressing, honey mustard, and buffalo sauce all work beautifully alongside it. Give people options.
  • As a side dish. Honestly these work as a side alongside a burger, a grilled chicken sandwich, or a plate of ribs. They replace fries in the most spectacular way possible.
  • At a party or gathering. They look stunning on a platter and they’re easy to eat standing up without a fork. FYI, they are consistently the first thing to disappear at any gathering I’ve brought them to.

Storage tips

Best eaten fresh. These blooming onions are at their absolute peak the moment they come out of the air fryer. Like most fried foods, they do soften as they sit and cool down. Plan to serve them immediately if at all possible.

Refrigerator: If you have leftovers — which is unlikely but theoretically possible — store them in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 2 days.

Reheating: The air fryer is your best friend here. Reheat leftover blooming onions in the air fryer at 375 degrees Fahrenheit for 4-5 minutes. They won’t be quite as spectacular as fresh but they’ll be significantly better than microwave reheated. The microwave will make them soggy — avoid it entirely for this recipe.

Make ahead tip: You can cut and soak the onions up to 24 hours ahead and store them in cold water in the fridge. You can also mix the dry coating and make the dipping sauce a day ahead. When you’re ready to cook, just coat and air fry. This makes them much more manageable for entertaining.

The dipping sauce: Stores well in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 5 days. Make a big batch — you will find other things to put it on.

Let’s wrap it up

If you’ve been sleeping on your air fryer, these mini blooming onions are your wake-up call. They’re the kind of recipe that makes you realize the air fryer isn’t just for reheating leftovers — it’s genuinely capable of producing restaurant-quality results at home, on a weeknight, without the mess or the guilt.

Make these once and I promise they go straight into your regular rotation. Game days, dinner parties, random Tuesday snack attacks — there is no wrong occasion for a crispy mini blooming onion and a bowl of that dipping sauce.

Your air fryer has been waiting for this moment. Don’t keep it waiting any longer.

With gratitude, Kip.

Air fryer crispy mini blooming onions — the addictive appetizer you’ll make on repeat

Difficulty: Intermediate Prep Time 25 mins Cook Time 15 mins Total Time 40 mins
Estimated Cost: $ 14
Best Season: Suitable throughout the year

Description

Small sweet onions cut into blooms, double-coated in a boldly seasoned flour batter, and air fried until golden and shatteringly crispy. Served with a creamy smoked paprika horseradish dipping sauce that you will want to put on everything. All the magic of a steakhouse blooming onion with none of the deep-fry mess.

Ingredients

For the blooming onions:

For the dipping sauce:

Instructions

  1. Peel onions and slice off the top, keeping the root intact. Make 12-16 cuts down through each onion from top to root without cutting through the root. Gently open the petals. Soak in cold water for 15 minutes then pat dry.
  2. In a shallow bowl, whisk together flour, smoked paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, cayenne, oregano, salt, and pepper. In a separate bowl, whisk eggs and buttermilk together.
  3. Dip each onion in the flour mixture, then the egg wash, then back into the flour. Press coating between the petals. Place on a rack and spray generously with cooking spray.
  4. Preheat air fryer to 375 degrees Fahrenheit. Place onions cut-side up in the basket without overcrowding. Air fry for 12-15 minutes, spraying again with cooking spray at the halfway point, until deeply golden and crispy.
  5. While onions cook, whisk all dipping sauce ingredients together in a small bowl. Taste and adjust seasoning.
  6. Transfer blooming onions to a platter, sprinkle with fresh chives, and serve immediately with dipping sauce.
Keywords: air fryer blooming onion, mini blooming onions, crispy blooming onion air fryer, air fryer appetizer, blooming onion recipe, air fryer onion, easy party appetizer, game day food
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Tag #recipesbykip and #deliciousrecipesbykip if you made this recipe. Follow @recipesbykip on Instagram for more recipes.

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Frequently Asked Questions

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Why aren't my blooming onions getting crispy in the air fryer?

Three likely culprits. First, the onions may not have been dried thoroughly enough after soaking — excess moisture prevents crisping. Second, you may have overcrowded the air fryer basket — the hot air needs to circulate freely around each onion. Third, you may have skipped or under-applied the cooking spray — that light coat of oil is what triggers the crisping reaction in an air fryer. Make sure all three of these are dialed in and your crispiness problem will disappear.

Can I use large onions instead of small ones?

You can attempt it but the result won't be the same. Large onions have a thick center that takes much longer to cook through than the outer petals, which means by the time the center is done the outer petals are overdone. The mini size is specifically what makes this recipe work so well in the air fryer. If you only have large onions available, cut them into quarters instead and make individual blooming onion quarters — they'll cook much more evenly.

Can I make these gluten free?

Yes. Swap the all-purpose flour for a good quality gluten free all-purpose flour blend. Most blends work very well as a 1:1 substitute in coating recipes like this one. The texture may be very slightly different but the crispiness and flavor will be just as good.

What if I don't have buttermilk?

No problem at all. Add half a teaspoon of white vinegar or lemon juice to half a cup of regular whole milk, stir, and let it sit for five minutes. It curdles slightly and replicates buttermilk's tangy acidity perfectly. This works in any recipe that calls for buttermilk.

Can I prepare these ahead of time for a party?

Partially, yes. You can cut, soak, and dry the onions up to 24 hours ahead and store them in the fridge. You can mix the dry coating and make the dipping sauce a day ahead too. But the actual coating and air frying should be done as close to serving time as possible. Coated onions that sit waiting lose their coating adhesion and the texture suffers. Air fry them in batches while your guests are arriving for the best result.

My coating is falling off during air frying. What am I doing wrong?

Most likely the onions weren't dry enough before coating, or the double-coat wasn't pressed firmly enough into the petals. Make sure to really work the seasoned flour between the petals with your fingers rather than just dipping and shaking. The coating needs physical contact with the onion surface to adhere properly. Pressing it in firmly makes all the difference.

A self-taught Cook, Filmmaker, and Creative Director

Most days you can find me in the kitchen experimenting with new recipes or behind my camera capturing the stories food tells. What I’m most passionate about is creating dishes that are quick, comforting, and surprisingly healthy—and sharing them with you.

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