Cod gets kind of a boring reputation, which I think is mostly unfair. It’s mild, yes. But mild means it takes on flavor well, cooks fast, and doesn’t require much fussing — and when you hit it with a lemony herb panko crust and blast it with dry heat, something genuinely good happens. This recipe came together on a night when I had four fillets, a half-used bunch of parsley, and about 20 minutes before I completely ran out of patience. I’ve made it probably a dozen times since.
The method here works beautifully in an air fryer — the circulating heat gets the crust crackly while keeping the inside tender and flaky. The toaster oven version is just as good, especially if you do a quick broil at the end. Either way, you’re looking at a real dinner in under 20 minutes, start to finish. If you’re cooking this in a toaster oven regularly, a good toaster oven baking pan makes a noticeable difference — the cheap thin ones warp and cook unevenly.
The crust is simple: panko, parsley, lemon zest, a little olive oil. You press it onto the top of each fillet before cooking and it basically glues itself on and toasts into something crispy and fragrant. It’s a technique I use on salmon too and it never gets old. Smoked paprika in the seasoning rub adds a little depth without making the fish taste smoky — just kind of warm and savory in a background way.
If you want to upgrade your setup, cooking fish in an air fryer is much easier with air fryer parchment liners — cleanup goes from annoying to basically nothing. Serve this with rice, a simple salad, roasted potatoes, or honestly just some bread and a glass of whatever’s open.
Air Fryer or Toaster Oven Cod (Crispy, Flaky, Done in 15 Minutes)
Lightly seasoned cod fillets with a golden, herb-panko crust — cooked in the air fryer or toaster oven until perfectly flaky inside and crispy on top. Fast enough for a weeknight, good enough to actually look forward to.
Ingredients
For the Cod
For the Panko Crust
To Serve
Instructions
Prep the Fish
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Pat your cod fillets completely dry with paper towels. This step matters more than people think — wet fish steams instead of crisping, and you'll end up with a soggy crust. Don't rush it.
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In a small bowl, mix together the olive oil, salt, pepper, smoked paprika, garlic powder, and onion powder. Rub this all over both sides of each fillet.
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In a separate bowl, stir together the panko, parsley, lemon zest, olive oil, and salt until the crumbs are evenly coated and look slightly clumped. Press a thin layer of the panko mixture firmly onto the top of each fillet only — the top side, not the bottom.
Air Fryer Method
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Preheat your air fryer to 400°F for 3 minutes. Lightly spray or brush the basket with oil.
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Place the fillets crust-side up in a single layer. Don't overlap them — cook in batches if your basket is small.
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Air fry at 400°F for 10 to 13 minutes, depending on thickness. At the 10-minute mark, check: the crust should be deep golden and the fish should flake easily when pressed with a fork at the thickest part. Thinner fillets (under 3/4 inch) may be done at 9 or 10 minutes, so peek early the first time you make this.
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No need to flip. Serve immediately with lemon wedges.
Toaster Oven Method
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Preheat your toaster oven to 425°F on the bake setting. Line the toaster oven pan with foil and give it a light spray of oil.
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Place the fillets crust-side up on the prepared pan, spaced apart. Slide onto the middle rack.
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Bake for 13 to 16 minutes. Check at 13 — the panko should be golden brown and the fish should be opaque all the way through with no translucent center. If your toaster oven has a broil setting, you can hit it on high for the last 60 to 90 seconds to really crisp the top, but watch it closely.
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Serve hot with lemon wedges.
Notes
Frozen cod works, but thaw it completely in the fridge overnight and dry it extra well — frozen fish holds a lot of water. If you're not a parsley person, fresh dill works great in the crust. Leftovers reheat well in the air fryer at 375°F for about 4 minutes — better than the microwave by a long shot. Don't crowd the basket or pan; that's the single biggest reason crust turns soft instead of crispy.
Nutrition
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Written by
Emma is a home cook who loves coaxing big flavor out of a toaster oven — from crispy roasted vegetables to easy weeknight dinners and sweet treats. She develops and tests Toastera's recipes for small-appliance kitchens.
Reviewed for accuracy & safety · Last updated July 13, 2026 · About Toastera
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