I will havee sous-vide tuna today. Yummy.
Nearly every week. Regularly do beef joint for sunday dinner, fish, pork ribs etc. Infact got the folks round today so a few fillet steaks at 55C or so will be done today.
Sent from my E5823 using Tapatalk
I will havee sous-vide tuna today. Yummy.
Thanks for the replies. I ordered the Anova today, looking forward to trying some steak at the weekend.
I have been following this thread with interest. How are people getting on I am considering an Anova model?
I like the idea but feel it might be one of those gadgets that will sit in the back of cupboard.
Following. Dropped hints that i wanted one for my bday, so fingers crossed I maybe lucky!
70 off the Anova Precision Cooker for Black Friday....
https://anovaculinary.com/anova-prec...SAAEgIPVPD_BwE
For searing meat - I use a cast iron or a steel/ceramic skillet on a tabletop induction hob.
The surface temp of the skillet reaches >230Cdeg in rapid time. (So fast, that I cracked an oval cast skillet on first attempt!)
To save the kitchen/house filling up with smoke/cooking products - I put the hob outside on the table, under the gazebo and finish off the food there.
For all the time it takes - getting a little bit cold, is a price worth paying.
Tefal table-top skillet is around £47 from most outlets, and seems good quality. (compared to a gas ring- it isn't affected by the breeze outside either)
Yes, carbon steel and cast iron are unbeatable for searing. Just stay the hell away from anything Teflon for high-temperature use, or better yet, for any use. :)
The recent steak-pan thread reminded me of this one, so here's an update.
Novelty is no longer much of a factor over a year in, and I find that the s-v circulator has been a very worthwhile addition. Although it's not an everyday thing for me, it gets used more than often enough (i.e. about once a week on average) to justify its existence, and it's in use right now to get three kilos of pork rib ready to broil for Christmas dinner. For things like big holiday meals, being able to prepare stuff days in advance and then quickly finish it with a grill/broiler/pan/blowtorch is a big advantage.
As its functionality can't be duplicated by other means and the results are often superior to any other method, plus it's efficient and doesn't have to be terribly expensive, I can't see any reason not to get one.
Here is my solitary dinner for tonight.
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
Salt, pepper and maybe some good olive oil or butter are enough for any half-decent steak, let alone a top-grade cut of rib.
Steaks cooked in plastic call for plenty of ketchup
Fas est ab hoste doceri
Well hello...
Replaced our old slow cooker and the new one doubles as a 'sous vide' bath. Tried it out yesterday with a couple of duck breast (1hr @56c then flashed on a very hot griddle). Delicious!
Looking to do some lamb next, either chops or a joint.
Nice; duck is amazing.
Had some chicken breast tonight that, after about two hours at 63 degrees, came out juicy and tender to an extent that I didn’t even know was possible with a lean cut. A quick sear in the pan with an oil, grated-ginger, honey, chilli and lime glaze finished it off properly.
Better yet, the entire operation only required about ten minutes of actual working time.
The wife came home yesterday with a pork loin with Italian herbs that is already vac-packed.
Any reason why I shouldn't just bung that in the sous vide bath?
The finishing touch
Followed this thread for a while but revisited mainly because I was bought a slow cooker for Christmas.
Bought an Uno/Codlo to go with it as an easy/cheap option and looking forward to having a play.
Did 3 x chicken breasts last night, 2hrs at 60Cdeg, and flung under the preheated grill with more marinade on - to eat cold with salad.
Certainly seems tender, and much less smoke in the kitchen due to reduced grill-time. Would be great for doing large amounts of chicken.
Its been a while since I had the Sous-Vide out so at the weekend after some chat with Mj2k about cheaper cuts I went out and brought some Silver side to try for a Sunday roast, which turned our very well.
While I was out I saw some brisket and I'd been fancying trying the sous-vide smoked brisket recipe here:
https://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/...as-recipe.html
I used my normal smoking rub, put this on vac'd and left in the fridge for a couple of days to start a cure (along with some liquid smoke)
Then sous-vide at 67c for 34 hours and then dried it off, re rubbed and back in the oven for a couple of hours at 135c
It lost about 200ml which I reserved and used to make some gravy
As it came out of the SV:
Out of the oven and carved:
This leftover made two great brisket sandwiches with the leftover gravy for dipping....
I think overall a success but next time I might drop the SV temp to 60 for a little firmer brisket.
That brisket looks great, something I keep meaning to have a go at. I've currently got a rack of ribs being sous-vided right now. Put in last night about 5pm at 64C (should've been earlier but I forgot) and will take out about 6pm tonight. I'll then put it in the oven for an hour about gas mark 4. Just deciding either to reapply the dry rub before going into the oven to try to get a good bark which is something I've not done before or coat it in the sauce I normal make.
https://www.seriouseats.com/ is a great source for sous-vide recipes.
I have also tried various 30h+ recipes and found that I like the texture of the meat better when in the sous-vide at 60-62° rather than 68-72°. Same for pork belly, 36h at 62° and then into the oven at max temperature. Wow.
Last edited by Raffe; 2nd March 2018 at 14:58.
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
Agreed, and it's not only for sous-vide that the site is a top-grade resource.
For just one example of something I didn't know existed that became indispensable once tried, have a read about preserved lemons there sometime. :)
Ribs came out really well last night. Did a dry rub, sous vide 64C for 24hrs, pat dry, roast in the oven for 1 hr at gas mark 4 then applied the sauce and roasted for another 30min. I want to try them at 36hrs next time but these turned out really tasty and the fats just melted.DSC_0552.JPGDSC_0555.JPG
Sent from my E5823 using Tapatalk
Si, that brisket looked good - might give that a go, as my full packer hunting locally is failing for the BGE.
I use a rub on beef short ribs that tastes amazing. Strangely the exact same rub from the same batch I made, when used on brisket tastes of nothing but pepper - very weird & one I cannot fathom based on surface area etc.
Can you post your rub recipe?
Matt
Sent from my iPhone using TZ-UK mobile app
Sure Matt,
I rubbed the brisket in french’s mustard going into the SV.
This is the rub:
- 2 Tbsp Paprika
- 1 Tbsp Smoked Paprika
- 1 Tbsp Freshly Ground Black Pepper
- 2 Tbsp Salt
- 1/2 Tsp Celery Seeds, Crushed
- 1 Tbsp Dried Oregano, Ground
- 1 Tbsp Dried Thyme, Ground
- 1 Tbsp Sumac
- 2 Tbsp Garlic Powder
- 1 Tbsp Mustard Powder
- 2 Tbsp Brown Sugar
- 1 Tbsp Cumin Seeds, Toasted & Ground
- 1 Tbsp Fennel Seeds, Toasted & Ground
- 1 1/2 Tbsp Chilli Powder
- 1 Tsp Cayenne Pepper
- couple of cloves
- few allspice berries
- 1 Tbsp of onion powder
- 1 Tbsp Ground Ginger
- 1 Tbsp Sichuan pepper
Makes a fare sized batch.
Cheers, will be giving that a go. Great flavour profiles looking at the ingredients.
Sent from my iPhone using TZ-UK mobile app
Been a while since this thread was bumped and a lot of photos have been lost to the great photobucket cull.
I went to Costco in the week and had a fun afternoon Wednesday vac packing the half ribeye, half fillet and pork shoulder.
Here’s the steaks ready to vac pack.
Here’s half the pork shoulder covered in American mustard and my rub, I added a couple of tsps of mesquite liquid smoke to this.
And this is where it will be until three pm tomorrow, then it’ll get re-rubbed and in an oven for a couple of hours to bark up.
I use some old foam garage floor tiles as a insulation jacket on my 12 ltr vessel.
I suspect it could well be used on ribs but I haven’t done any yet, it works well on brisket though.
They are good machines, I have a suspicion that they are designed for medical / scientific use and re-badged.
I like having 1400w vs the 900w that a lot of the other machines offer.
What’s the make of kit then? Mine is an all in one device, a bit like a slow cooker but does limit the amount I can cook.
Quite like the immersion ones, as can use my stockpot.
On the back burner though as my vacuum sealer has finally given up the ghost.
Sent from my iPhone using TZ-UK mobile app
I use these.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Vactec-Ther...eywords=Vactec
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/...1?ie=UTF8&th=1
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Rubbermaid-...8JF5KXSB088CWY
Most of the wand types are only 800w so can have trouble raising and maintaining temp plus I’ve seen reviews where they have failed quite quickly hence me getting this one with 1500w
Last edited by Captain Morgan; 31st March 2018 at 17:12.
Thanks, will give it a full research, particularly as you are insulating yours.
Given I know you have a smoker, how does the pork compare, o LY tried friends’ faux pulled pork, and theirs is easier, but never as good. After a genuine comparison, as if this is as good...why bother with my BGE for it!?
Hoping it’s just an easy pork dish; as you know I’m pretty heavily invested in the more traditional route!
Sent from my iPad using TZ-UK mobile app
Although the losses you’ve seen for your next sauce are something I can never get back from my BGE. Interesting if you did meat on both & calculated the difference in loss via both methods.
If the bbq is better, I can sacrifice a butt for amazing sauce quite easily
Sent from my iPad using TZ-UK mobile app
You can buy some already insulated vessels now, I wasn’t aware of that at the time, have a look on google, think cool box / food delivery box and you’ll get it.
Something like this https://www.amazon.co.uk/Professiona...D12AATZHFKVYN5
Obviously check the size is suitable.
Actually that’s not a great example the one I’m looking for has a hard plastic liner more suitable to the higher temperatures in a SV use.
The difference are,
Bark, better on the smoker.
Time, longer in SV, but it’s a known time, no wondering what time you’ll eat because of the stall in the smoker.
The liquid smoke in the SV helps but again it’s not the same as the smoker.
Ease well obviously the SV is much easier. Also easier / more convenient to do smaller portions.
The SV is more hands off cooking.
I still smoke but not so much until the weather improves. It’s definitely worth trying if you haven’t.
Last edited by Captain Morgan; 31st March 2018 at 21:56.