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Re: Sous vide
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Re: Sous vide
Did 16 pounds of eye roast for a party Saturday...130 for 30 hours...seasoned well, then vac sealed...minimal post-bath sear as I was slicing thin on deli slicer for sandwiches...the juice in bag went into a stock pot with sweated onions/garlic, some add'l beef stock, and a concentrated "stock base" for an "au jus"...made a great sandwich with horeradish...way better than deli roast beef...
Out of the bag... http://i313.photobucket.com/albums/l...ps61klhejg.jpg Sliced... http://i313.photobucket.com/albums/l...psquzoefpu.jpg http://i313.photobucket.com/albums/l...psyusnwqet.jpg |
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Looks awesome!
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...holy s*** :dr
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http://www.lemproducts.com/product/c...n-saws-slicers |
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No photos but I've been using the Anova for the last few days and have been impressed with how meats turn out with this cooking process. I've never really viewed boneless skinless chicken breast as good for much other than chucking into a soup or drowning under a sauce to cover it up, until now. Was also quite impressed by how it took a thin, cheap ribeye from Safeway (generic mid-tier supermarket w/ average quality) and turned it into something quite edible, which is unusual for their meats IMO.
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A friend has one, I've used it, I think it's a nice slicer. It's not a Hobart, but it's also not carrying the $2500+ price tag of a Hobart. I currently have a 7" Deni that I bought in near new condition for around $6 in a thrift store a few years ago. It works, but I'm not thrilled with it. Lots of little gripes about it that might not be an issue to anyone else but me, the big catch is that I find myself discarding the safety guard and food pusher all too often, and I fear that the next time I cut myself with it because of this, I might not be so lucky as to only need a few closure strips or sutures. |
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I have this slicer from Cabelas - http://www.cabelas.com/product/CABEL...3893716&rid=20
Works well if you don't want to step up to the price of the LEM. Not to bad to clean and does a good job. |
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So I have a rib eye setup for dinner in the sous vide. I plan to cook the steak at 132* for about 4 hours just to see what a 4 hour bath will do.
But, I also have snow peas and carrots. From what I've read, they need to be cooked at about 184. The two recipes I have looked at call for about 45-50 minutes. I can't, of course, put the meat and veggies in the same water bath. Suggestions? Putting the veggies in the lower temp bath and letting them go with a pan fry at the end doesn't seem to buy me much. I'd love to hear what others are doing. No - throwing the veggies away and having more steak is not in the cards. |
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YMMV. |
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Time for another Anova! :D
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How thick is the ribeye steak that you are planning on cooking for 4 hours? I'm curious to hear how that one works out. |
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