Clearly hereallyhates sous-vide, even having literally no knowledge about it at all.You can do it with a cooler, and even the appliances aren't as big as stove. You really have no idea what this shit looks like, do you?
Clearly hereallyhates sous-vide, even having literally no knowledge about it at all.You can do it with a cooler, and even the appliances aren't as big as stove. You really have no idea what this shit looks like, do you?
Ziploc works fine unless you're using spices/etc to give other flavors (like a quick marinade), then you want as much air out as possible.You need a vacuum sealer too, or can you just use a ziplock with the air 'pushed' out?
Yeah, I think it's as big as a stove and that's why I said in my post that it's smaller than the stove. Great reading.You can do it with a cooler, and even the appliances aren't as big as stove. You really have no idea what this shit looks like, do you?
It's certainly smaller than a dishwasher and similar in size to an electric mixer (Kitchenaid), but I guess you making assumptions on it and immediately calling it "nerdy and overlycomplicated" or assuming every steakhouse uses a grill certainly makes you qualified to pass judgement on something you've never tried.Yeah, I think it's as big as a stove and that's why I said in my post that it's smaller than the stove. Great reading.
Stop being smart. That shit isn't allowed here.Rather than going back and forth ad nauseum about this, ICHALLENGEyou to cook a sous-vide steak. Surely you have an ice-chest, hot water, ziplock bags and a thermometer. Rather than telling us how you wouldn't eat one on a plane or on a train, in a box or with a fox, cook one up and report back.
Here is a link if you need it, but I'm pretty sure you should be able to handle it:Sous-Vide 101: Prime Steak Primer | Serious Eats
*edit: If you are really up for a challenge, get 2 nice thick pieces (3"+ imo, sous-vide really shines with the thicker the cut) of your choice cut, sous-vide one and grill the other then do a side-by-side.
Good luck with your overcooked steak.I'll pass. Good luck with yours though. Don't mispronounce Wylie Dufresne's name in your James Beard award acceptance speech.
I'll pass. Good luck with yours though. Don't mispronounce Wylie Dufresne's name in your James Beard award acceptance speech.
Zero professional steakhouses use grills. They all use sous-vide or salamanders. If you go to one and your steak has grill marks, they put those on there with a heated iron to give it that "grill look." It doesn't make sense for them to do it any other way, considering the amount of time freed up and, most importantly, the consistent results.It's a large, expensive, unnecessary appliance. I can see having one if you are in a restaurant or a caterer, but getting one for a home kitchen is pretty silly in my opinion. Also, a shit load of steak houses cook on a grill. None use a fucking immersion circulator.