Anova sous vide cookers are on sale on Amazon right now, so I went ahead and ordered one. I'm going cooler shopping later today, so does anyone have any recommendations on building a cooking vessel? Any great recipes I should try?
My best tip would be return it when you get it and not open it. It's like a treadmill, exercise bike, juicer, waffle iron, etc. The new will soon wear off of it because you will get tired of waiting for your meat cooked in a plastic bag in warm water takes forever to cook and doesn't have much flavor after that long period of time. Sure, it will be tender but if you have to wait hours for it and then sear it to get any flavor then why not grill or reverse sear (yuck, not my preference but whatever) a good cut of tender meat to begin with? I ordered one, used it about half a dozen times and gave it to my sister. She used it twice and donated it to Palmer Home Thrift Store.
Did you cook much fish with it? I thought that was supposed to be a big part of it, that you could cook fish and have a wide range of time you can pull it out without having to worry that it will be under or over cooked.
I have trouble grilling fish without overcooking it. Usually still tastes good, but the few times it's perfect reveals how much you're losing by overcooking just a little bit. I do better with it in a cast iron skillet but still not as well as I'd like.
I love using it for fish, especially cod and halibut. You can basically butter-poach the fish in the bag, but not sacrifice texture.
Worthless, good for nothing yankee. Can't you at least pretend you belong and talk about how it does with speckled trout and redfish? Or hell, even bass, crappie, or catfish?
It's good with a steak too, but most people can cook a good steak on a grill. I find myself missing the smoky flavor and rendered fat you get from a high heat grill when I sous vide beef. Don't get me wrong, it's still good, but just a personal preference.
Get one of these: https://www.amazon.com/Rubbermaid-C...d=1606241034&sprefix=sous+vide,aps,181&sr=8-3
They are also excellent for "cooking" pre-cooked hams. Completely eliminates any drying out risk.
I love using it for fish, especially cod and halibut. You can basically butter-poach the fish in the bag, but not sacrifice texture.