Total
Time: 10 hours
Active Time: 30 mins -- mostly calibrating
Makes: 2-6 servings
I’ve pondered buying expensive sous vide equipment, but found I can get
the job done quite well with appliances I already have that would cost
under $100 —a good quality digital thermometer (ideally one with a
probe on a wire) and an electric wok or skillet with an old fashioned
analog temperature control.
The analog control is essential. A digital control with low-medium-high
like is found in crock pots is not going to do it. The old fashioned
dial control on your mom’s electric skillet —the one with that curious
metal spike coming out of it — is the kind you need.
The magic of this technique is once you’ve brought your food to cooking
temperature (say 145-50) using a precise digital thermometer, you
should be able to get your cheap, simple analog control to maintain it
at that temperature with accuracy that is plenty good enough for
excellent results.
(PoorMan's Soo Vede cont.)
Inspired by this technique and the one where meat is baked then grilled to sear, I've altered the way I cook meat on the stove top. I now pan-fry at a really low setting until almost done then crank it up to high to sear rather than the other way around. Never overcooked, always juicy!
ReplyDeleteI'm going to try this next but I will pan sear before serving. It's a color-texture thing.
AWM
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteVery good Helly, but you take me more seriously than I do myself *snortz*
ReplyDeleteSo I win?
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