Sous Vide: Recipes, Techniques & Equipment, 2011
#121
Posted 30 January 2011 - 04:20 AM
Calf's heart is brined for 24h, packed with duck fat, braised sous-vide at 79.4 °C for 24h; then fat is poured off and heated to 82°C, heart is sliced, warmed in the fat, drained and served.
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I am looking for infographics showing average percentages of collagen content in various beef muscle. Can someone point to scientific research or web articles?
#122
Posted 30 January 2011 - 09:42 PM
Edited by ScottyBoy, 30 January 2011 - 09:45 PM.
#123
Posted 03 February 2011 - 12:57 PM
So now I'm on a quest to find more marinades to put in the vacuum bag that will help with post-sv browning. Any suggestions?
#124
Posted 03 February 2011 - 02:27 PM
#125
Posted 03 February 2011 - 02:35 PM
#126
Posted 03 February 2011 - 02:42 PM
#127
Posted 03 February 2011 - 02:47 PM
I understand that (per Doug Baldwin's book) there are some pathogen spores that survive the relatively low heat of sous vide cooking. I understood this to mean that we *always* need to rapidly chill our meats if we aren't eating them right away.
And I can't realistically see restaurants telling their customers that they can take their food home as long as they promise to chill it in an ice water bath before putting it in the fridge.
I did perform a search in the old (original) egullet sous vide thread, and I couldn't turn up any explicit mention of this topic regarding doggy bags/takeaway.
Edited by DaveJes1979, 03 February 2011 - 02:48 PM.
#128
Posted 03 February 2011 - 03:02 PM
#129
Posted 03 February 2011 - 03:08 PM
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#130
Posted 07 February 2011 - 07:59 AM
In general you want food to either be hot, or cold, and not in between. So ideally you would rapid chill anything before it goes into the refer. This also protects other food in the refer from heat you introduce. So it is always good practice.
That said, this is not usually necessary.
#131
Posted 07 February 2011 - 04:19 PM
Douglas Baldwin has added a table of contents and a list of tables to his Guide.
This will enable easy linking directly to tables or sections.
Go to Douglas Baldwin's Practical Guide to Sous Vide Cooking, right-click link the appropriate link and copy link-address.
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#132
Posted 15 February 2011 - 02:06 PM
#133
Posted 15 February 2011 - 02:31 PM
Just bought a Sous Vide supreme and have used it a few times. Very happy with the results so far. I have so many questions. I am receiving Mr. Baldwins book any day now and am looking forward to learning more about this technique. Just a quick question if anybody can help me out. The other day I made flank steaks @ 134 degrees F for about 24-25hrs. What do you do with the juices in the bag? I felt terrible dumping them down the drain. I was a little concerned with food safety issues. The steak was amazing anyway even without a sauce but I was just wondering if the juices can be used for a jus or gravy. Love all the informative posts about sous vide. Thanks for all the hard work.
You can put the juices in the microwave to coagulate the proteins, filter them out, and use it as a cooking liquid (say, reducing for a sauce)
#134
Posted 15 February 2011 - 04:22 PM
Just bought a Sous Vide supreme and have used it a few times. Very happy with the results so far. I have so many questions. I am receiving Mr. Baldwins book any day now and am looking forward to learning more about this technique. Just a quick question if anybody can help me out. The other day I made flank steaks @ 134 degrees F for about 24-25hrs. What do you do with the juices in the bag? I felt terrible dumping them down the drain. I was a little concerned with food safety issues. The steak was amazing anyway even without a sauce but I was just wondering if the juices can be used for a jus or gravy. Love all the informative posts about sous vide. Thanks for all the hard work.
I save the juices, make a roux with some duck fat (or any other fat you have on hand) and Wondra and then whisk the juices in to make a sauce. it works great and has tremendous flavor. Try this with the juices you get from short ribs done in the momofuku recipe and you will be convinced that this is a good way to use these juices. Last week I did Beef
Wellington for 50 people and saved the juices. last night I made a sauce as I described above but the protein coagulated and made it very "lumpy". A quick spin in the blender made it into a powerful beefy gravy.
#135
Posted 15 February 2011 - 06:22 PM
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#136
Posted 15 February 2011 - 07:55 PM
Thanks, my beet dirt is wonderfully dirty!!!
#137
Posted 17 February 2011 - 06:51 PM
So, I'm wondering, cooking the meat SV turned out amazing, what if I'd put the skin on a cooling rack that fits in my baking sheet, maybe even on top of parchment paper through which I punch a lot of holes for the fat to drain, then cover with an other parchment paper and the 2nd baking sheet. Would that get me thinner and less fatty skin? It also took a lot longer to crisp up, almost an hour.
Oh, and I'll salt a bit less "liberally" next time too, I might not salt at all unless it's necessary for some reason, then sprinkle with salt once the skin is done.
All in all a great dinner though, first time I ever made duck breast, which I finally found at Whole Foods in the specialty freezer next to the meat counter.
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#138
Posted 18 February 2011 - 05:22 AM
I used to coagulate the solids out and use the juice for sauce. Looking at the coagulate, I realised that it could be subjected to heat to give an approximation of the maillard effect that you get on pan residue when frying. The process I use is:Just bought a Sous Vide supreme and have used it a few times. Very happy with the results so far. I have so many questions. I am receiving Mr. Baldwins book any day now and am looking forward to learning more about this technique. Just a quick question if anybody can help me out. The other day I made flank steaks @ 134 degrees F for about 24-25hrs. What do you do with the juices in the bag? I felt terrible dumping them down the drain. I was a little concerned with food safety issues. The steak was amazing anyway even without a sauce but I was just wondering if the juices can be used for a jus or gravy. Love all the informative posts about sous vide. Thanks for all the hard work.
1. heat juices to coagulate solids
2. strain off clear juice (osmazome)
3. Put solids in saucepan and heat until maillard effect occurs
4. deglaze pan with alcohol of choice
5. add some stock
6. add osmazome from step 2
7. add veal demi glace
8. boil to thicken/use potato starch mixed with water as a thickener
9. adjust seasoning
10. add an acid (sherry vinegar or similar) to taste before serving
The sauce is delicious. If I have any left over, I freeze it in ice cube trays and use one cube per person as a sauce on steak. Variation: sautee some sliced mushrooms in butter, add sauce and serve.
Enjoy playing around with it but please don't tip all that taste down the drain.
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#139
Posted 18 February 2011 - 07:38 AM
I have just cooked a piece of brisket (63C for 24 hours) and naturally saved the bag juice, having boiled and filtered it.
The juice did not set up in the fidge overnight, like a normal stock.
If the tenderness of the meat comes from the collagen dissolving to gelatine, I would have expected gelatine in the bag juice.
learly something different is going on.
Any ideas?
#140
Posted 19 February 2011 - 10:38 AM
I think that the reason the juice does not gel is that relatively little juice comes out of the meat. The juice that does get generated does not contain much gelatin. The heat and time do convert the collagen into gelatin, but it is mostly not dissolving and leaching out of the meat. So yes, there is gelatin, but it pretty much stays in place.
What this suggests is that it make take higher tempertaure to dissolve the gelatin and remove it from the collagen matrix than it does to convert the collagen in the first place.
#141
Posted 19 February 2011 - 11:37 AM
Last week I did 20 pounds of well trimmed beef tenderloin (24 hours @ 55C) and saved a bit over 2 quarts of juices. They did not gel in the refrigerator.
Two weeks earlier I did 10 pounds of well trimmed picnic pork (24 hours @68.3C) that produced a bit under a quart of juices that gelled very nicely overnight in the refrigerator.
Both produced great tasting stocks.
#142
Posted 19 February 2011 - 11:44 AM
I suggest an experiment. Get a non-gelling stock and adding a small amount of acid or salt and compare results after chilling.
The presence of bone in the initial stock might also be a factor. Heck of a lot of collagen in bone and its membranes.
Edited by gfweb, 19 February 2011 - 11:45 AM.
#143
Posted 19 February 2011 - 01:15 PM
When I made osmazome from mince as an experiment (see this post), the resultant extract gelled marvellously. It was cooked at the relatively low temp of 56C.
Subsequently when making it from the juices of intact pieces of meat such as long, slow cooked brisket, I've observed that it doesn't gel. The mince had no salt or acid added to it during cooking.
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#144
Posted 19 February 2011 - 03:28 PM
#145
Posted 19 February 2011 - 03:40 PM
As to the discussion of vinegar/salt - it's an interesting concept. But when I make chicken stock (granted, not SV, but in the pressure cooker - see the pressure cooked stocks thread), there is no salt added at all, and I can cut the resulting stock into cubes the next day after being in the refrigerator.
#146
Posted 20 February 2011 - 03:50 AM
Happy editing!
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#147
Posted 20 February 2011 - 09:34 AM
#148
Posted 20 February 2011 - 12:38 PM
Low temperatures and long time will definitely convert collagen, but it does not cause the shrinkage of collagen fibers that tends to cause juice to be actively expelled. As a result, I think that the gelatin remains in-place and does not go into solution.
#149
Posted 20 February 2011 - 02:09 PM
#150
Posted 21 February 2011 - 07:19 AM




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