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EMG

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Posts posted by EMG

  1. Any news on the higher voltage item for us folks abroad (UK here)?

    There doesn't seem to be an option to select the 220V model on the website, or in fact any option to ship outside the US.

    International customers can order by phone. Their 220V version is coming out sometime in October (or so it says on their website).

  2. The "for household use only" has me worried. Is this the synonym of "Not for every day use"? That's the way I read it anyways. It kind of makes you wonder what kind of lifespan or usage you can get out of this model.

    Really disappointed in Polyscience!!! This is their answer to the emergence of the Anova, Sansair and Nomiku?

    Major FAIL from Polyscience IMO...

  3. That's interesting. The specs don't seem to be on par with the Anova or Sansaire, and it's yellow, but I'd be interested in hearing what people think. I'm curious as to why they are so adamant about household use only. Is it because it can only handle 5 gallons and they assume no restaurant would be using a 5 gallon tank?

    It's for household use only because no self-respecting restaurant would own a yellow submarine for a circulator :raz:

    • Like 1
  4. Hi PeppersGalore,

    Shawarma is my favorite go-to take-out meal :) here's a few helpful links to start you up:

    Recipes: http://www.spinninggrillers.com/shawarma-recipes.html

    How to assemble on a stick for a sinning griller:

    Garlic sauce recipe: http://allrecipes.com/recipe/lebanese-garlic-sauce/ (although I think I have egg white in my recipe). This is a little tricky to make. The trick is to slowly mix in the oil.

  5. How easy is it to cut a rounded hole in polycarbonate? What tool does one use?

    Cambro has two grades of lids. Neither is polycarbonate. Either can be cut trivially with shop scissors, a utility knife, even a cooking knife. The hole doesn't have to be exact.

    This isn't rocket surgery!

    This is the lid I was thinking of: http://tinyurl.com/mgjbq73

    That lid is too rigid. it will crack under minimal stress. The soft "transport lids" are your safest bet. Just like one of these:

    http://cdnimg.webstaurantstore.com/new/70030s_sm.jpg

  6. Oh ok, that makes sense. So either putting them in a basket or putting a basket over them would work right? I'm sure putting them in a basket works but since I can't physically see it, won't the eggs get sucked out of the basket? Or is it not sucking but pushing the eggs around, hence the basket? I'm glad I read this as this is one of the first things I want to do sous vide!

    Get a small 1/9 stainless steel or plastic 4" food pan and put it in your water bath and put the eggs in them. If the eggs still move around, flip the food pan upside down in the water to cover the eggs.

  7. I'm buying the Anova Sous Vide Circulator as soon as it's available in Canada.

    A circulator is potentially the perfect device for an application that's unfamiliar to most people right now: making cheese at home. I've been making cheese at home for 4 years now. There's a reason why the hobby/art of making artisanal cheese at home hasn't picked up; you need absolute control on temperatures between 86F and 108F without scorching the milk. The temp control is so demanding that you need to rise the temp by 2F every 5 minutes. These new circulators have the potential achieve that in a water bath uniformally. People won't spend $200 for a cheese vat, but if they already have a sous vide circulator, they might just go ahead and try to make some fresh mozz at home. I really think the hobby will pick up once most house holds have a circulator.

    Can't wait to try it!!!

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