If you haven’t heard about Sous Vide aka Water Oven machines, you definitely should start checking them out! The most basic way to explain the principle is to cook items at the temperature you want it to reach, over a longer time rather than higher heat and removing when the food reaches that temp.
Let’s look at that example a bit further. Say you want to cook a steak to say 140 degrees. On a grill or in a cast iron skillet, your temperatures will be quite a bit higher than the 140 degrees, so you will need to remove the steak when the meat reaches 135 degrees in the center. The problem is the outsides of the steak are above that temperature already, so you will get a gray banding of overcooked meat on the edges.
With a Sous Vide machine (aka “water oven”) you will set your water temperature to the exact temperature you want to cook you steak to. You then seal your steak in a water-tight bag and while fancy ones are available, an ordinary heavy duty Ziploc bag will do fine. Then if you set your water to 140 degrees, your steak will not be able to reach any temperature higher than 140 degrees, through the entire steak. No overcooked gray meat on the edges!
When just starting out and learning about Sous Vide (water bath, water oven, whatever you want to call it) cooking there are couple budget minded alternatives which you might already have at home so you can try it with your favorite steak tonight!
I haven’t measured the temperature range exactly, but this fryer will go low enough to make an extremely rare steak, and holding 130-140 degrees is no problem for it at all. Of course it doesn’t have the fine tune set & forget temperature adjustment of a Sous Vide machine, but it also only cost $60 and can be used for deep frying too!
Many other deep fryers will work also, as long as they have a temperature adjustment that is low enough to allow for cooking at the temperature that you want. I just know this one will work from personal experience, but feel free to try other ones too.
I just use a small thermometer that will fit through the hole to monitor the water temperature and adjust the heat on the range until it is at desired temperature.
The biggest challenge with this is controlling your range, but here are some ideas you can try. Just be sure to try them with water-only and not your food so you don’t risk ruining something.
Basically the idea comes down to a few simple steps:
I have an electric smoker very similar to this one that I use for ribs, brisket, smoked chicken and even some smoked mullet. Yum!
While I haven’t tried this yet, it seems like it would work just like the deep fryer. The theory here is I will add a pot with a lid, adjust the temperature on the smoker (probably higher than what the desired water temperature is) and measure the water temperature. My smoker has a similar adjustment for temperature as the deep fryer so I am hoping it might work as well.
If anyone tries this before I get to it, please let me know how it works. I have high hopes that it should work well, once I figure out the right temperature to heat the pot and water inside it.
Have you cooked with a Sous Vide machine or used any of the alternatives listed here? I’d love to hear about your experience. Leave me a comment below.
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I also use a counter top deep fryer (Big Boss Dual Deep Fryer - https://www.amazon.com/Big-Boss-Dual-Deep-Fryer/dp/B010TUSANO) for sous vide cooking. I set the temperature with the dial and verify it with a meat thermometer. It is a 2 sided / dual chamber model that can hold quite a bit of food but I have also used this fryer along with a large cooler to cook 10 steaks at once. I filled both fryer chambers with water and got them to temperature, dumped the water into the cooler with the steaks in individual bags, and then repeated the process with more water. I refilled the fryer chambers again and got them up to temp for extra water to add to the cooler during the sous vide process of a few hours. This worked great since I didn't have to add hot / boiling water to the cooler, check the temp, then try to cool it down to get to the proper temp. I knew that the water I added was exactly what I needed every time.
Thanks for sharing Andy! That works well for me also.