Originally Posted by Buehler445:
Rain Man might have died from that restaurant.
It was what I thought it was. I had to sit there through two trips and ten agonizing minutes of some guy telling us all of the undercurrents and bouquets of various wines. And I wasn't into the seven menu items.
However, lacking any other options, I did something I haven't done in 30 years and ordered trout, and it was pretty darn good. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Fire Me Boy!:
Correct. With sous vide, you can pasteurize anything with enough time at 130 or higher.
I go 140-145 on chicken breasts all the time. You can go lower with time adjustments, but chicken below 140 takes on this weird spongy texture that I personally dislike.
So, a rather well-endowed chicken breast (think Costco), 145 for 1:45? And do you sear them once done?
We did one with teriyaki sauce in the bag, one with lemon herb marinade in the bag, and a third with olive oil/rosemary/Italian seasoning in the bag. We didn't sear them later (and they were wonderful) because we wanted to try that next time and see if the barking makes a difference.
But man is it awesome.
The neighbor got one like this, and he's been having a ball with it, and I imagine that the circulating water might actually do a better job than one like mine. I just like that we have it all built into one unit, I think it'll save a lot of space.
Originally Posted by Fire Me Boy!:
Looks good. Chili with leftover smoked meat is the best.
I'm making a plain old ground beef chili today.
I definitely took advantage of these crazy midwest temp fluctuations. Smoked the brisket on a 55 degree day then used it for chili after it dropped 25 degrees and snowed the very next day. [Reply]
We did Sous on two Tri-tips, a KC strip, and a (too thin) ribeye... OMG they were awesome. I mean "Never need to go to a high-end steak house again" kind of good and tender...
For the cut pic, from left to right, ribeye, KC Strip, Tri-tip, Tri-tip...
Originally Posted by Fire Me Boy!:
Looks good. Chili with leftover smoked meat is the best.
I'm making a plain old ground beef chili today.
Making pork chili
Was told by a guy at work to bring the heat so I'm bringing it but how the freak long do you cook the beans i go to work at 7pm and I started them in the crock before midnight last night still harder than i want them to be.
Last night i grilled a nice juicy steak and potato was very pleased but couldn't eat it all but finished it this morning with over easy eggs was good. [Reply]
Originally Posted by GloryDayz:
We did Sous on two Tri-tips, a KC strip, and a (too thin) ribeye... OMG they were awesome. I mean "Never need to go to a high-end steak house again" kind of good and tender...
For the cut pic, from left to right, ribeye, KC Strip, Tri-tip, Tri-tip...
My chili was a success at work people really liked it and said it was plenty hot but tasty.
Tonight though I am making wangs and I was told to "bring the heat" so that's what I'm doing got a jar of Mrs. Renfro's Ghost Pepper Salsa that the stock guy said was the hottest thing he has in the store and I got Famous Daves pickle chips Devil's Spit for the juice and four habaneros and sweet hot mustard and Mango Scotch Bonnet and some lemon pepper marinade.