CHEFTALK
Sous-vide cooking for beginners and other home chefs
If you, like me, cook regularly at home and are not too
afraid to try something different, sous-vide cooking is something you must lay
your hands on one day.
If you believe that sous-vide is a mysterious way of cooking,
exclusively reserved for well-trained chefs in Gourmet restaurants, something
you need a lot of expensive equipment for, an investment you are not willing to
spend your hard earned dollars on. Read on…
Sous vide does not change or
replace traditional cooking, sous-vide complements traditional cooking. If you are a bit innovative you do not need to
spend a lot on this amazing cooking method.
What it is?
Sous-vide literally means ‘under vacuum’. To explain the
method in the simplest way, it means cooking vacuum packed food in a water bath
under low, very precise temperatures.
What it does?
Cooking food at low temperatures is a technique known to give
great results. Braising a big roast in the oven for a couple of hours is a good
example.
Cooking vacuum packed food under low temperatures in a water
bath ensures an even setting of protein in the product from edge to edge
without over or under cooking, this creates a super tender texture of meat and
fish and results in super tender vegetables. No thermometer, no guessing if the
steak is medium or rare, trust your timer and you cannot go wrong.
How do you do it?
The idea of going through a scary process of learning how to
go about sous-vide puts a lot of people off, looking for a special temperature
controlled water bath sounds like a hassle also.
Well here is what you need:
A good quality vacuum sealer
You can find your vacuum sealer and vacuum bags here:
A Rice cooker (one of
those where you press a button and your rice is cooked automatic), as long as there is rice and water
inside of course.
A sous –vide magic, or
a temperature control devise.
You can find SVM
temperature controllers on-line under that name.
Most likely you can find
your rice cooker in your cupboard
What is the purpose?
The art of perfect cooking is mastering the dish, to have it
perfectly right every time you make a particular dish. The problem is that
contrary to a restaurant, you do not cook the same dish very often at home like
chefs do in a restaurant with a fixed menu. To get rid of that annoyance
sous-vide provides the perfect solution.
Every time you cook your in-laws favorite dish the amount
varies, sometimes there are four people another time there are five and you
cannot remember exactly how you did it the last time.
Sous-vide cooking reduce complicated matters
to a few simple steps, temperature and time. This gives you control and predictability.
All your cooking stress is eliminated when you are assured of the outcome.
Why should I cook
sous-vide
For one it takes away a big part of intense cooking, you can marinate
and vacuum your meat or fish in advance, then just place it in your temperature
controlled rice cooker with water and spend time on other important issues.
Linked to that is the idea of neatness and storage. Your marinated
meat or fish is clean, safe for cross contamination and if made in advance easy
to store in your refrigerator.
You can even prepare your whole meal and pan-sear or stir fry
just before serving a magical dish.
The illustration
Teriyaki chicken breast
I use the example of chicken breast because chicken breast seems
like an easy to cook piece of meat. You can buy it de-boned almost everywhere
and most people like it.
Problem is that it tends to be dry and all your effort to
produce something magic!! Well you know what I mean.
Use this recipe per chicken breast and multiply by as many
breast you intend to use.
For the chicken breast
1 bone-less chicken breast
½ tsp ginger juice
1 tsp evaporated cane sugar (you can use another liquid sugar as
well, like maple syrup)
½ tsp salt
Season the chicken breast with salt, sugar and ginger juice.
Place the seasoned chicken breast in individual vacuum bags,
vacuum and marinate overnight.
For the sauce
2 tbsp light soya sauce
2 tbsp evaporated cane sugar (you can use another liquid sugar
as well, like maple syrup)
2 tbsp sake
Method
Set your temperature controller at 140 F, attach your rice
cooker filled with water
When the water has reached 140 F, drop the bagged, marinated
chicken breast in the water and cook for 1 ½ hour.
Place the sauce ingredients in a small sauce pan and bring to a
boil.
Remove the chicken breast from the bag, you will notice that
there is very little juice released.
Place the chicken breast on an oven tray and brush with some of
the sauce,
If you have a blow torch brown the chicken breast, if you do not
have a blow torch you can place the chicken breast for one or two minutes under
the heating element of your oven broiler.
Slice the chicken breast at a 45 degree angle, and place on a
plate, drizzle the remaining sauce around and serve.
It is nice to serve this dish with grilled asparagus that have been sous vide cooked at 190 F for 4 minutes, prepare the asparagus earlier and grill them for 2 minutes just before serving.
Best chicken breast you have ever served and eaten.
Let me know how you fared.
By: Marinus Hoogendoorn
Let me know how you fared.
By: Marinus Hoogendoorn
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