How to get good color steak without sous-vide

How to get good color steak without sous-vide - Overjoyed African American graduate tossing copies of resumes in air after learning news about successfully getting job while sitting in green park with laptop

The internet is filled with videos and pictures of people using sous-vide and obtaining rosy, almost red steak "fibers".

For the last couple of months, I've been making bone-in ribeyes by reverse searing from air-fryer oven to carbon steel pan.

The temperature I shoot for was always 55 to max 60, no matter how many times I try, the steak fibers always comes out not as bright colored or "pink" when sliced, instead they are gray-ish with lots of bright reddish colored "juice".

My wild guess is that the reason for not getting the rosy colored fiber in sliced steak is that the temp is not precise. Could it also be the steak itself and the diet of the cow? Is the only to get good colored steak as seen all over the internet the sous-vide?

My ribeye cuts aren't very marbled, they came from a younger cow.



Best Answer

You can certainly get good steak without sous vide, both in color and taste.

The quality of the meat matters, but is not the only variable. You should get the proper cut, and while the cow diet is not necessary for a red color, if it was slaughtered too young, the meat will be lighter in color. Not grey though, just a less saturated pink-red. And make sure that you have a thick enough cut, something very thin will not get a pink center.

The more important part, especially with your greyish results, is the temperature. If you get grey meat that is not juicy enough, you are overcooking your steak. It could be that your thermometer is inaccurate (hopefully you have a digital one, the analog ones aren't very useful), or simply that you are not accounting for the proper cooking process.

The temperature you see on the temperature chart is the final internal temperature at the core of your meat. You have to account for additional temperature rises both from the sear and from carryover during resting. So, if you think you want a 57 C steak, you should stop cooking it at maybe 54 (depends on thickness), and even earlier if you are doing a sear. The sear itself should be on a really hot pan, so you get a very short duration, maybe 15 seconds per side. It could also be that your preference is for a steak that is rarer than the average medium rare (that would be at 57 C), and/or that your thermometer is consistently undermeasuring the temperature.

Whatever the reason, just continue taking the meat out at lower thermometer readings until you get a result you are happy with, then stick with repeating it that way no matter what the thermometer shows.




Pictures about "How to get good color steak without sous-vide"

How to get good color steak without sous-vide - Photo of Macarons
How to get good color steak without sous-vide - Top view of wooden table with salad bowl and fresh drink arranged with tray of appetizing steak and french fries near menu in cozy cafe
How to get good color steak without sous-vide - Close-Up Photo of Macarons on Plate



How do I get my steak Browning even?

If you sprinkle a little baking soda on each side of the meat, it'll act as a catalyst and speed the browning process along. This is particularly helpful if you're looking to make a nice crunchy \u201ccrust\u201d on the outside while leaving the inside rare.

How do you sous vide steak without a machine?

How to Sous Vide Without the Fancy Machine
  • STEP 1: PREPARE A WATER BATH. Fill your pot with water. ...
  • STEP 2: MOUNT A THERMOMETER ON THE SIDE OF THE POT (OPTIONAL). ...
  • STEP 3: HEAT WATER. ...
  • STEP 4: PLACE FOOD IN A ZIPLOC BAG. ...
  • STEP 5: COOK. ...
  • STEP 6: SEAR (OPTIONAL). ...
  • STEP 7: SEASON AND SERVE!


  • Can you sous vide meat in the oven?

    YES. The chicken breasts and salmon cooked inside a water-bath in the oven, VS the same ingredients being cooked simply wrapped up in parchment in dry heat at a different temperature/time, are essentially, undistinguishable. You can \u201csous vide\u201d in the oven, with or without water-bath.

    Can you sous vide in the microwave?

    Cooking sous vide allows the food to cook thoroughly at a consistent, low temperature in food-safe plastic pouches. It is perfectly safe. VacMaster offers a variety of BPA-free and FDA approved nylon/polyethylene sealable plastic bags. You can freeze, refrigerate, microwave, boil, or use the bags to cook sous vide.



    How to cook steak sous vide without a machine




    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: Ketut Subiyanto, Jill Wellington, ROMAN ODINTSOV, Jill Wellington