Sous vide meat without seasoning - strong flavor

Sous vide meat without seasoning - strong flavor - Pizza On Plate on Table

I tried the beer cooler sous vide hack just now. On both a veal entrecote and a piece of lean beef braising meat. Both turned out OK, but as the sous vide technique does not impart flavor, most people found the veal a bit underwhelming.

So - if I want to serve an unseasoned piece of meat using this technique: what animal, and what cut, should I take for maximum inherent taste?



Best Answer

The beer cooler hack is not ideal for meat. The issue is the cooking time. I don't find Sous Vide to be particularly good for meats with low fat content that require short cooking time. The meat comes out perfectly cooked, which is nice (i.e. a steak medium rare from edge to edge), but you don't get any real wow factor from the flavor or texture. Where meats start to get really interesting, in my opinion, is long cook times. Tougher cuts of meat that require longer cooking (short ribs, flank steak, ribs, roasts) come out meltingly tender with all the lovely meaty flavor of the cut and you can cook them medium rare. These take 12-24 hours though, and I don't think the beer cooler hack would work for that (at least not without a lot of tending).

However, the beer cooler hack should work very well for seafood, which has much shorter cooking times. Here the temperature control and the vacuum sealing is what really makes a difference. You can get some wonderfully novel textures out of seafood and very subtle complex tastes without anything being "fishy". I'd recommend you try one of the following:

  • Salmon Mi-Cuit - cook salmon at 113F / 45C for about 35 minutes. This is delicious. Somewhere between sashimi and cooked, great texture and a fantastic flavor.
  • Lobster - cook the tail meat (no shell) at 140F / 60C for 15 - 20 minutes. Do not let this one go long. The lobster will turn to mush and gets disgusting.
  • Halibut - cook at 140F / 60C for about 35 minutes. Great texture and flavor. Very moist. Essentially "perfectly cooked" fish.

Note that the first two do not reach pasteurization levels. You should use sushi grade fish and not serve to anyone who is immune compromised.

You could also try chicken breasts. I know a couple of people who rave about chicken because of how moist it comes out, but I've never had much luck with it (the few times I've tried).




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Can you sous vide steak without seasoning?

In the first example we cook the meat sous vide without any salt and do not season it until we take it out of the bag just before we sear or serve the meat. With this method we end up with juicy, well seasoned meat.

Should I season beef before sous vide?

To avoid this texture, it's best to season and bag a steak immediately before cooking, or after cooking sous vide and before searing.

Does sous vide meat taste different?

The table wasn't overwhelmed by the sous vide version, which had the solid, evenly cooked texture that you find in slow-cooked meats, such as smoked brisket or barbecued pork. The conventional steak had more flavor, arguably some of it imparted from the caramelizing factor from the fire. It also had better mouth feel.

Should you salt meat before sous vide?

Salting food before cooking sous vide Any good home chef would tell you that it's always better to salt meat before cooking: the salt penetrates into the meat and helps to tenderize and flavor the entire cut.




More answers regarding sous vide meat without seasoning - strong flavor

Answer 2

I would suggest a tough but flavorful cut of beef, like chuck. I like my beef rare, so I keep the temps on the low side. It's the time - hours or even days - that break down the connective tissues that make these cuts tough. I find that it's easy to over do this, and there is such as thing as meat that's too tender.

I add marinades, salt and whatever flavorings to the meat inside a zip-lock freezer bag, immerse it all in water to push the air out of the bag and then seal it.

I don't know what the beer-cooler hack is, but I use a cooler with a digital temp controller and replacement 110 volt heating element for a hot water heater. The whole setup costs about $30-40USD and works great.

Also, before serving hit the meat with a butane torch to give it some browning and flavor. Propane will add a garlic-like taste from the leak-detecting agents that aren't good. If you're lucky enough to have an alcohol blow torch, that would work too. I'm not even going to think of a gasoline (petrol) torch. Hydrogen would be fabulous.

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