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The SousVide Supreme™ Blog

March 8, 2010

Richard Blais and the SousVide Supreme on ABC News

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , , — webteam @ 6:17 pm

Check out Top Chef Richard Blais and the SousVide Supreme on ABC News. (Video Link)

What does your perfect steak look like?

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , — webteam @ 11:23 am

The perfect steak is a relative term, as perfect for one person is not perfect for another. Luckily, there is a way to guarantee that your steak comes out exactly the way you want it to every single time. A recent Serious Eats blog walks us through the difference cooking sous vide, visually pointing out the degrees of perfection that will suite every palate. The side by side photo comparison of a sous vide steak cooked at varying temperatures, spells out how precise cooking with the SousVide Supreme really is. Check out the Serious Eats article here. (Article)

March 5, 2010

“Thank Goodness for one little machine that’s saving our sanity…”

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , , — webteam @ 1:26 pm

The SousVide Supreme is perfect for the foodie with even the most chaotic schedule.
Check out what New York Daily News columnist, working mother, wife, Brooke Parkhurst had to say about bringing the SousVide Supreme home with her. Brooke’s NY Daily News Column

March 4, 2010

Asian and International Markets are a source of sous vide delicacies

International and Asian markets such as Uwajimaya, in Seattle’s International District, are filled with culinary experiences you would have never thought to explore. Take for example China’s Silkie Chicken, prized for their silky plumage and found in many Chinese dishes, it is an almost non-existent site on western menus. On the Salty Seattle blog post, I’ve come across one of the most interesting recipes to take home and try in your SousVide Supreme. Take advantage of international delicacies found in these international markets, as walking through their aisles, you are bound to uncover a culinary treasure that gets the experimental chef in you to come alive. Sous Vide Silkie Chicken Recipe

March 3, 2010

Top Chef Richard Blais and the SousVide Supreme in Chicago

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , — webteam @ 6:37 pm

Top Chef Richard Blais and the SousVide Supreme Team are heading to Chicago for the 2010 International Home and Housewares Show. From March 14-16, the culinary center of Chicago will be welcoming over 60,000 attendees, exhibitors, and buyers all looking for and showcasing the latest trends in consumer lifestyle and products. Richard Blais will be front and center in the SousVide Supreme Test kitchen demonstrating the latest trend in culinary innovation for the home chef. Stay tuned for photos and updates from the show.

Sous Vide Beef Tenderloin with Chef Dario Schicke

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , — webteam @ 6:35 pm

Chef Dario Schicke, owner of Dario’s Brasserie in Omaha, NE, demonstrates and gives his opinion about sous vide cooking while using the SousVide Supreme to www.GastronomicFightClub.com. Check out this video of Dario preparing a sous vide beef tenderloin. Looks amazing! Dario’s Video Link

January 23, 2010

Quick-Chilling Sous Vide Cooked Foods

Filed under: General — Dr. Mary Dan @ 5:47 pm

The technique of quick-chilling foods cooked in a water bath, such as the SousVide Supreme, really helps to leverage the time of the busy restaurant chef or home cook.  The cook-chill-reheat technique has been a secret of commercial kitchens and caterers for decades, allowing them to prepare batches of food for large crowds of diners ahead of time.  It’ actually quite easy to do, though you do want to be careful, as with all cooking methods, not to allow food to sit for more than an hour or two at temperatures above 40F/4C and below 130F/54C.

Step 1 – Cook multiple pouches for later use.

Fill the SousVide Supreme with vacuum-sealed pouches of foods that will all cook at the same temperature—for instance, if you are planning to cook a batch of Brussels’ sprouts at 182F/83C, throw in a pouch of carrots, a pouch of beets, and a pouch of butternut squash at the same time, since they can all cook at the same temperature nicely.   If you are cooking two chicken breasts at 140F/60C, cook four or even six.   If you are cooking steaks, medium rare at 134F/56C, drop in a pouch of lamb chops and a pouch of pork chops as well.

Step 2 – Quick Chill the extra pouches

When the pouches have finished cooking, pull them from the water bath and submerge them—fully covered—in an ice water bath that is at least one-half ice.  Leave them in the ice water to chill for about an hour.

Step 3 – Store the extra pouches

Once chilled to refrigerator temperature, you can remove the pouches from the ice water, dry them well, label them with the food contained and the date you put them into storage, and either refrigerate the sealed pouches of cooked food for as long as 4 days or freeze the sealed pouches for up to a year.  Note:  If any air has accumulated in the pouch (which can occur with vegetables) you should repackage the food in a new, vacuum-sealable pouch, removing as much air as possible, before storing in the refrigerator or freezer.

Step 4 – Reheat the food

When ready to use the foods, put the sealed pouches (frozen or refrigerated) into a water bath at desired serving temperature for at least 30 minutes (from thawed) or up to one hour (from frozen.)  If reheating multiple foods together in the water bath that were originally cooked at different temperatures, set the SousVide Supreme at the lowest of these various cooking temperatures.  (For instance, if reheating steak cooked at 134F/56C with beets cooked at 182F/83C, set the water bath to 134F/56C so that you will not overcook the meat.) Conversely you can set the SousVideSupreme to 180 to reheat the vegetables, let the meat come to room temperature on the countertop, and reheat the meat with just a sear in the skillet, on the grill or grill pan, or with a kitchen torch.


November 27, 2009

Sous Vide Turkey: Once you’ve gone sack, you’ll never go back!

Filed under: Sous Vide Recipes — Dr. Mary Dan @ 11:38 pm

There is nothing more the centerpiece of a traditional American holiday meal than roast turkey with all the trimmings.  I recall in my childhood, my grandmother rising at 4 am to begin the preparations for our Thanksgiving or Christmas feast.  Roasting the big bird for these special meals holds an almost sacred place in our family’s traditions and I have dutifully followed the footsteps of my fore bearers every year.  This one being no exception, except that this year we received two birds.  My husband and son played in an annual golf tournament the week before Thanksgiving, called (appropriately enough) the Turkey Shoot, for which participation each of them received a nice turkey.  We were having a larger than usual crowd at our table for Thanksgiving dinner, so I decided to cook both of them.  I would roast one turkey the traditional way and prepare its twin brother in my SousVide Supreme.

It would be a turkey throw down!

Here’s the timeline:

Five days out:  Thawed both birds in the refrigerator.

Two days out:  Made about a gallon of an 8% brine (80 grams salt/liter water or 5 T plus 1 tsp salt per quart of water) to brine one bird whole and the other in pieces by removing both leg quarters (thigh and drumstick) and both breasts.  Made turkey stock from the remaining carcass, herbs, and seasonings.

One day out: Rinsed the birds in clear water.  Refrigerated the whole turkey overnight in a plastic bag. Vacuum-sealed the two leg quarters and two breasts each in a separate food-grade, plastic pouch along with about 1/4 stick of butter (cut lengthwise) and a good sprinkling of poultry seasoning.

blog size

Refrigerated breast portions immediately.

Turkey Breast Sous Vide Ready Blog size

With the SousVide Supreme preheated to 176F/80C I cooked the dark meat portions for 8 to 10 hours, then quick-chilled them in an ice water bath for 1 hour and refrigerated them until the big day.  (Sounds like a lot of time, but it’s almost completely mindless, hands-off time.)

The day before:  I heated the SousVide Supreme to 140F/60C and cooked the breast portions of the turkey for 2- 1/2 hours, then quick-chilled them in an ice water bath for 1 hour and refrigerated them overnight.

Cooked Turkey Breasts Blog Size

While they were chilling, I cranked the SousVide Supreme temp up to 183F/83C and cooked my veggies for an hour:  cauliflower pieces in one pouch with butter, salt and pepper and butternut squash pieces in another pouch with butter, salt, pepper, cinnamon, and just a touch of Splenda 1/2 brown sugar (about 1 tablespoon for 2 squashes, designed to feed 10 people.)  Afterwhich, I pureed the perfectly cooked vegetables, let them cool slightly, and put them into casserole dishes, covered, in the refrigerator. (Sorry, no pictures of these.)

On Turkey Day:  Hours ahead, I pulled the whole bird from the refrigerator, patted him dry, stuffed his cavities with fresh sage and thyme from my herb garden, whole cloves of garlic, and a quartered Maui onion.   I trussed his legs and brushed his breast with melted butter and settled him snugly, breast down, onto the roasting rack and into a 400F/204C oven, which heated up my kitchen mightily.

After 45 minutes, I pulled him out of the oven, turned him on one side, wrapped his wing tips with aluminum foil to prevent their charring, brushed him again with melted butter and returned him to the oven for 15 minutes.

Meanwhile, I pressed one button to turn on the SousVide Supreme to preheat to 140F/60C.

When the timer dinged for the oven, I pulled Tom out again, but by this time, my granddaughter had gotten to the house and in my slight distraction, I managed to burn the side of my hand pulling the roasting pan out of the oven, which doesn’t even really require the distraction of a granddaughter when handling a large bird tipped on its side.

I burned my fingers trying to flip the bird to its other side, when I remembered that my sister had sent me a pair of turkey lifters, which I got out and used.  Now sitting with his other wing in the air, I brushed him all over with butter and returned him to the oven for another 15 minutes.

Meanwhile, the SousVide Supreme has reached its target temperature, so I dropped the four pouches containing the cooked leg quarters and breasts into the rack of the machine to gently reheat before searing..

When the oven timer dinged again, I pulled the roasting bird out of the oven again, turned him breast side up, brushed him again with melted butter, and only burned the side of my hand slightly trying to get him back into the 400F/204C oven for his last 45 to 60 minutes of roasting, while keeping one eye on the progress of the football game going on.

Meanwhile, the vegetable casserole dishes went into the other oven at 375F/190C to warm.

About 15 minutes before the roasting bird was due to come out, I pulled the pouches of turkey from the SousVide Supreme (with just my fingers and no burns at all) and let them cool slightly in the tray lid. Then opened their pouches, pulled the pieces out, and patted them dry on the surface with a paper towel.

When, at last, the glorious roasted bird was cooked to a golden brown perfection–and he was lovely for sure–I brought him out to rest under a tent of foil for 15 to 20 minutes while I attended to last minute duties:  pop the rolls into the oven and brown the sous-vide turkey legs and breasts under the broiler for about 5 to 10 minutes.

Browned Turkey sous vide blog size

Cooked Sliced Turkey Breast blog size

Moist, tender, juicy, flavorful — in short, delicious! Nothing like the dry, slightly stringy breast meat that gives turkey its bad rap.

But back to the throw down.  The comparison of effort and ‘tending’ time stacks up something like this:

Traditional Turkey: 2 slight burns, 3-1/2 hours of closely choreographed trussing, stuffing, tending, flipping, basting, and timing.

SousVide Supreme: 0 burns, maybe 15 minutes of prep and 10 minutes of broiling

Our Thanksgiving guests were treated to comparision platters of traditional roasted turkey and turkey a la SousVide Supreme.  The verdict was unanimous — the sous-vide turkey was the hands down winner!

Here are some of the rave reviews:  The most succulent, flavorful turkey ever…More like delicious ham than turkey, which I’ve never liked much…The white meat was even better than the dark meat! This turkey is so good, I wouldn’t mind having it more often than holidays!  And from a finicky six year old: I’d like more! SousVide Rules!

November 14, 2009

U.S. SousVide Supreme Pre-Orders Closed

Filed under: Announcements — webteam @ 6:00 pm

Thank You to everyone that has pre-ordered. Order data is being sent to the warehouse and units will begin shipping out next week.

For our Northern Neighbors, we have extended Canadian pre-ordering for one week. As it took a little time to get Canadian shipping rates secured, we felt it was only fair to leave the option available for a little while longer.

Thank You all again for making the initial introduction of the SousVide Supreme such a wonderful experience.

All the best,
- the whole SousVide Supreme Team

November 7, 2009

Oh Canada

Filed under: General — webteam @ 11:38 pm

svs-email-canFlag-01Canadian pre-ordering is now available! We launched yesterday with the email notification and everything is working as it should. The SousVide Supreme™ is officially international. Thank you to every one of our northern neighbors for your interest and excitement.

We appreciate the emails, the community that is forming here in the comment areas and the interest from around the world. Thank you all and keep it coming.

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