Cooking for Geeks: Real Science, Great Hacks, and Good Food (67 page)

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Authors: Jeff Potter

Tags: #COOKING / Methods / General

BOOK: Cooking for Geeks: Real Science, Great Hacks, and Good Food
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Cooking with Sous Vide

While the general principles of sous vide cooking are the same regardless of the food in question, the exact temperatures required to correctly cook and pasteurize it depend upon the specifics of the item at hand. Different meats have different levels of collagen and fats, and denaturation temperatures for proteins such as myosin also differ depending upon the environment that the animal came from. Fish myosin, for example, begins to denature as low as 104°F / 40°C, while mammalian myosin needs to get up to 122°F / 50°C. (Good thing, too, otherwise hot tubs would be torture for us.)

Because meats can be grouped into general categories, we’ll cover them in broad categories. We’ll look at beef and other red meats together, for example, but keep in mind that variations between different red meats will mean that very slight changes in cooking temperature can yield improvements in quality. Data for the graphs in these sections are from Douglas Baldwin’s “A Practical Guide to Sous Vide Cooking”; see the interview with him on the previous page for more information.

Beef and other red meats

There are two types of meats, at least when it comes to cooking: tender cuts and tough cuts. Tender cuts are low in collagen, so they cook quickly to an enjoyable texture; tough cuts require long cooking times for the collagen to dissolve. You can use sous vide for both kinds of meat; just be aware of which type of meat you’re working with.

Time at temperature chart for beef and other red meats.

Beef Steak Tips

One of the primary benefits of sous vide is the ability to cook a piece of meat, center-to-edge, to a uniform level of doneness. Beef steak tips are a great way to demonstrate this.

Place in a vacuum bag:

  • 1–2 pounds (~1 kg) steak tips, cut into individual serving sizes (7 oz / 200g)
  • 1–2 tablespoons (15–25g) olive oil
  • Salt and pepper, to taste

Shake to coat all sides of the meat with the olive oil, salt, and pepper. Seal the bag, leaving space between each piece of meat so that the sous vide water bath will make contact on all sides.

Cook in a water bath set to 145°F / 63°C for 45 minutes. Remove bag from water bath, snip open the top, and transfer the steak tips to a preheated hot pan, ideally cast iron. Sear each side of the meat for 10 to 15 seconds. For a better sear, don’t move the meat while cooking each side; instead, drop it on the pan and let it sit while searing.

You can create a quick pan sauce using the liquid generated in the bag during cooking. Transfer the liquid from the bag to a skillet and reduce it. Try adding a dash of red wine or port, a small pat of butter, and a thickening agent such as flour or cornstarch.

Notes

  • In sous vide applications, it is generally easier to portion out the food into individual serving sizes before cooking. This not only helps transfer heat into the core of the food faster (less distance from center of mass to edge), but it also makes serving easier, as some foods — especially fish — become too delicate to work with after cooking. You can still seal all the pieces in the same bag; just spread them out a bit to allow space between the pieces once the bag is sealed.
  • I find adding a small amount of olive oil or another liquid helps displace any small air bubbles that would otherwise exist in a dry-packed bag. The quantities of oil and spices are not particularly important, but the direct contact between the spices and food does matter. If you add spices or herbs, make sure that they are uniformly distributed throughout the bag; otherwise, they will impart their flavor only to the pieces of meat they are touching.

Some chemical reactions in cooking are a function of both time and temperature. While myosin and actin proteins denature essentially instantly at sufficient temperatures, other processes, such as collagen denaturation and hydrolysis, take noticeable amounts of time. The rate of reaction increases as temperature goes up, so while collagen begins to break down at around 150°F / 65°C, duck legs and stews are often simmered at or above 170°F / 77°C. Even at this temperature, the collagen still takes a matter of hours to break down.

The drawback to cooking high-collagen meats at this temperature, though, is that actin also denatures. While the fats in high-collagen cuts of meats can mask this, there is still a certain dryness to the finished dish. Since collagen begins to break down at a lower temperature than actin, though, it’s possible to avoid this. The catch is that the rate of reaction is so slow that the cooking time stretches into days. With sous vide, though, this isn’t a problem, if you don’t mind the wait.

48-Hour Brisket

Seal in a vacuum bag:

  • 1–2 pounds (0.5–1 kilo) high-collagen meat, such as brisket, chuck roast, or baby-back pork ribs
  • 2+ tablespoons (30g) sauce, such as barbeque sauce, Worcestershire sauce, or ketchup
  • ½ teaspoon (3g) salt
  • ½ teaspoon (3g) pepper

Cook for 24 to 48 hours at 141°F / 60.5°C. Cut bag open and transfer the meat to a sheet pan or baking dish and broil to develop browning reactions on outside of meat, one to two minutes per side. Transfer liquid from bag to a saucepan and reduce to create a sauce. Try sautéing mushrooms in a pan in a bit of butter until they begin to brown and then adding the sauce to that pan and reducing until the sauce is a thick, almost syrupy liquid.

Notes

  • If your meat has a side with a layer of fat, score the fat to allow the marinades to contact the muscle tissue underneath. To score a piece of meat, drag a knife through the fat layer, creating a set of parallel lines about 1” / 2 cm apart, then a second set at an angle to the first set to create a diamond pattern.
  • For additional flavors, add espresso, tea leaves, or hot peppers into the bag, along with whatever liquid you use. Liquid smoke can give it a smoky flavor as well.
  • If your sous vide setup does not have a lid, be careful that water evaporation doesn’t cause your unit to burn out or auto–shut off. One technique I’ve seen is to cover the surface of the water with ping-pong balls (they float); aluminum foil stretched over the top works as well.
Fish and other seafood

Fish cooked sous vide is amazingly tender, moist, and succulent. Unlike fish that has been sautéed or grilled — cooking methods that can lead to a dry and rough texture — sous vide fish can have an almost buttery, melt-in-your-mouth quality. Other seafoods, such as squid, also respond well to sous vide cooking, although the temperatures do vary.

Time at temperature chart for fish and seafood.

Note

If you are going to be using sous vide cooking in any professional setting, I highly recommend consulting Chef Joan Roca’s book
Sous Vide Cuisine
(Montagud Editores).

Cooking fish sous vide is so straightforward that you don’t need a recipe to understand the concept. The following tips should help in your experimentation with sous vide fish:

  • Fish cooked to a doneness level of medium rare (131°F / 55°C) or more undergoes pasteurization by being held at temperature for a sufficient length of time (see the time-for-thickness graphs provided for lean and fatty fish).
  • Lean fish, such as sole, halibut, tilapia, striped bass, and most freshwater fish, require less time to cook and pasteurize than fattier fishes, such as arctic char, tuna, and salmon.
  • For fish cooked to a doneness level of only rare (i.e., cooked in a water bath set to 117°F / 47°C), pasteurization is not possible. Thus, if you are poaching salmon at 117°F / 47°C, be mindful that it will not actually get hot enough to kill all types of bacteria commonly implicated in foodborne illnesses. (Salmonella, fortunately, is not prevalent in fish.) Cooking fish at 117°F / 47°C for less than two hours presents
    no worse
    an outcome than eating the fish raw, so the usual recommendations for fish intended to be served raw or undercooked apply: buy sashimi-grade, previously frozen fish to eliminate parasites (see
    How to Prevent Foodborne Illness Caused by Parasites
    in
    Chapter 4
    ), and don’t serve the fish to at-risk individuals.
    Note

    The FDA’s 2005 Food Code excludes certain species of tuna and “aquacultured” (read: farm-raised) fish from this requirement, depending upon the farming conditions (see FDA Food Code 2005 Section 3-402.11b).

  • If your fish comes out with white beads on the surface (coagulated albumin proteins), brine it in a 10% salt solution for 15 minutes before cooking. This will “salt out” the albumin via denaturation.
Sous Vide with Prepackaged Frozen Fish

The grocery stores where I live sell frozen fish in vacuum-packed bags. In some cases, the fish, which has been cut into individual portions, is frozen in marinade, making it the perfect sous vide–ready food: it’s already vacuum-packed; it has been frozen per FDA standards, thus killing common parasites; and it has been handled minimally, having been frozen and sealed shortly after catch, reducing chances of bacterial cross-contamination. The time is ripe for sous vide to catch on big time: the food industry is already selling food in sous vide–ready packaging!

My favorite use of sous vide — well, besides making so many foods just plain delicious and easy to prepare for dinner parties — is using prepackaged frozen fish to make my daily lunch. My routine is fast, easy, cheap, and yummy:

Fill sous vide container (a pasta pot, in my case — I have an industrial circulator) with hot water from the tap. Using hot water means I don’t have to wait for the immersion circulator to heat up the water.

Drop frozen vacuum-packed fish in the water, as-is, straight from the freezer. Because it’s a single portion, the amount of time it’ll take to thaw is relatively short. Just remember: pasteurization times start once the core of the food has reached the target temperature. With a frozen item, you’ll have a hard time knowing when this occurs. I cook a single portion of fish for long enough to ensure that both thawing and pasteurizing have occurred. And because sous vide cooking is forgiving of longer cook times, for most types of fish leaving them in the water bath for an extra half hour won’t affect the quality.

Go for a run. Go to the gym. Do some errands. Write a section in a book about cooking frozen fish in a bag.

Fish out the bag, cut it open, drop the fish on a plate with some steamed veggies and brown rice, and voilà: lunch.

Note

If you’re preparing yourself a meal ahead of time, you can drop the cooked fish into a container with some frozen veggies, which do double duty by acting as ice cubes to rapidly cool the fish down.

The quality of frozen fish can really vary. Frozen salmon from one store can turn out mushy and unappetizing, while the same type of salmon from a different chain can come out moist, succulent, and perfect. This is mostly likely due to differences in freezing techniques: rapid freezing does less damage to the tissues by limiting the amount of time ice crystals have to aggregate and form larger, dagger-like shapes that can pierce cell walls. If you’ve had bad results with frozen fish, blame the freezing technique, not the fact that it has been frozen.

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