Renier wrote: » Can anyone tell me if there a place in ireland that sell sous vide equipment for home use or would I have to shop online.
Rew wrote: » I think some of the catering suppliers do the Sous Vide Supreme but they are ~€600. Look online at Sous Vide circulators. The big 3 are sansaire, nomiku and anova. I have a DIY sous vide made from a slow cooker and a temperature controller which works fine and Im due an Anova any day now via their kickstarter from the start of the year. I went for the Anova because it was a bargain price if you got in early on the kickstarter,
Rew wrote: » Got my Anova precision cooker yesterday, very happy but won't get a proper son till the weekend I'd say
duploelabs wrote: » Beer cooler from argos is about €25, digital meat thermometer is about €40. Just as good
Thud wrote: » What Kickstarter number were you?
Renier wrote: » Hi Rew What did you use for the temperature controller and what did you use for the circulator. Ps. Thanks for responding to the thread.
Renier wrote: » Thanks for the info. How do you keep the temperature and how do you circulate the water.
Rew wrote: » In the early 700's I was following who was getting what on their forums and people later then me got their 220v models ahead of me, then mine shipped late the week before last and arrived Tuesday last week via fed ex.
Thud wrote: » I'm n the 4000's but the sent an update saying all should be shipped by christmas
Rew wrote: » You don't. For beer cooler sous vide you fill the cooler with hot water add more hot or cold to get it to the right temp stick the food in and out the lid in. The insulated cooler will keep it at temp long enough for the cook. You can monitor the temp and top up with hot water if it drops. Works perfectly well but its all very manual. Realistically you cant do longer then a few hours with this method unless you going to top up the water every few hours. Instructions:http://www.seriouseats.com/2010/04/cook-your-meat-in-a-beer-cooler-the-worlds-best-sous-vide-hack.html
Rew wrote: » Worth the wait anyway, great bit of kit. Bring the water up to temp in about 10 mins and its rock solid holding it there (measured separately whit a thermapen). When you look under the stainless steel shield it looks like there are 3 temperature probes that they are using to figure out when to turn on and off the heater. The pump moves quite a bit of water as well. I need to factor it into my Christmas menu now...
Thud wrote: » Can you add hot water to speed up getting to up to the temp at the start or are you best off to let it do it itself?
Rew wrote: » Defiantly juicier and a little more tender. It was edge to edge medium rare.
Alun wrote: » How did you finish yours off? Hot griddle or blow torch?
Rew wrote: » A plumbers blow torch would probably be more suitable, might get one at some stage.
duploelabs wrote: » ... another alternative is a paint stripping heat gun if you've one lying around
RasTa wrote: » Feck that effort. BBQ steaks are nicer than sous vide imo. I would only sous vide a fillet too.