Time for some juicy burgers. I smoked these with cherry wood, cooked indirect until inner temp was 122° F (50° C), then reverse seared them until inner temp hit 131° F (55° C). I cooked two burgers, each one weighed in at 250 grams (8.8 oz). Seriously good stuff. Served it with bacon, lettuce, onion and the usual.
Just last evening's dinner. It's a simple minute steak (cube steak) with zucchini, grape tomatoes, capers, garlic, EVOO, and lemon zest and lemon juice. Wonderfully tasty and awfully healthy!
That's Pete The Salt Pig and he was given to me by a dear Friend. He doubles as a salt well and has had a place on my table ever since he arrived about 2 years ago. Great pig!
Got 2 mongo strips. Brined one in our usual Montreal seasoning. On the other, I tried a new rub a friend gave me, an Old Fashion Coffe Rub for beef. Brined them for a few days, then sat them in sealed bags and gave them a 6 hr water bath @130*F, then over the SnS on warp speed for a nice sear.
My goal was to try to make the strips almost as tender as a filet. The water bath rendered out some juices, which knocked off some of the rubs. The strips came out VERY tender, but not so tasty. - a bit bland. The meat was not dry, but it was not juicy, either. Unless I did something wrong, likely the last time I'll try this. Did I let them in the bath too long?
Huskee , the coffe rub is not for me on steaks. Just not bold enough for my taste. I'll go back to Montreal on steaks.
I recently posted a thread about cooking 2 USDA Prime New York steaks that were 2 1/2" thick. 1 I cooked Sous Vide for 11 hours at 133.5°. I SV'ed at that temp because the steaks were so thick I knew the interior temp was not going to rise very much during the quick searing process. The other I cooked the normal reverse sear on my son's new gasser. I dry brined both steaks overnight with just salt before starting the cook. No other spices were added until right before they went on the grill.
When the one getting the reverse sear was approaching 120° I took the SV steak out of the bag and dried it with a paper towel and basted on some beef love and put a rub on it. It was ready to sear. I went out to the grill and that steak was at 120°. I took it off the grate, cranked up the fire to Warp 10. I blotted that steak dry, basted on some beef love and hit it with some more rub. I seared them both together.
The end result was... The one that was SV'ed for 11 hours retained much more of its moisture and was more tender. Notice in the pictures below the difference in the thickness of the 2 steaks after the searing process. They were exactly the same size before I started cooking them. The thicker one is the SV'ed steak. The more pink one on the plate is the SV'ed one.
Your 6 hour SV certainly is not effecting your steak negatively, IMHO. If anything I would suggest going longer, not shorter.
Attached Files
Last edited by Breadhead; June 14, 2016, 08:27 AM.
According to my Modernist Cuisine cookbook regarding Sous Vide cooking that thickness of steak will be ready to sear in less than 4 hours. However it also says with longer times in the hot tub you can expect a more tender product. Then it goes on to explain that you can over do it which can make your meat passed tender to the point it becomes mushy.
Hi Guest - Thanks, I have the same book. 63 mm is in the 4.5-4.75 hour range @ ~132 F. Another resource says just < six hours. Have you ever tested something closer to those times v. 11 hours to see if there's an appreciable difference in tendernous?
Have some in for 24 hours, and it's not to my liking. With good steakhouse cuts, I wouldn't go too long, but if you want it really soft, you want something different than I want.
If I want something long and super tender, I buy something like short rib, and go 72 hours.
I smoked a couple Briskets last night (12# & 14#).
Ran my pit @ 225* for 5 hrs before I crutched 'em @ 160 IT. They took 5 hrs more @ 285* before they hit 203 IT. Cambro'd for another 2 hrs and shot this pic They both wobbled nicely when they hit the cutting board: YEAH!
Thanks for the props everyone! Yes I did @DWCowles, used the Lone Star Grillz offset for this cook. The folks at work gave it high praise, which always makes me smile
"Man, THAT was a good dinner," she said. "Thank you," I replied, smiling. Pork chops brined with game changer brine and then dusted two ways. Two chops got Meathead's Memphis Dust and two got a dose of Aleppo pepper and rested in the fridge for three hours. The chops went on the indirect side and the corn went on the direct side to caramelize the sugars. The topside of the corn was basted with tarragon butter and rotated and basted again and again, then it joined the chops on the indirect side for about 15 minutes. Next the chops were seared lightly and the corn was basted and seared again. I dodged the rain on my way in from the grill and plated the food. Blue cheese cole slaw, adapted from a serious eats recipe, joined the meat and corn. Was so hungry I forgot to take a pic of the plated meal! #spicesinc #sns #webergrill #oakridgebbq
Cookers:
Weber Kettle (used/fair condition; a gift).
Grilla OG.
Pit Boss 3-Burner Ultimate Lift-Off Griddle.
SnS Kettle.
Everything Else:
Sous Vide equipment.
Instant read and leave-in thermometers.
Grill Grates.
Kingsford Blue Bag, Royal Oak Lump Charcoal, Weber lighter cubes, Weber charcoal chimneys.
BBQr's Delight Hickory & Apple flavor pellets, propane torch, 6" smoke tube.
Grilla apple & hickory pellets, Royal Oak charcoal pellets.
Rubs with salt: Meat Church, Meathead.
Rubs without salt: SnS Grills Rocky's Rub and Not Just for Beef.
Rubs home-mixed: None at this time.
Spices: Lots of 'em.
Fresh gulf shrimp cooked quickly over the SnS for dinner tonight. Served with cole slaw and garlic toast. Mmm mmm good! The family didn't talk much during dinner.
Hi, my name is Darrell. I'm an OTR truck driver for over 25 years. During my off time I love doing backyard cooks. I have a 48" Lang Deluxe smoker, Rec-Tec pellet smoker,1 Weber Genesis 330, 1 Weber Performer (blue), 2 Weber kettles (1 black and 1 Copper), 1 26" Weber kettle, a WSM, 8 Maverick Redi Chek thermometers, a PartyQ, 2 SnS, Grill Grates, Cast Iron grates, 1 ThermoPop (orange) and 2 ThermoPens (pink and orange) and planning on adding more cooking accessories. Now I have an Anova sous vide, the Dragon blower and 2 Chef alarms from Thermoworks.
I let the pit temp get to 425 F. just to see what will happen and the only thing that I notice is the skin split in spots other than that the skin was crispy and the chicken was still juicy and moist. I dry brine them in the fridge uncover for 18 hrs and used MMD rub. Also did one with Sweet Baby Ray's BBQ sauce. Not to pretty but they were good.
One day someone is going to yell, "DUCK!!" And everyone will drop down and Ernest will look around and exclaim, "Where? I'm cooking!!"
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