I love my Anova Sous Vide. Chicken breasts? Great! Any kind of Beef? Great! Eggs? Total fail. I have read that "Eggs are perhaps the poster child for innovative sous vide cooking". I find that not to be the case.
My last failure was my 3rd and final attempt at Sous Vide Poached Eggs. I have tried them at 167o F for 12 minutes per the ATK Sous Vide for Everybody cookbook, I tried then at 167o F for 15+ minutes per various sources and finally I tried them at 145.5o F for 60 minutes. Here is a picture of how all of them turned out (+ or -):

Now then, perhaps the whites are supposed to come out with the texture of snot, but that is not how I like them,
One technique I have not tried is one recommended by J. Kenji Lopez-Alt on the Anova website. He recommends to SV them at 145o F for 45 minutes and then drop them into simmering water for 1 minute. Since my old school method is to drop a raw egg into simmering water for 3 minutes, I don't really see the point of adding SV into the process.
Similarly, I have tried scrambled eggs, hard boiled eggs and omelets in the SV and find that I can get better results and much faster on my stove top.
So, when it comes to warm blooded animal flesh, I am happy with the options I get with a Sous Vide as a back up or to precede grilling or smoking. Eggs are off the list for me.
My last failure was my 3rd and final attempt at Sous Vide Poached Eggs. I have tried them at 167o F for 12 minutes per the ATK Sous Vide for Everybody cookbook, I tried then at 167o F for 15+ minutes per various sources and finally I tried them at 145.5o F for 60 minutes. Here is a picture of how all of them turned out (+ or -):
Now then, perhaps the whites are supposed to come out with the texture of snot, but that is not how I like them,
One technique I have not tried is one recommended by J. Kenji Lopez-Alt on the Anova website. He recommends to SV them at 145o F for 45 minutes and then drop them into simmering water for 1 minute. Since my old school method is to drop a raw egg into simmering water for 3 minutes, I don't really see the point of adding SV into the process.
Similarly, I have tried scrambled eggs, hard boiled eggs and omelets in the SV and find that I can get better results and much faster on my stove top.
So, when it comes to warm blooded animal flesh, I am happy with the options I get with a Sous Vide as a back up or to precede grilling or smoking. Eggs are off the list for me.
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