SonRise Ranch | Grass-fed Beef, True Pastured Pork and Chicken
  • The Ranch
    • CLA's in Grass-fed, Grass-finished Beef
    • Bio of a Lunatic Rancher
    • Low Impact Ranching
    • Ranch FAQs
    • Ranch Description and what we feed
    • Visit our Guest Ranch
    • Who Is SonRise
  • Shop
    • Membership and Individual Cuts
    • Bulk Packages and Wholesale
  • Ranch Videos
  • Blog
  • Contact
    • e-mail us
    • Sign up to receive our Blogs via email
    • Weekly specials sign up
  • SonRise Internships 2025

Sous Vide - the latest trend in cooking

10/31/2024

3 Comments

 
Picture
Brace yourselves - I am about to share with you one of the greatest secrets of good Grass fed & finished beef cooking.

​In truth, it is the only one we use. 

Ready?

Sous Vide - that's right, a French culinary technique that involves cooking food in a precisely controlled water bath. The term "Sous Vide" means "under vacuum," as the technique was originally developed to cook food in a vacuum-sealed bag.

However, today Sous Vide cooking is commonly done with food placed in a regular plastic bag or jar, and the air is simply removed from the bag or jar by immersing it in water. Sous Vide cooking has become particularly popular for cooking meats because it allows for precise temperature control, resulting in perfectly cooked meat every time. Unlike traditional cooking methods, such as grilling or roasting, Sous Vide cooking uses low temperatures for longer periods of time. This slow and gentle cooking process helps to retain the natural moisture and flavor of the meat, while also ensuring that it is cooked to the desired level of doneness.

We recommend cooking all our Grass fed & finished beef Sous Vide cooking because it is very easy, accurate and produces an excellent taste.
You need two things for this…

​First, you'll need a Sous Vide machine, which will allow you to accurately control the temperature of the water bath. Second, you'll need to experiment with different cooking times and temperatures to find the perfect combination for your specific cut of meat. And finally, you'll need to finish the meat by searing it on a hot pan or grill to develop a delicious crust on the outside.

We are Sous Vide all our steaks to 120 degrees. We try to limit the Sous Vide time to no more than two hours at that temperature. I always include crushed, fresh garlic and a thyme stem or two inside the Sous Vide bag with the meat.
The beauty of the 120-degree mark is this – you can cook multiple “doneness” for each of your dinner guests. Once we have the steaks in the Sous Vide for at least an hour, we take them out of their bags and dry the steaks. We remove and discard the garlic and thyme. After patting them dry, we spice the steaks with our favorite seasoning – salt.
Plain-olde, boring, sea salt.

Then into a tallow bath of slightly heated, liquid tallow for just the top and bottom of the steak. Once each side is wet it goes directly to a very hot cast iron skillet. We move the steak around, flipping from one side to the other every 45 seconds. We are sure to use a skillet large enough to flip the steak from one side to the other so that with each flip the steak lands in a newly heated area of the cooking surface that has yet to be used in the previous rotation. Between the flips, the open space on the skillet is reheating, while the area currently holding the steak is sizzling away adding that desirable “crust” for an excellent steak.

Once my internal temperature reaches 128 degrees, using a very sharp temperature probe with a digital read out, I remove and rest under foil (shiny side towards the steak) for 10 minutes.
This produces the nicest, soft steak center with a crispy outer edge.

Picture
3 Comments
    Join our Email List

    Tags

    All
    A2/A2 Raw Milk
    Bees
    Broth
    Cholesterol
    Clean Eating
    Conventional Vs. Grass Fed
    Cooking
    Dry Aging
    Environmental
    Feed Lot Beef
    Foodie
    Free-range
    Free Range Vs. Pasture
    Good-bacteria-vs-bad
    Good Fats
    Grass
    Happy-hogs
    Import Beef
    Intern-and-apprentice-program
    Laws That Hurt Farms
    Logging Without Laws
    MIG
    Milk Cows
    Overgrazing
    Pasture Based Livestock
    Pastured Chicken
    Pastured-pork
    Polyface
    Rancher Environmentalist
    Raw Butter
    Raw Milk
    Real Grass Fed Beef
    Real-pastured-pork
    Recipe
    Shipping
    Son Rise Ranch
    Types Of Animal Feed
    Wild Fires

    Archives

    October 2024
    July 2024
    May 2024
    September 2023
    July 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    July 2022
    June 2022
    April 2022
    January 2022
    September 2021
    August 2021
    May 2021
    October 2020
    June 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    December 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    August 2014

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly