About the pan... it has to be screamin' hot so that it browns the meat and doesn't cook it.The temp' required on the pan would burn off the seasoning. I don't use that method because I like my seasoned pans and I don't want to reseason it after every time I want a SV hunk of meat. That's why I use a butane torch. Propane could be tried and also MAPP. The problem I've heard discussed with propane is a rotten egg taste that some folks get from the stench added to it. So I've never tried propane. There is another way to brown, and that's over charcoal in a chimney. I've never done that because it's too much "set up". I much prefer fast and easy. I've also been known to use out IR broiler in our commercial, but for the home, oven. It's far from being the typical home broiler. It glows blue and puts out very intense heat. It's like having a huge butane torch and under it I can brown a few steaks at once.
Is it worth the effort? Well, it was designed for use in French hospitals specifically because it's so easy and fast, So yes, if one is going to cook something "meat" it's definitely worth the effort since it's so easy and the results so fantastic. It's much less effort than many other ways of cooking. To give you an idea.... I'll SV up to 30 steaks at once. If I don't buy them individually sealed in plastic, I seal them by some means. After sealing they get SV for a time, then we eat a few, after browning, and the rest get frozen. At that point I have steaks that have been cooked to med' rare. Next tiem we want a steak, just put it in the SV bath for an hour to warm through, then brown and eat. The result is a perfect med' rare steak that I might have put all of 3 minutes of time into and it will be significantly tastier and more perfectly cooked than cooking on most propane grills. It also allows one to eat a rare burger once again since the cooking process kills anything in the ground meat.
For browning I make a solution to enhance the browning and taste. It consists of not more than 1/4 cup of water and approx' a tsp each of Dextrose/ or Corn Syrup and Sodium Bicarb'. The reducing sugar is there to goose the Maillard reaction which gives grilled meat that taste that everyone loves. The Sodium Bicarb' is there to lower the pH of the meat to enhance the browning.
Would you still be into it after a few times? I don't know. But if you like easy with excellent results, and if you enjoy eating, I suspect you would be. Especially if I was single, I would be doing SV. It removes any necessity for a propane grill and I have yet to fail to impress anyone with a SV product. I've had folks who don't normally eat meat rave over it and consume every bit of what was served to them. For a single guy dating, a good meal never fails to impress and that can lead to other things. Of course it can be done wrong and then yes, it would probably be put away after a few tries, but it's so easy that success is almost guaranteed. If one can ask questions, read a chart, or a recipe, one can SV since it's easier than traditional cooking.
I don't know why more restaurants don't use it because there is absolutely no waste. If something doesn't get used it gets frozen for reuse. A restaurant might need different temp' baths for different doneness, or find another way to change doneness from rare to something else. But that's no big deal and a steak for instance could be mere minutes away from serving since all that would need to be done is select a steak from the right bath and brown it. Since timing isn't critical the steaks in the bath can hold for hours. But then what would Chef Ramsey have to yell about on Hells Kitchen?
I keep mentioning steaks, but any meat can be done in the SV bath. Even tough cuts like brisket come out tender, but the tougher and thicker the piece of meat the longer it will be in the bath. Brisket can take 2 days to cook. I find that lower quality meat actually works better since the fat from marbling gets in the way of the browning process and it contributes nothing to the flavor of the final product.
Is it worth the effort? Well, it was designed for use in French hospitals specifically because it's so easy and fast, So yes, if one is going to cook something "meat" it's definitely worth the effort since it's so easy and the results so fantastic. It's much less effort than many other ways of cooking. To give you an idea.... I'll SV up to 30 steaks at once. If I don't buy them individually sealed in plastic, I seal them by some means. After sealing they get SV for a time, then we eat a few, after browning, and the rest get frozen. At that point I have steaks that have been cooked to med' rare. Next tiem we want a steak, just put it in the SV bath for an hour to warm through, then brown and eat. The result is a perfect med' rare steak that I might have put all of 3 minutes of time into and it will be significantly tastier and more perfectly cooked than cooking on most propane grills. It also allows one to eat a rare burger once again since the cooking process kills anything in the ground meat.
For browning I make a solution to enhance the browning and taste. It consists of not more than 1/4 cup of water and approx' a tsp each of Dextrose/ or Corn Syrup and Sodium Bicarb'. The reducing sugar is there to goose the Maillard reaction which gives grilled meat that taste that everyone loves. The Sodium Bicarb' is there to lower the pH of the meat to enhance the browning.
Would you still be into it after a few times? I don't know. But if you like easy with excellent results, and if you enjoy eating, I suspect you would be. Especially if I was single, I would be doing SV. It removes any necessity for a propane grill and I have yet to fail to impress anyone with a SV product. I've had folks who don't normally eat meat rave over it and consume every bit of what was served to them. For a single guy dating, a good meal never fails to impress and that can lead to other things. Of course it can be done wrong and then yes, it would probably be put away after a few tries, but it's so easy that success is almost guaranteed. If one can ask questions, read a chart, or a recipe, one can SV since it's easier than traditional cooking.
I don't know why more restaurants don't use it because there is absolutely no waste. If something doesn't get used it gets frozen for reuse. A restaurant might need different temp' baths for different doneness, or find another way to change doneness from rare to something else. But that's no big deal and a steak for instance could be mere minutes away from serving since all that would need to be done is select a steak from the right bath and brown it. Since timing isn't critical the steaks in the bath can hold for hours. But then what would Chef Ramsey have to yell about on Hells Kitchen?
I keep mentioning steaks, but any meat can be done in the SV bath. Even tough cuts like brisket come out tender, but the tougher and thicker the piece of meat the longer it will be in the bath. Brisket can take 2 days to cook. I find that lower quality meat actually works better since the fat from marbling gets in the way of the browning process and it contributes nothing to the flavor of the final product.
Brian. Lover of SE razors.