zinfamous
No Lifer
- Jul 12, 2006
- 111,587
- 30,836
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OK, I'll probably just get a book, but quick question while my head is on it:
Say I want to cook a few different items, say: chicken and vegetables, which means two separate bags of food.
say I decide to cook them both at the same temperature, to reduce complications (surely this is possible, right? It should just be a matter of time, no?)
OK, assuming that is all well and good--
Will the addition of an extra bag of food into the water bath effect the cooking time for each bag?^that chart shows type of ingredient and time/temp. But it doesn't show weight.
I spend most of my daily time in a molecular bio lab doing this kind of shit in eppendorf tubes...so I can't help but think that every time I add another reagent (food item) to the pot, then I'm going to have to adjust the protocol for each item.
Additional *slightly* drunken thoughts:
By the way, to prevent evaporation on the cheap, we always used hollow plastic beads that float on the surface of the lab water bath (basically, exactly what a sous vide circulator is/does). For the life of me, I cant' find these anywhere in our catalogues.
But, progress is awesome, and now there are these
Not sure if these beads are an equal non-water replacement for food prep, but they claim to do the same work of a real molecular water bath (a sous vide device), without the water.
Anyway, I've been looking to get those in the lab for some time now--finally ordered some free sample packs to try out in our bath and our heating blocks. I mean..you would just need to submerge your food bags in these beads, right, assuming they keep constant temp, as they damn well should. Jettisoning an expensive circulator that is necessary to keep a water bath at constant temp would be a good thing, imo...
:hmm:
Say I want to cook a few different items, say: chicken and vegetables, which means two separate bags of food.
say I decide to cook them both at the same temperature, to reduce complications (surely this is possible, right? It should just be a matter of time, no?)
OK, assuming that is all well and good--
Will the addition of an extra bag of food into the water bath effect the cooking time for each bag?^that chart shows type of ingredient and time/temp. But it doesn't show weight.
I spend most of my daily time in a molecular bio lab doing this kind of shit in eppendorf tubes...so I can't help but think that every time I add another reagent (food item) to the pot, then I'm going to have to adjust the protocol for each item.
Additional *slightly* drunken thoughts:
By the way, to prevent evaporation on the cheap, we always used hollow plastic beads that float on the surface of the lab water bath (basically, exactly what a sous vide circulator is/does). For the life of me, I cant' find these anywhere in our catalogues.
But, progress is awesome, and now there are these
Not sure if these beads are an equal non-water replacement for food prep, but they claim to do the same work of a real molecular water bath (a sous vide device), without the water.
Anyway, I've been looking to get those in the lab for some time now--finally ordered some free sample packs to try out in our bath and our heating blocks. I mean..you would just need to submerge your food bags in these beads, right, assuming they keep constant temp, as they damn well should. Jettisoning an expensive circulator that is necessary to keep a water bath at constant temp would be a good thing, imo...
:hmm: