Sous vide cooking allows you to achieve perfect results with eggs, poultry, meat, and more. Learn everything you need to get started in our step-by-step guide, featuring sous vide recipes:
1. Set up your rig
Attach your immersion circulator to a container that is heat-safe to at least 212 degrees (boiling). Fill with water to about an inch above the machine’s minimum water level line.
2. Choose your cooking temperature
Some recommended temperatures for sous vide cooking:
Chicken, turkey, and other poultry—white meat: 160 degrees
Chicken, turkey, and other poultry—dark meat: 175 degrees
Pork: 140 degrees
Beef: 120-125 degrees (rare), 135-140 degrees (medium)
3. Pre-heat the bath
Turn on the machine. Set the machine’s temperature to your desired cooking temperature. Letting the bath preheat helps ensure even cooking. Depending on your machine and target temperature, preheating will take about 20 to 30 minutes.
4. Season and seal your food
Season your food with salt, pepper, and any other aromatics. Add the food to a zipper-lock style plastic bag (we recommend adding a small amount of olive or vegetable oil for meats and fish), remove as much air as you can, seal the bag until just an inch of the lock is still open. Once the bath is up to temperature, dunk the bag into the bath until all but the unsealed corner is submerged in water, and then complete the seal. If you have a vacuum sealer, you can also use that to remove all the air. This step is important because air is a poor conductor of heat and too much of it insulates the food from the hot water bath. Removing air gives the food direct contact with the heated water, so it cooks more quickly and evenly.
5. Place food in the bath
Once the bath is up to temperature, place the sealed bags into the water bath until the food is completely submerged. Cover the bath with plastic wrap to slow evaporation and help retain heat.
6. Keep an eye on time
Though timing isn’t always as important for sous vide as it is with traditional cooking methods, it’s still important to keep a passive eye on the time, since the texture of meat can suffer with too much time in the bath. Most common cuts of pork, steak, and poultry will be fully cooked in about 1 hour and can stay in the bath for about 4 hours without much change to texture. And when cooking delicate foods like eggs or fish, which are often cooked at higher temperatures for less time, you’ll want to be extra vigilant. Too much time for a poached egg can spell disaster.
7. Finishing touches
Remove your food from the bath. Open the bags and pat the food dry with paper towels. Though some foods like fish fillets, eggs, vegetables, and pulled pork are ready to enjoy straight out of the bath, most cuts of meat benefit from a quick sear to give the food a crisp crust. How you sear depends on the size and cut of meat, but whatever method you choose, the goal is to get the searing done as quickly as possible to avoid raising the temperature of the meat further. Make sure you use high heat and dry the the food as much as possible before searing.
8. Enjoy your sous vide meal
Sous vide has the potential to make traditional cooking easier and more foolproof, taking away all the guesswork and giving you back some free time. Plus, with precise, consistent cooking, it can even make food taste better.
More sous vide inspiration and information at
America’s Test Kitchen is a real 2,500 square foot test kitchen located just outside of Boston that is home to more than three dozen full-time cooks and product testers. Our mission is simple: to develop the absolute best recipes for all of your favorite foods. To do this, we test each recipe 30, 40, sometimes as many as 70 times, until we arrive at the combination of ingredients, technique, temperature, cooking time, and equipment that yields the best, most-foolproof recipe.
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Doesn't the plastic bag when heated release hormone disruptors into the meat?
Great value for the money. Got this for my son and MyBest.Kitchen he made a 3 lb beef tenderloin for Christmas dinner. Best filet I've had outside a top end steakhouse. So good, I bought 2 for myself.
In terms of brands, for the money, I don't really see any advantage over the Chefman 1000W that I just bought three of for gifts at $68 each on Amazon. It might not look sexy, but it's easily programmable and you can see the time and temp throughout the cooking process on the display (from across the kitchen). I also don't see a need for wi-fi/BT while the thing is sitting right there in my kitchen. I do have the app which I can use as a guide, but sous vide cooking is easier than conventional cooking because it's hard to screw up. If I end up really liking this way of cooking and do it a lot, I can always get a fancier-sleeker unit.
I have been letting my steaks sit out to room temperature for years before either grilling on charcoal grill or cooking on cast iron. Is the extra 20-30 degrees really going to make that much difference? – I got here from Quora when someone asked why restaurant steaks taste better than steaks cooked at home. I used to own a steak restaurant and my steaks at home taste just as great as the steaks I made at my restaurant however, the restaurant steaks were handled quite differently.
The steaks at the restaurant were actually held in either water if they were high fat (rib, which was actually cold from the line) or in a breakdown solution for top sirloin.
Now I am curious. At some point, I will try bringing my steak up to bath-water temperature before grilling…but I have doubts that I will discern any difference. I do know that salting any meat to soon before cooking will dry it out…
I've used this several time and have been happy with the results of the food I've cooked. The app helps guide a new user through setup and use very quickly and easily.>>>do7.info/rxdb I've had issues getting the device connected to my WiFi but I'm not sure if that's a problem with the sous vide, my WiFi or my device. I'm still troubleshooting that. Other than the minor technical issue, I've made some perfectly cooked, delicious steaks and chicken for salads with my sous vide. The hardest part for me has been allotting the 2+ hours for it to cook.
please make a video comparing all models
Very nice
Eat more plastic, brilliant!
Lot of hassle for a 4 min steak.
so in conclusion, sous vide is for people who dont have the skill to cook steak consistently?
Sous vide is making dry meat at an exact temperature.
What is this demon sorcery?!
Wait – My local store often has 2 chops of different sizes in the same package. This is hard to cook in a traditional fashion. Sous Vide lets me cook both a thin & thick piece of meat to the identical level of done. This is one of the big advantages of Sous Vide. You DONT need all pieces of meat to be the same size.
Other tips:
A straw can be used to increase the vacuum in the bag through the corner
A butter knife can be put in the bag to help it stay under water
Why didnt you cover the pot with plastic while meat was cooking as well?
Weird. Don't think I'd eat food, especially protein cooked this way.
OMG you guys still exist? a month in between videos or longer and it's a how to sous vide…an instructional that's plastered all over the box or manual even in app when you buy a machine…you gotta get your vid game up my goodness.
I didn't purchase a Joule, because I thought it was silly to cook with an app. There are very capable SV cookers for less than half the price, like the Wancle, which I picked up for a hundy. I'm going to use this for Christmas because I don't have a double oven and I need to cook a meal for 17. I need the oven for all the sides and the bread. It's not the answer to every problem, but it is a pretty slick device.
Lmao Chefsteps joule
In the next video where you cook meat, can you actually cook the meat instead of just browning the outside.
Sous vide had got to be the most ridiculous technique of cooking. Just another stupid fad.
America's Test Kitchen just jumped the shark! Now it's only a matter of time before they become another ChefSteps. Rest in peace.
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I'm joking, of course 😉
This looks like it would work good on eggs. I would rather just cook my steak on a hot cast iron skillet or a grill.