I read a lot about people leaving it in the sous vide for 24+hrs
It has a lot of fat, so I guess at 131 it takes quite some time to completely render it?

by FollowingSad7756

14 Comments

  1. idgafos1

    I would remove the garlic. Garlic in sous vide can cause botulism.

  2. Aggravating-Jump1300

    I’d break it down into two parts. The upper part resembles ribeye which takes less time to cook (about 2-3 hours it can be pretty tender if ur using a well marbled steak). As to the bottom part I’d sous vide it for 12+ hours with higher temp because it’s the tougher Denver steak. I like this method because usually a whole chuck roast is too big for me to finish in one meal and different cuts require different treatment.
    Btw sorry for the poor English I’m not a native speaker 😃

  3. Genghiiiis

    I’d remove the herbs and garlic to start.

    137 for 24-36 if it’s a decent size

  4. Hot-Problem2436

    Man, I just made the mistake of sprinkling some salt + pepper + garlic granules on a nice piece, then cooking at 134 for just 4 hours.

    The garlic made it taste so nasty. Cut that open and take it out. Add it to some butter in a cast iron pan when you reverse sear or something, never sous vide it.

  5. BigCopperPipe

    👮 🚨🚨🚨🚨🧈🧈🧈🧈

  6. selz202

    I make chuck eyes all the time and 137 is the amazing spot. Usually do around 3 hours.

    Yours looks a bit interesting as it looks like they didn’t separate the eye before cutting these.

  7. austinteddy3

    I will let the community correct me if I’m wrong, but I believe when you use any kind of herbs or spices in the vacuum bag, they should be dry and distributed. Otherwise, it could be a single focus or dangerous.

  8. NarcanBob

    Did this last weekend: 135.5 for 36 hours. Cast iron for crust at the end. It was AWESOME!

  9. Sous vide garlic tastes disgusting. It gives the bag a touch of Food Network glamor, but imparts a bitter flavor.

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