Ready to try a new temp…133 or 137?

by I_Like_Penguins

17 Comments

  1. I_Like_Penguins

    Recently found this subreddit. Have always cooked my ribeyes at 129 targetting medium rare, but I am excited to try a higher temp! Should I go straight to 137 to test it out or try something in between first like 133?

  2. oldasshit

    137 does a better job of rendering the fat. I’m team 137 all day with ribeyes.

  3. jdelaossa

    133° so there is room for searing without passing the “medium” term

  4. I sous vide them at 130 for 2-2 1/2 hours and then sear them for a couple of minutes each side. They hit 135 and I’m good.

  5. SirGunther

    135, just split the diff. Besides 137 may render fat, but the steak is tougher.

  6. Particular_Worry1578

    i usually shoot for lower around 120 to 125 depending on the thickness and cut. i also refrigerate after sous vide so i can have it cool enough to build a better crust for longer. Tiny bit more greyband but almost negligible.

  7. PeacoPeaco

    Don’t shoot me, but 133 because I don’t like to eat globs of fat (yes I know it’s tasty)

  8. chillywilly521

    I just did some Costco American Wagyu at 137 for 3 hours and it was amazing,,,, of course they were Wagyu,,, so there is that….

  9. thecakeisali

    129.5 is my ideal temp. I don’t think the .5 really does anything but it makes me happy so I do it.

  10. squishmaster

    Cooked a traditional way, I like ribeyes at the rare end of medium rare. But I find ribeye to be the cut which benefits least from sous vide, especially if the steaks aren’t THICK. I genuinely think reverse searing or the classic combination of pan/oven/butter basting will give you better results for a steak less than 3 cm (1.2″) thick.

    But the Sous vide the 137 thing is worth a try. It is a different experience, but the fat renders much better than a medium rare 131 steak. Rather than being a medium rare steak that is perfectly cooked, but has an inferior crust, you get a different eating experience that is also very delicious and many people prefer it over traditional methods of cooking ribeye. For me, it’s something I reserve for very thick ribeyes with lots of chunky non-marble fat.

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