Today's Entertaining with Style post is all about cooking sous vide and we're featuring the Sansaire cooking brand. Sansaire's technology is changing the way people cook at home, making traditionally professional-grade cooking tools available to the home chef. Valerie
Trask, Chief Operating Officer and co-founder
of
the company, shares one of her recent culinary adventures with
Interiors by Jacquin blog.
What is sous vide...
Sansaire
makes a sous
vide precision cooking device
and a Searing
Kit
with a blow torch and searing tray. While fancy restaurants have been
using this technology for years, we helped make it accessible to home
chefs. This method takes the guesswork out of preparing perfectly
cooked meals. By maintaining a constant and exact temperature,
Sansaire sous
vide device makes
cooking
time less important. Not
to mention it's ideal
for hosting because with
a sous vide device all
of the preparation work can be performed well before guests arrive.
Hosts can finally
focus
on their guests instead of meal preparation, which helps us all to
be
the relaxed
hosts
we truly
want
to be.
"Sous vide" is French for "under vacuum" and refers to the process of vacuum-sealing food and cooking it in a temperature controlled water bath. The intent is to cook the item evenly, ensuring that that the inside is properly cooked without overcooking the outside, all while retaining the food's moisture.
A Tradition of Entertaining:
Every summer, myself and a group of 10-20 hyper-urban Seattleites flock to a cabin in a small town to play like the locals and eat like the kings. While cooking is not officially competitive, we divide and conquer meal preparation and people go big. To add to the challenge, our combined food allergies and preferences along with the sheer volume of people is a feat for us all as cooks. Typically my dinner parties are no larger than eight guests, but for a group of our size we alternate hosting the meals on fun trips like this one, which allows time for relaxation in between preparations.
Like
any proud co-founder, I wanted to show off the breadth of Sansaire’s
cooking devices while
preparing
a meal that anyone could enjoy, which meant that I had to be
sensitive to vegetarianism, lactose-intolerance, and gluten
allergies.
No problem!
My
menu and advanced cooking tools made this complicated task completely
do-able.
On the menu:
- Sous vide vegetable hash with colorful fingerling potatoes, beets, carrots, and onion (meat-, gluten-, and dairy-free)
- Sous vide egg with a velvety yolk (meat-, gluten-, and dairy-free)
- Buttermilk biscuits with homemade blackberry jam (meat-free)
- Brûlée
peaches (meat-, gluten-, and dairy-free)
The Setting... plus making the most of limited resources:
This
year for
our group dinner we
rented an adorable home on Orcas Island, in northern Washington
State. They say that constraints breed creativity, which
was
certainly the case for this trip. The ferries to the island were
overbooked, so our group maxed out our ability to carpool, therefore,
forcing us each to pack modestly. For me, that meant I wasn’t able
to bring tableware and table décor. Instead, I was forced to wing-it
and rely solely on what I could find.
I
was pleased to discover that the outdoor table was nestled into a
small clearing in a gorgeous garden of lavender and roses, which was
all surrounded by wildflowers and tall grass. Bingo! In addition to a
colorful bouquet of fresh flowers from the garden, I was able to use
lavender stems as napkin holders, a sheet as a tablecloth, and
wildflowers as a decorative plating accessory. The white tablecloth,
the colorful foods, and the bright flowers came together
terrifically.
Everyone
was blown away by the presentation, especially knowing that it had
been pulled together with limited resources. Quite
the success!
Preparing the meal:
I
prepared a sous vide veggie hash the night before. This way, the
morning of I
could
enjoy
a more relaxed pace.
I worked
with a
wide
array
of brightly
colored vegetable
colors ––each of which I wanted to maintain its own integrity––so
I prepared beets, carrots, onions,
and two different potato varieties all
separately.
In an
effort
to maintain some textural diversity, I left the red peppers
raw and crunchy, but used the Sansaire Searing Kit to blacken the
skins.
Aiming
for sweet-but-seasonal, I used the Searing Kit to brûlée the
peaches.
It was a simple way to incorporate fresh fruit, yet show creativity.
As
a 5’1
girl who wears dresses daily, I always love busting out a blow torch
at dinner parties! Making the brûlée peaches was the easiest aspect
of the meal, but it garnered me the most style points. Using
a searing kit really adds
wow factor to your meals, especially when you want to impress guests.
Cooking
eggs for twelve
people would normally be a stressful task, but I prepared 24 eggs by
simply cooking them sous vide in their shells for 23 minutes at 72
degrees C/161.6 degrees F. The result was a medium firmness velvety
texture, which
is harder to achieve than expected without a sous vide device.
I
don’t
usually venture into mixology; but there’s a first time for
everything so I expanded my horizons with a unique breakfast
cocktail. I sous vide cooked and blended lychees, combined with
sparkling wine to make a phenomenal mimosa. I made fresh buttermilk
biscuits with my grandma’s
fresh blackberry jam to round out the meal.
Here's
how to make my Brûlée
Peaches!
Cut
the
peach in half, remove the pit, sprinkle with raw sugar, and torch the
top until you reach the desired crispy amber color. Serve as is or
top with vanilla yogurt or ice cream and a dash of cinnamon. It's
that simple!
If you're looking to impress your family and friends with gourmet quality meals, Sansaire's cooking devices will certainly assist you. Visit the Sansaire website to learn where you can purchase Sansaire's Sous Vide cooking device and Searing Kit.