About me

According to Collins Dictionary, a gourmet is “a person who cultivates a discriminating palate for the enjoyment of good food and drink”. That’s quite a good description of me, although I do not only enjoy good food and wine, but also like to cook and select matching wines. I’m a guy (1974) from the Netherlands, living near Amsterdam. On this blog I intend to share my experiences with cooking, eating at restaurants, visiting wineries, and related topics. Other than you might think, all of this is just a hobby for me: I work in the financial industry as a financial risk manager. When I’m not cooking or working, I also try to find some time to read (in Italian to keep up my Italian), play the piano, sing, and travel. (Of course food and wine are usually important factors in my travels.)

I’ve always enjoyed sharing my enthusiasm for cooking, good food and wine with others. It gives me a big thrill when my sharing leads to someone trying something new or developing an interest for wine or cooking. I’ve had a home page on the internet since 1995, where I’ve shared some of my recipes almost from the start. Back in those days the ‘easiest’ way to create a page was to write HTML code using Notepad, so it was quite laborious to share stuff and that is part of the reason why I did not post regular updates. The other reason was a lack of interaction. Posting recipes into a ‘void’ and not knowing if more than a few friends actually read and try them isn’t that much fun.

Nowadays interaction has been made easy thanks to Facebook and there is no more need to write HTML to post stuff on the web. I had been sharing some of my cooking and eating experiences and winery visits on Facebook, but there it’s mixed up with unrelated posts, only seen by my Facebook friends and moves out of sight quickly as new messages are posted. Kees suggested to me that I should really start a blog, since that would be a more suitable medium to keep an organized record of my experiences. One that in the future can be used by others (and myself) as a body of knowledge. And he was right, so here I am!

I strive to share every single interesting experience with respect to food and wine. I hope you’ll enjoy it as much as I do, and hopefully my blog will inspire you to try new things or develop new interests, as well as help you cook better and more easily!

I’ve been cooking for myself, my husband, as well as family and friends on a daily basis for 20 years now. As you may conclude from browsing the recipes published in this blog, I cook mostly Italian and ‘from scratch‘, and I often use a novel cooking technique called ‘sous-vide‘. My love for good wine is a more recent development, that started in 2004 when I had the first glass of wine that I really liked. It was a Pouilly-Fumé from Masson-Blondelet, and on the way back from a vacation in Portugal we visited the winery where it came from and bought some bottles. And some other Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé on the same trip as well. That was the start of our wine collection, and it’s gotten slightly out of hand since then (now we have a collection of around 1000 bottles in 5 wine fridges).

Something else that you may regard as gotten out of hand is that I have learned Italian just to be able to communicate with Italians about food and wine, and read Italian recipes. I have even createda blog in Italian with a selection of the recipes found here, to practice my Italian.

I have also created blogs dedicated to sous vide cooking in Dutch and Italian.

If you have any questions about cooking (especially Italian or sous-vide) or about matching a wine to your dish or about anything you read on this blog, I would be happy to respond! I do not pretend to know everything, but if I do not know the answer already and find your question interesting, I may do some research for you. All questions and answers will be posted on the blog.

You can send me your question as a comment to a post or a comment on this page below.

214 thoughts on “About me

  1. Keurige beschrijvingen van het menu, complimenten!
    Groeten Jan Dirk Zonnenberg, je speciale vlees/en wild leverancier.

    Ps ik hoop je snel weer eens in onze kookstudio te mogen begroeten met je collega’s of vrienden.

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      1. Nice surprise coming across your blog dear Stefan by chance! Being an experienced cook I find your recipes very simple and easy to make. I make fresh ravioli and pasta from scrath with just egg and flower as you do, but I have never tried to do the pasta using an electric mixer. Can u please guide me thtough it. Which attachment to use, the K beater or the hook? Speed? Time of kneading? … thank you

        Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks! It’s the thought that counts and I haven’t received that many yet. The awards do multiply if everyone who receives one actually nominates 5 (or sometimes even more) others.

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  2. You are by far my favorite cooking blog to read. I nominated you for the versatile blogger award! The logo is on my most recent blog post for you to snag. Thank you for making me drool!

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  3. Hi Stefan – You’re probably too busy for these sorts of games, but I love your blog. So… I’m pleased to offer you the Sunshine Award for the stellar work you are doing. If you would like to display the award, you can copy it from my post and follow these steps.

    1 Thank the blogger who nominated you on your site and provide a link back to their blog.
    2 Answer some or all of the 10 questions listed below.
    3 Nominate up to 10 blogs for the award, provide a link to their blogs in your post, and notify them of the award.

    1. Who is your favorite philosopher?
    2. What is your favorite number?
    3. What is your favorite animal?
    4. What are your Facebook and Twitter?
    5. What is your favorite time of the day?
    6. What was your favorite vacation?
    7. What is your favorite physical activity?
    8. What is your non-alcoholic drink?
    9. What is your favorite flower?
    10. What is your passion?

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    1. Thanks Mimi, I’m honored! Your comment had ended up in my spam box by the way — I’m glad I check my WordPress spam comments once in a while so I could ‘unspam’ this! I hope you’ll get as much mileage out of your sous-vide water bath as I have!

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  4. Great to find another sous vide fan! Got mine at Christmas and have hardly stopped using it! (currently using it as a water bath for ripening milk for making cheese )
    thanks lots for recipes and ideas
    Salilah

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  5. Stefan, what would you suggest for a 2 pound piece of beef tenderloin sous vide? I can’t find a consistent recipe. I like no more than medium rare… Thank you! Mimi

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    1. Hi Mimi,
      Doneness of beef is a personal preference, which might explain the inconsistency in cooking temperatures that you may be seeing. 122F/50C is rare, 127F-131F/53C-55C is medium rare. For your first time I would recommend 127F as middle ground and then you can always go lower or higher next time.
      Since beef tenderloin is already tender, you only need to bring it up to temperature. The cooking time depends on the thickness (diameter) of the tenderloin. 2″ thick requires 80 minutes, 3″ thick 160 minutes, 4″ thick 4 hours. If it is thicker than that, it may be unsafe to cook to a temperature lower than 130F/54.5C because that is the lowest temperature that will pasteurize the meat. (Allowing the meat to come to room temperature first does not help, as that is slower than sous-vide and cuts into the maximum allowable 4 hours between 10F and 130F.) (If cooking to 130F you could even serve medium rare beef tenderloin to a pregnant woman as it will be pasteurized, but it may be more towards pink than you’d like depending on your preference.)
      If cooking time is an issue, you could cut into single portions and vacuum seal them individually. That will cut the cooking time back to 2 hours or even less.
      To finish the tenderloin after it’s cooked sous-vide, allow to cool for 5 minutes or so and then pat dry with paper towels and sear in very very hot clarified butter in a thick-bottomed skillet. (The cooling is to prevent overcooking the meat because it will heat up from the searing.)
      I would season the tenderloin with salt and pepper before vacuum sealing it, so the salt can penetrate into the meat.
      The juices that come out can be used to make a sauce, but you need to get rid of the scum (I have a post about that).
      Hope this helps!
      Stefan

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  6. Stefan, I might have done something pretty stupid. I received a brisket from D’Artagnon that I wanted to sous vide. The plastic on the brisket looked somewhat vacuum sealed, so I just put the whole thing in my sous vide. A little bit ago, I took it out of the sous vide and opened up the plastic, and the meat smells different. It’s a big “off,” although I can’t describe it. Do you think that the plastic wasn’t vacuum sealed ? thanks, mimi

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    1. Hi Mimi, did it float when you put it in? If not, it was vacuum sealed enough to be cooked sv. I’ve never tried this way myself, because when I open raw meat that has been vacuum packed with a strong commercial vacuum sealer, the meat usually gives off an unpleasant smell that is caused by anaerobic bacteria. They can only grow in a place without oxigen, so they love it when 99.99% (I’m making up this number) of the oxygen has been removed rather than 99% (again made up for illustration purposes) with a household clamp style vacuum sealer. Have you ever noticed this smell when opening vacuum sealed meat? Before cooking the meat, I leave it on a plate in the fridge, uncovered, for an hour or so to allow the smell to disappear. You may have cooked the meat including that ‘smell’, and that could be what you’re smelling. I’d say it’s good to eat if after searing the outside, the smell is gone, also from the inside of the meat. Hope this helps!

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      1. Thanks for commenting! No, it didn’t float, but I also put a can on top of it to keep it submerged because the brisket just barely fit in the sous vide. I read everything I could, including the book you recommended, on food safety, and I read about the aneurobic (sp?) bacteria, but no one has mentioned the smell. That has to be what I am smelling, because even if there was air in the package, the meat still cooked, right? And I subsequently smoked the brisket on the stove and the internal temperature got up to 200 degrees F, which actually surprised me that it got that high. I actually have a really good nose, which isn’t always a good thing! Well now I feel better about this and we’ll have it today. It’s not a huge amount of money for a brisket, although it’s from a grass-fed cow, but it’s hard to throw food away! But I also didn’t want to die!
        Thanks again for your help. You should write your own book!!

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        1. I’d recommend to always smoke the brisket before cooking it sv, because it will allow the smoky flavor to diffuse all the way to the center. Did you allow the brisket to cool off before smoking it? If it was 135 degrees in the center when you started smoking it, it’s not a big surprise it hit 200 degrees. That may mean though that it has been overcooked but that’s something you’ll find out soon enough.

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    1. Hoi Danielle,

      Dank voor je leuke berichtje. Jahoor ik heb ook nog tijd om te zingen. Op 3 augustus sta ik op de boot te zingen op de Prinsengracht 🙂

      Groetjes,
      Stefan

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  7. “Perfection in progress…”

    Beautiful blog Stefan.
    My mouth is watering by just reading some of your recipes.
    I simply cannot wait… Grocery, here I come!

    Question/suggestion: I’m wondering if you can add some sort of an indicator in the “menu” in order to quickly separate ‘starters’ from ‘main dishes’ and ‘desserts’.

    Rgds, Jeroen

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    1. Hi Jeroen, thanks for your nice comments!
      I think you may find what you’re looking for under “Categories” on the right-hand side (scroll down a little).
      Have a nice weekend,
      Stefan

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  8. I love your “about” section – you have a clear, life-long passion for food. Have you ever considered working as a chef at some point in your life? You have vast knowledge and a true gift. Your husband, family and friends are quite lucky to eat your food – and well-paired wine, of course. 😉

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    1. Thanks — enough already with all the nice words 🙂
      I’d like to work as a chef as soon as I’m financially independent — doing it for a living would take out all the fun and would mean working much harder than I do now.

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  9. I have nominated you to the Versatile Blogger Award.
    The rules as per my understanding are;
    • Give thanks to the person providing your nomination.
    • Include a link to their blog
    • Nominate 15 bloggers for the Versatile Blogger Award
    • Finally, the hardest, tell the person who nominated you 7 things about yourself.
    All the best, Cheers

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  10. awesome stuff, stefan. i’ve been enjoying a few of your posts. while i think most of your recipes might be waaaay out of my league (i’m just a lowly cook in a crappy, tiny, one room apartment kitchen), i sure as heck love looking at your photos.

    maybe if i work up some confidence, i’ll see if i can find an easy one and give it a go…

    anyway, keep up the awesome work. you have a pretty cool backstory, and i am excited (as always) to find another interesting, gourmet-loving food blogger.

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    1. Hi Misha, thanks for visiting and taking the time to leave a message. There are lots of easy recipes on my blog that you should have no problem with. Please feel free to ask anything when in doubt.

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  11. Hi there

    A request: can you perhaps put up a recipe for malloredus? The sardinian small flour gnocchi. I’ve had them a few times in restaurants and they were great. I tried to make them myself but it didn’t come out so well. I thought it would fit your style and I am sure you can do better than I! I served it as i had it in a restaurant, with a pork and fennel light sauce, which really works spectacularly well.

    Cheers!

    Owen

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    1. Hi Owen,

      I’ve never been to Sardinia, but I love requests so I’ll see what I can do. I’ve already found a lady from Sardinia who has been kind enough to share her recipe with me. I haven’t been able to find a recipe for the pork and fennel sauce yet. Are you interested in making the fresh pasta by hand, or is it the sauce that interests you?

      To be continued…
      Stefan

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  12. Actually I can do the sauce, it is the malloredus i need help with! 🙂 I managed to get eh sauce not far off right, by using some pork and fennel sausages from a local butcher as the meat (when I have used pork mince it dries out too much).

    Basically i sweated onions till they got sticky, added the meat from sausages and some very thinly sliced fresh fennel and cooked it for a few mins, then added white wine, a splash of stock and fennel seed and cooked till the meat was done and the wine reduced a bit and melded with the juice from the sausage meat. finished with a little lemon juice it tasted brilliant, but the malloredus I made let me down – I cooked them very briefly (barely a minute) but they were gungy rather than al dente. I did use 00 wheat flour though and some recipes for the malloredus used other flours. If you can get info from a Sardinian that would be amazing!

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    1. I’ll prepare them after christmas and I’ll do a post on them, using your sauce. One thing I can tell you already: you should definitely use “semolina flour” (semola di grano duro rimacinato) instead of 00 grano tenero for these. All pasta from the south of Italy is made with durum wheat (i.e. semolina).

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    2. P.S. You could also try the “gnocchetti sardi” by DeCecco. It’s not the same as fresh of course, but according to my Sardinian source it would be acceptable. They would certainly turn out al dente.

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  13. Hi, Stefan – Still no email! Just wanted to let you know; I’m looking forward to collaborating. I told The Swedish Pop Band that we may join forces and “Abba” thought it was an awesome idea. Best – Shanna

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  14. Hi Stefan! I have a question for you. I bought a venison short loin, supposedly also called backstrap, and I’d like to sous vide it. But I can’t find any directions for this cut, and I honestly don’t know if it fits more into the loin category or a flank steak category. If you could help that would be great!

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    1. Hi Mimi! Venison backstrap is what is called tenderloin in beef and pork. It is the most tender cut of venison. I would personally prefer to eat it raw as carpaccio (I actually have a recipe for that on my blog, although that also uses regular loin). It doesn’t need sous vide to become tender. If you like the rare side of medium rare, sous vide it for an hour at 122 degrees and then sear briefly over high heat. If it is thicker than an inch, more than an hour would be needed. Go up to 130 degrees for less rare. If it is a thin piece and you sous vide it to 130 or even higher, allow to cool for 5-10 minutes before searing, as otherwise the searing could overcook the center. Hope this helps. Let me know how it turns out.

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  15. Thanks Stefan! I googled backstrap and found out nothing, interestingly enough. I’m not surprised you know what this is!!! I won’t sous vide it at all. It sounds like it should turn out really well prepared like I do my filets. And speaking of sous vide, I can only purchase fresh salmon filets here, not steaks. I promised you that I’d sous vide salmon some time, but I get so many different directions online and from my one book, that I thought I’d just ask you what you recommend. Thanks again, as always!

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    1. I did have to use Google as I had not heard the term backstrap before. Google does personalise search results, but it is still remarkable that unlike you, I got lots of hits googling venison backstrap. Since I have deboned venison a couple of times, I can confirm from the descriptions that I found that it is definitely the tenderloin.

      As for salmon sous-vide, steaks and fillets are basically the same, it is just a different way of cutting the salmon. The temperature for salmon is always the same: 109 degrees.
      The reason I asked you to try sous vide salmon is to try it at 109 degrees. The texture is out of this world, so buttery. You could eat it with a spoon. This is also why it is easiest if you can find salmon with the skin still on. Otherwise, it may be difficult to get it onto your plate in one piece.

      For that purpose it also helps to cook it for a shorter time if possible. Unlike meat, sous vide fish overcooks easily. It won’t become dry like fish overcooked in a frying pan, but it will become too soft.
      The time needed depends on the thickness. 32 minutes is sufficient for 1 inch of thickness. If your salmon fillet is thicker or thinner (measure it where it is thickest), you can calculate the time by taking the square of the thickness and multiplying by 32 minutes. For example for .8 inch thicknes: .8 * .8 * 32 = .64 * 32 = 20 minutes.

      If you try the salmon at 109 degrees and think it is TOO buttery, next time you could try it at 122 degrees for a more conventional texture.

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  16. Stephan, I read your blog on Thai Fish cakes. I thought yours looked good. I have tried to make these, from a Thai recipe book, but the texture never has that bouncy feel that you get from the ones you oder in the restaurant. The ones I made had more of the texture of a crab cake or ordinary fish cake.

    Are you familiar with the bouncy texture I am talking about? I love that chewy texture and mouth feel. Perhaps using the store bought fish paste you achieved the feel I am talking about.

    The thing is, I didn’t like the idea of using the store bought stuff because there has been so much talk about asian food products and the lack of regulations and level of corruption. Therefore, I decided to look for a way to make the paste at home.

    The best recipe I found, had two ingredients that I think gives the bounce. One was 1/2 cup arrow root, corn starch or tapioca starch, the other ingredient was 2 egg whites. I think this is what is missing in most recipes–I will have to try and make my own paste and see what i think.

    Your recipe for the dipping sauce, seemed perfect, so I will make it when I make the fish paste and cakes. If I get the bounce I’m looking for I’ll let you know.

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    1. Thanks for visiting and taking the time to leave such a nice compliment. I’m going to check out your blog. If you like cooking, you should definitely get a sous-vide. There are now very affordable immersion circulators on the market.

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  17. Hoi Stefan,

    It’s great to finally find some more foodies that actually live in the Netherlands 🙂 I am French and after moving to Amsterdam I experience a big culture cooking chock 😉 I am really looking forward to read more from you!

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    1. Hoi Raphaelle,
      Thanks for visiting and taking the time to comment. I’m so glad you like my blog.
      You should be glad you didn’t arrive here 20 years ago, as by now the foodie scene is so much more evolved in the Netherlands.
      I’m looking forward to ‘see’ you again!
      Stefan

      Liked by 1 person

  18. Hi Stefan,

    I was delighted to stumble across your blog yesterday. Thoughtful, clear, informative, inspiring……..fantastic! While I am an experienced amateur cook, I am facing a perplexing problem. We raise chickens at home (think small farm), primarily for eggs, but eventually all of them end up in the oven or stewpot. Our last seven hens are five years old and have stopped laying eggs, so they are now destined for the kitchen. Attempts in the past to tenderize old hens through slow, moist cooking proved disappointing; the meat inevitably was tough and stringy. We ended up discarding the meat but saving the extraordinary broth for a variety of uses.

    Convinced there had to be a successful way to prepare and salvage the meat, I thought about sous vide after thoroughly enjoying a leg cut of venison prepared by a friend recently. It was amazingly tender. I found your recipe recreating your grandmothers slow cooked, farm raised chicken legs and realized this was the perfect answer. Thank you so much for taking the time to share it with others.

    Two questions remain and I would be most grateful to receive your thoughts.

    First, because our chickens are five years old, I expect them to be even tougher than the stewing hands and Asian chickens you found. So I’m expecting an increased cooking time, perhaps 72 hours at 144°F. Second, your recipe is for the legs, But I saw no mention of the breasts. Our prior experience suggests that they will also be very tough. You and others recommend one hour at 135° to 140° for conventional boneless chicken breasts. I’m certain ours will take more than one hour but there’s a huge range of times between one hour and 72 hours! Do you have suggestions for time and temperature?

    Many thanks.

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    1. Hi Matt,
      You’ve just made my day! This is exactly why I started blogging in the first place — just to think that without reading about my grandmother’s chicken you may have discarded all that wonderful flavorful meat! I can imagine how extraordinary the broth was.
      I don’t have experience with 5-year old chickens, but I can make some educated guesses for you. I agree with you that the legs at 144ºF for 72 hours is the best guess. Try it with one leg first. If it is too tender (which I doubt), decrease the cooking time to 48 hours for the next leg. If it is still tough, increase the temperature to 148ºF. You could also increase the cooking time to even longer, but then you would be venturing into uncharted territory for most sous-vide cooks.
      As for the breast, my best guest is 48 hours at 135ºF. If that is too tender, decrease the cooking time to 24 hours. If it is still a little tough, increase the cooking time to 72 hours. If it is still very tough, try 48 hours at 140ºF instead (and then 72 hours if needed).
      Wings can be treated the same as the legs.
      I guess I don’t have to tell you to turn the carcasses into broth!
      I’m curious what will work best, so please report back here with your findings! 🙂
      Good luck and enjoy the hopefully tender and certainly flavorful chickens!
      Stefan

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  19. Sorry, first sentence of last paragraph should read: “First, because our chickens are five years old, I expect them to be even tougher than the stewing hens and Asian chickens you found.”

    Liked by 1 person

  20. Okay I have a culinary mystery for you that’s been puzzling me for three years. In 2011, we dined at a Hostellerie de Plaisance in Saint-Emilion. The meal was fantastic, but one of the courses was a pasta dish. I’m still flummoxed on how they managed to get this to work. Basically, it was bucatini pasta that they somehow fused together into sheets. Then the sheets were formed into a cube and they stuffed the inside of the cube with beef and lobster. It was a really spectacular-looking dish, and I’d love to be able to reproduce it for dinner parties, but when I tried, it completely fell apart. I wonder if some food glue might work?

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    1. Hi Grant,

      Never having seen the dish makes it difficult for me to help out. Just fusing the bucatini pasta into sheets (especially sheets that have a pleasant texture to eat and at the same time hold a shape of a cube) seems very difficult to me.
      Was the stuffing of beef and lobster itself also a cube, or was it loose? Transglutaminase could have been used to glue the beef and lobster together, but I don’t see how that would make the cube hold its shape.

      I’ve tried to look for this dish online, but no such luck. I did find out that the chef who was there when you visted is no longer the chef, and made them lose both stars.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. If I could post a picture I would. It was very odd. The filling inside was definitely loose, but the sides were almost like panels of a bamboo fence. But somehow all the bucatini were fused together.

        I did notice that the chef is no longer there.

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      2. Here’s a link to the photo I took of it. It’s not very good quality as I had forgotten my real camera and had to use my iPhone camera (and the camera on the phone three years ago wasn’t very good). I made the album public, so hopefully you can see it. If not, let me know and I’ll try again, or I’ll try to post it on G+.

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        1. Thanks for the photo, which is helpful. From the photo I get the sense that the box was open on top, is that correct? Was it also open underneath? So more like a square ‘wall’ of bucatini pasta than a box?

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          1. I’m glad the photo worked. Actually it wasn’t open on top. And I don’t believe it was open on the bottom either. It was pretty much a self-contained box.There were a few pieces of food on top, but if you look at the left corner, you can see the sauce sitting on top of it. I don’t remember the bucatini being any more firm than normal pasta, I imagine somehow the bamboo-like features of the bucatini gave it some strength to hold up. Although maybe there wasn’t any on the bottom. I imagine it would be easier to do it that way. A friend suggested maybe some sort of thin gel, but I don’t remember there being one, but I imagine that it would be one way to do it.

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          2. Okay I’ve refined my googling, given the chef’s name and the pasta and I came up with this: http://www.m6.fr/emission-top_chef/photos-bar_en_croute_de_feuilletage_legumes_et_creme_de_langoustine_par_philippe_etchebest-72012/photo-1020958#diaporama

            I guess we was in Top Chef in France recently and he did something similar with bucatini pasta on there. He uses something which google translate calls “stuffing Pike” to bind the pasta together before cooking it in a steam oven it looks like. If I can figure out what stuffing Pike is, it might be doable.

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  21. I just checked out your this ‘about’ page for the second time. I love that you learned Italian so that you could further your culinary skills! Brilliant, I think that made my day. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  22. Hoi Stefan, vanavond je blog voor het eerst tegen gekomen. Al wat interessante ideeen tegen gekomen die ik, als gepassioneerd hobby kok, zeker ga uitproberen. Ook ik ben dagelijks bezig met het plannen, koken en het uitproberen van restaurants 🙂 Sinds kort aan het experimenteren met moleculair koken.

    Misschien heb je nog een suggestie voor het volgende:
    wil een ‘potato foam’ in een siphon maken en warm serveren. Als ik het 1 dag van tevoren maak en in de koelkast bewaar, kan ik het de volgende dag dan opwarmen in een warm water bad of is dat niet aan te raden?
    Tips / suggesties zijn welkom.
    Bedankt, Eric.

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    1. Hoi Eric,
      Leuk om weer eens een reactie uit Nederland te krijgen. Zou het erg leuk vinden als je iets uitprobeert van mijn blog en er dan een berichtje over achterlaat.
      Ik heb zelf pas één keer potato foam gemaakt, voor een gecompliceerd recept uit Modernist Cuisine. Zie https://stefangourmet.com/2014/01/19/modernist-cuisine-pulpo-a-la-gallega/
      Bij dat recept staat dat het warm gehouden moet worden.
      Volgens een veel eenvoudiger recept uit Modernist Cuisine at Home staat echter dat het wel in de koelkast kan: http://www.modernistcookingathome.com/potato-foam-and-onion-confit/
      Ik denk dat het voor de textuur iets beter is om het wel warm te houden, maar zeker een goed resultaat geeft als je het toch koelt.
      Succes!
      Stefan

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  23. I have two Emu eggs I was thinking of cooking them sous vide perhaps a giant deviled egg. Do you have any suggestions for a great way cook and present to company?

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  24. I’ve just found at a San Francisco farmers’ market a vendor who sells sustainably raised pork. Very expensive, but delicious. So when i saw the pork belly, i flashed on my great pleasure in eating babi pangang at the New King in Amsterdam on numerous occasions, googled for a recipe, found your blog, and just spent two hours wallowing in it. Many thanks.

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  25. Hi, nice blog, i found it through Google Image search. Man, i thought you were a professional cook because your meals are so goddamn professional looking better than from a 5 stars restaurant. It’s unbelievable for me.

    Thanks for the amazing Inspiration. I will browse the site now and look for more.

    I have one question. I hope it is not to personal: How do you keep so skinny?! What’s your secret and please don’t tell me you have no secret.

    Thanks

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    1. Hi Roj, thanks for visiting and your nice compliments.

      My secret for not gaining weight is portion control. I do not limit WHAT I eat (I eat everything including high-calorie stuff) but HOW MUCH I eat. For instance, I eat chocolate almost every day, but only 1 little square per day! You can eat as much low-calorie vegetables as you like, but I use scales and prepare exact portions of pasta, rice, potatoes, meat, fish, etc. There are never second helpings or left overs, which would lead you to eating too much.

      I do not believe in dieting at all. Diets are impossible to stick to and lead to jo-jo effects. What works is to lower the amount you eat PERMANENTLY and stick to it. You don’t need to lower it by much, even if you only lower how much you eat by 10% or 20% you will slowly start to see the results.

      Like

  26. Hi Stefan!!
    I just wanted you to know I really enjoy reading your blog and I feel like I have learned so many great things from you. I would also like to nominate you for two awards… The Very Inspiring Blogger Award and The Versatile Blogger Award. Here is the link http://mealswithmel.com/2015/03/09/versatile-blogger-award-very-inspiring-blogger-award/
    There is no pressure at all to participate as I’m sure you have been nominated for these awards many times before. This is just my way of saying thank you for all the great recipes you share 🙂
    Happy Cooking!!

    Liked by 1 person

  27. Hi Stefan,

    Because you love sous vide so much I thought you’d be interested in hearing about our new product which let’s you do not just sous vide but you can also precision fry, simmer and even make candy. You can check it out on Kickstarter now:

    Matt

    Like

    1. Hi Matt,
      Thanks for letting me know of your product. It looks interesting and innovative. Unfortunately, it won’t attach to my induction stovetop with touch control (no knobs at all!).

      Like

        1. The digital settings of an induction cooktop are also accurate enough for simmering and deep frying (not for sous-vide though). Many home cooks here have gas though because they think it reacts quicker and provides higher heat than induction (which is not true, except perhaps for huge gas wok burners). What I’m saying is, I do believe there could be a market for your product in Europe.

          Like

          1. We’ve definitely had a good number of Europeans back us on Kickstarter :). Hopefully we’re a more affordable option than upgrading to induction for some.

            Like

  28. Hi Stefan,
    Thank you so much for visiting and following my blog. I’m looking forward to reading more about your recipes. You have a lot of tempting recipes that I would love to try! 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  29. Hi Stefan, I’ve been following for a long time, and I have a question/challenge. Tonight I tried alton brown’s duck method. Steaming, followed by a hot cast iron pan in a very hot oven. It worked great at rendering the fat so that it crisped up very quickly in the oven. But the breast was overcooked. Not tough or rubbery, but definitely not medium rare like I like it. How can I get the skin crispy, yet the breast medium rare? I’ve tried sous vide for the breast, but it just doesn’t render the fat the way that steaming does. So it still comes out with too much fat between the skin and the meat. Any thoughts?

    Like

    1. Hi Bob,
      I can see why that method would overcook the breast. It may help to allow the duck breast to cool off in the refrigerator for a couple of hours after steaming (I would prefer sous-vide), but I’m not sure if that will help enough to crisp up the skin before overcooking the breast.
      The only way to get crispy thin skin with the fat rendered from it without overcooking the breast, is to separate them, cook them separately, and then glue them back together again using transglutaminase. I did two posts on the topic:
      https://stefangourmet.com/2013/10/30/perfect-duck-breast-using-transglutaminase/
      https://stefangourmet.com/2013/11/25/duck-breast-sous-vide-with-duck-red-wine-demi-glace/

      Does this help?

      Like

  30. It does. Funny, I remember reading that, but thought it had come from somewhere else. I am a big fan of sous vide, and it does the breast up nicely, but just doesn’t render the fat. I’ve also tried putting the breast skin side down in a cold pan and putting on very low heat, periodically pouring off the fat. Still not good enough. My wife suggested trying same, but with partially frozen breast.

    I will try transglutaminase next time I have some duck breasts. By the way, the steaming method was great for the legs. Not as good as confit, but quite tasty.

    Liked by 1 person

  31. Hi Stefan

    I meant to ask, have you visited Il Pacciocne in the city centre? I was taken there by Italian colleagues who work in Amsterdam, and while tiny and cramped, and pretty warm in summer, it is pretty great food I think. See http://www.tripadvisor.co.uk/Restaurant_Review-g188590-d4548131-Reviews-IL_Pacioccone-Amsterdam_North_Holland_Province.html – also most times I visit at least half the customers seem to be Italian.

    The menu is tiny and changes day by day. It is not cheap, and they do have a tendency too push the more expensive wine (always check wine prices before agreeing) but the food I’ve had has been great. It all comes out of a wood oven int he back. The Pizza is sourdough crust and pretty chewy but with a great tang. Pasta dishes have been great, the Lasagne al forno is certainly to my taste. Starters are always interesting, and last time I was there we had pork shank slow cooked in the oven, which was quite incredible.

    I think ti is worth a visit if you have not been.

    Like

    1. Hi Owen, I’ve not been there yet, but I’ll go check it out. Thanks for the tip.

      I just posted a review of Eatmosfera, which is very good and in the city centre too. Definitely recommended.

      Like

  32. Good afternoon! I have been asked to prepare an Italian meal for 15 people. I am going with a layered cheese ravioli dish (kind of like a lasagna) and will serve with salad and bread. I have no idea how many pounds of ravioli should be used to feed this many. Can u give me any idea on portion sizes? Also what’s a good dessert for this type of thing. I am being paid to cater so obviously I don’t want to spend a crazy amount of money on the food and then do all the work for pennies. Thank you for any advise!

    Like

    1. About 7-8 lbs of ravioli should do it, but of course that depends on the group. A group of quarterbacks eats more than a group of models. The people paying for this may expect you to serve meat. If you want the food Italian as in ‘like in Italy’, you should be aware that serving ravioli as lasagna is not common in Italy. As for dessert, something light would be nice. How about strawberries macerated with balsamic? Recipe is on this blog. Good luck!

      Like

  33. Hi Stefan, thank you for all of the great information on making lieveto madre. One question please – I started my first batch of lieveto madre and all is going well. At day nine of the 14 day cycle I may be unable to repeat the process of 200 grams flour, 200 grams starter, 100 ml water – for roughly four days – unplanned challenge. Will I need to simply start over at a later date, or is nine days sufficient for a good base? I appreciate your feedback. Thank you.

    Like

    1. I have not tried this myself yet, but I think it is best to store the lievito madre in the refrigerator while you are away for four days. When you come back, continue with the 14-day cycle. Please let me know if this actually worked.

      Like

  34. Hi Stefan,
    I discovered your site when i was looking for sous vide information as i had just purchased a machine and had no idea how to use it. You were most helpful.
    So I subscribed to your blog.
    The first recipe I received was for duck with tagliatelli. I used pappardelle pasta, as i couldnt buy tagliatelli.
    Absolute winner!
    As we are comming into summer here and i have a couple of fig trees, i am looking forward to trying the rabbit and fig dish i found on your site.
    I live in the country, and there are plenty of bunnies to be had, and at this time of the year they are in great condition. Your suggestion of sous vide is the answer, as the feral ones can be a bit stringy. Rabbits are introduced in Australia, and classed as vermin. They are a bit stronger flavoured than the farmed variety, but all the better i reckon.

    Finally, thank you for taking the time to set up a very interesting and informative blog.
    I am looking forward to more.
    More power to you.

    Cheers

    Tim
    Margaret River
    Western Australia

    Like

    1. Hi Tim,
      Thanks for your very nice message. Great to hear you like my blog.
      The stronger flavor of the feral rabbits may come through a bit more than you like when cooked sous-vide. I haven’t tried feral rabbit sous-vide yet, so would love to hear about your results.
      Let me know if you have any questions, as I’d be happy to answer them.
      Best regards,
      Stefan

      Like

  35. Stefan, While looking for a recipe that would duplicate the pappardelle/porcini that I had in a small restaurant on a medieval borgo in Northern Tuscany (La Lunigiana is the region) I happened on your blog. Astounding that this your blog produced as a hobby. As a vegetarian I was searching for a rich sauce but unobtrusive sauce to let the porcini flavor dominate. Your recipe fits the bill, and I will try it this week. Thank you.

    Liked by 1 person

  36. Hi Stefan,

    Thank you for the pannenkoeken recipe. We are gluten free and I wanted to make these for my wife who grew up in Tilburg. Her mother made them all the time. She wasn’t feeling well today so I wanted to give her some comfort food. I replaced the flour with GF flour and she said that they were just like what she had as a child.

    Steve

    Liked by 1 person

  37. Hi Stefan,

    I just came across your blog as I was searching for ravioli recipes and making them from scratch, which I have never done before. Your blog is absolutely amazing! There are so many recipes I love to try. I appreciate your clear detailed step by step picture instructions. I never had Italian food growing up in an Asian household but after I met my husband who loves Italian food, I started trying and cooking more Italian dishes. We are going to Venice/Rome in a few weeks. I was wondering if you can suggest any local food or brands that are unique to Italy that I can buy and bring back to the US? Something that is rarely found outside of Italy. I would like to use for future cooking. Thanks

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hi Jen,

      Thanks for the nice words. If you have any questions about Italian cooking in general or making ravioli from scratch in particular, please feel free to ask. Have you already found this post?
      https://stefangourmet.com/2014/12/20/top-10-secrets-to-make-the-best-homemade-ravioli-from-scratch/

      Depending on where you live in the US, you may already be able to buy a lot of Italian supplies locally like Italian 00 flour (to make the ravioli dough). Unfortunately you can’t bring any fresh produce to the US, because those would be the hardest to find in the US (like guanciale).

      Food that I usually bring from Italy includes several types of flour (including manitoba flour for making ciabatta), pasta, amarena cherries, olive oil, balsamic, saffron. I can get those at home too, but at 2-3 times the Italian price.

      To find good restaurants and avoid tourist traps (which are rare in Italy, except for Rome and Venice) I can recommend the Gambero Rosso restaurant guide. They also have an app. I am not sure if it is available in English, but even in the Italian version you should be able to figure out the address and the rating (1, 2, or 3 shrimp for the best trattorie and 1, 2, or 3 forks for the best restaurants).

      Enjoy Italy and hope to ‘see’ you around on the blog more often!

      Stefan

      Like

    1. Thanks, I’ll go check it out.
      I’m not sure if I’m going to post Selena’s recipe for cornbread, as it was impossible to keep track of how much of each ingredient she used.

      Like

  38. Hello 🙂 i would like to know where you can buy the white “clip” on the scallop that you took a picture of..? on the edge of the shell before taking it out if you know what i mean. 🙂 i can’t find them anywhere online.. Hope that you can help me with this 🙂
    Thank you 🙂

    Like

  39. Thanks for stopping by and joining my blog. I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I enjoy sharing my recipes and travels with you and as much as I enjoy your blog. Welcome aboard. Do t forget you will need to come visit next time you come to the area.

    Nadia

    Maisontravers.wordpress.com

    Like

  40. Hello Stefan,
    I will receive a Thermomix in a couple of weeks. Do you have any experience with this machine?
    So many top restaurants are using them now, so I just had to give it a try. I am looking for things that it does better than the regular kitchen machines.
    Best regards, Happy New Year and thank you for this great blog,
    Leif

    Like

  41. ciao stefan
    una domanda: sto pensado di comprarmi questo benedetto sous vide, come forse ti avevo già detto, anni che ci sto pensando: io di solito seguo le dritte di Serious Eats quanto a raccomandazioni di prodotti…tu quale hai? un’amica italiana mi ha appena consigliato quello dell Klarstein, marca che proprio io non conoscevo…. tu la conosci? quale raccomanderesti? grazie e ciao, ste (ps vedrai il link al mio blog italiano, ma sono sempre anche italianhomecooking.co.uk) grazie

    Like

      1. Grazie. Oltre ad Anova (che pero’ andrebbe comprato sotto Natale dato che hanno sempre una holiday sale) avevo anche considerato il Klarstein …dopo ripensamenti vari ho pero’ deciso di aspettare che arrivi sul mercato europeo Joule di Chefsteps – generalmente queste cose non tardano ad arrivare. Grazie per dritta in ogni caso

        Liked by 1 person

  42. Frank here from City Fish Market in Wethersfield, CT.

    We would love to feature some of your seafood recipes on our
    website if you would allow it.

    http://cfishct.com/recipes/

    Any use would include a link back to your site and
    any verbiage that you would like to see.

    Let me know.

    Thanks,

    Frank Motola
    Web Marketing
    City Fish Market
    (813) 441-0275

    Like

    1. Hi Frank,
      You are allowed to use a photo and part of the recipe (e.g. only the ingredients) with a link to the full recipe on my site. I do not allow copying the full recipe.
      Hope that’s OK.
      Regards,
      Stefan

      Like

  43. Hello Stefan,
    I am looking for advice. I have 1/2 pig just delivered and want to make several Terrines and Paté’s, but we will have a visitor who has acute allergies to eggs and all dairy.
    Can you possible suggest what to use as a binder instead, so we avoid an emergency visit?
    Regards,
    Leif

    Like

  44. Kom vandaag voor het eerst deze site tegen. (Via de Facebook groep Exploring Sous Vide) Zal hier zeker vaak terug komen. Leuk dat je je recepten in beide hoeveelheden en gewichten weergeeft. Ik begrijp beide, maar omdat ik al zoveel jaar in de VS woon ben ik meer aan die maten gewend.

    Liked by 1 person

  45. Dag Stefan

    Ik moet je een compliment geven, ik vind me minstens net zo kritisch op kwaliteit als jij en ik ben blij dat ik je
    sous vide recept voor picanha heb ontmoet. I heb toentertijd een groot stuk 1kg met SV behandeld intuïtief op basis van ervaring met eenmans plakken gegrild ( vooral rood [niet “blue”] op houtskool. Mijn idee was net zo lang in de SV houden totdat de kern 55 graden is en dat was inderdaad 2 uur. Misschien 1,5 hr met kamer temp vlees. Helaas heb ik het toen niet zelf kunnen proeven/eten maar mee gegeven aan een BBQ, waar ik op het laatste moment niet mee kon komen. Wel hele hele goede FB gehad en dit is al 2 jaar geleden. Voor a.s . Kerst ( vanavond de 24 e) wilde ik weer hetzelfde stuk vlees aanbieden met SV ( 14 gasten). Dus ik zoek op internet een “officieel” recept uit. en zie tot mijn verbazing recepten tussen de 4 en 24 uur SV??? Een kleine paniek bekroop me, want het is wel een kerstmaal dat perfect moet zijn. Hè, hè ik ontmoet jouw site en voel me helemaal geruststelt. Niet door jouw recept ( 2 uur) maar door de doordachte benaderingen van je hele site over lekker eten en de kwaliteit van je recepten. Dat maakt je recept betrouwbaar voor me.
    Dus grote dank en je zit in mijn belangrijke niet vergeten speciale bookmark lijste.

    PS ken je de site ( voornamelijk SV maar niet alleen) http://www.chefsteps.com al? Ook hele goede kwaliteit duidelijke instructies en veel video’s plus veel invites naar lokale top koks die mogen laten zien wat hun kunsten zijn ::

    Fijne memorable dagen toegewenst
    Kyrill

    Liked by 1 person

  46. I Stefan, this is Marcella, I am Italian. If you prefer, we can communicate in Italian 😉. Thank you for your “blog”. I was looking for some recipes about “cavolo nero” and I tried your ” sformatini di cavolo nero e castagne”. My friends appreciated it but one said it was too dry. I followed literally the quantities and I realized the cavolo nero doesn’t realise (?) (maybe the English is not correct) much water from inside like spinach. Do you have any suggestion to make it more creamy without using any sort of cream?
    Congratulazioni per le ricette – molto sfiziose. Ne proverò altre!
    thanks and good luck!🍀
    Marcella

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Ciao Marcella. Mi piace che hai provato la mia ricetta. Ho controllato e non avevo scritto chiaramente la quantita’ di uova. Avevo scritto corretamente negli ingredienti ma non nella descrizione. Deve essere 2 uova. Hai usato solo 1 uovo? Il composto dev’essere umido ma non bagnato. Per farli meno asciutti, il piu’ importante e’ sfornarli prima. Il problema puo’ essere stato troppo tempo in forno. Un’altra soluzione sarebbe aggiungere un tuorlo. Hai ragione che il cavolo nero non rilascia (“release”) tanta acqua di vegetazione come gli spinaci, ma se faccio gli sformatini di spinaci strizzo sempre gli spianci molto bene usando un canovaccio. A presto!

      Like

      1. Ciao Stefan,
        Complimenti per il tuo italiano.
        Ho rifatto gli sformatini e sono venuti deliziosi. Composto umido ma non bagnato. Evidentemente li avevo lasciati in forno troppo la volta scorsa.
        Per la ricetta sei stato chiaro – avevi già scritto 2 uova.
        Grazie per la risposta (questo è’ il mio primo blog dove lascio commenti 😁) e temevo di non aver inserito la mia domanda correttamente. Grazie anche per il commento sugli spinaci, mi piace avere conferme di quanto appreso o suggerimenti per migliorare sempre.
        Decisamente alla prossima ricetta.
        Grazie e buon lavoro.
        Marcella

        Liked by 1 person

  47. Hi Stefan

    I am becoming much more interested in good wine pairings and after re-reading your previous wine pairing posts (here comes the cheeky bit) I was wondering if you could perhaps formulate a new post (or page) that covers all the the “match made in heavens” that you have come across in your time in the kitchen or in visiting nice restaurents, in such a way that your readers can easily refer to that page for the dish (recipe) and wine combo. Is this something that you have ever considering doing?

    Liked by 1 person

  48. Good afternoon Stefan, have you tried rognone trifolato (veal kidneys) and fegato alla veneziana in sous vide?
    thanks

    Like

  49. Have you though of having a fan week at a special retreat, where you can show us your special tricks and allow us, your fans to praise your good works? Cheers, and thanks again.

    Liked by 1 person

  50. Dear Stefan,

    Today at PicoBrew we just launched a new campaign on KickStarter for our new coffee/sous vide/drink brewer the Pico U. Being the culinary connoisseur that you are we thought we’d connect with you on our new product! This machine can sous vide some of the best dishes while giving you the full control of your cooking temps.

    I look forward to hearing from you.

    Thank you,

    Like

  51. Stefan, your blog has been a great help as I explore sous vide cooking; the way you explain your recipes is excellent, and the results are fabulous! I hope you can help me now with an equipment question. My stick sous vide circulator has just died, so I have to replace it. I was considering going to the sous vide supreme waterbath, which I know you use. Do you have any thoughts about the relative flexibility (in the sense of what size or amount of food you can cook with it) of stick vs waterbath? And if the waterbath weighs 13 pounds without its 11 liters of water, does its filled weight make emptying the bath difficult? Many thanks for whatever guidance you can offer, and especially thank you for your wonderful recipes!

    Liked by 1 person

  52. Hi Stefan,

    could you please help me with couple of questions.

    I made a pork belly(2x 0,5Kg), 24hours at 74°C, cooled it in ice bath and put it in a fridge.
    Next day/today I heated one package up to 57°C for 1 hour. Then I broiled it on max setting in my
    oven, 15 minutes skin towards broiler, 5 minutes meat towards broiler.
    I didn’t see any evaporation in my ceramic bowl. As it took quite some time I took it out after 20min.
    Finished for 2 minutes with blowtorch.

    Meat came out quite dry to my surprise. Broiling!? Taste was OK, but not something I would expect from sous-vide. (my first try at it) It was more like it was store both already baked.
    Could you help me and tell me where I went wrong?
    I still have 0,5Kg in a fridge.

    Also, 24 hours at 74°C pasteurised the meat thoroughly. Meat was also vacuum packed before S-V.
    If you google it… advice is to use it withing 48 hours which I find odd.
    I know when I buy pork S-V short ribs in vacuum, it has expiry date of more than a month.
    Any info on that?

    Thank you and good luck with your great blog, Denis

    PS. Photos if it helps.

    Like

    1. Hi Denis,
      First reheating to 57C and then broiling for 20 minutes means that you cooked the pork belly far beyond the 74 degrees that it was cooked sous vide at. If you go directly from reheating to the blowtorch, it should be perfect. Or if you want to use the broiler, put it under the broiler directly from the refrigerator. In that case, I would still recommend to use an instant-read thermometer with a probe, and pull it from the broiler as soon as the core temperature exceeds 60C or so (as the residual heat will heat it more).
      The time you can hold something that is vacuum sealed and pasteurized depends on the temperature of your refrigerator. After 24 hours at 74C it is indeed pasteurized thoroughly, but that doesn’t do anything for the spores. So the bacteria can grow back. If your fridge is 5C, you can hold for up to 72 hours. At 1C up to 30 days! Most advice about food safety is very cautious. The 48 hours is still fine if you set your fridge to 5C and open the door a bit often. Or if you haven’t chilled it very quickly.
      Hope this helps!
      Stefan

      Like

  53. Hi Stefan,

    thank you for your answer and the guidelines, it helped!
    0.5Kg of already S-V pork was frozen for couple of days, then thawed over night in my “drinks” fridge I keep at 3-4°C.
    After that I S-V heated it to 57°C.
    I tried searing it with my torch, but it’s just not powerful enough.
    I put the induction hob on highest setting and seared it in a pan with olive oil, fast!
    The result!? You could it eat if you had no teeth, most tender piece of pork I had in my life and I’m about your age, just a tiny bit more tired. 🙂
    So tender, it was jiggly like jello, and because of the tenderness was hard to cut even with ceramic knife.
    I reduced the juices from the vacuum bag in the same pan I seared the meat and added some butter.
    I ate it with oven backed potatoes, carrots, zucchinis and brown champignons.

    Next is octopus, which was of the menu for about 15 years. I made it “regular-way”, but only once and had to change all the range hood filters, clean the range hood, etc.. kitchen and hood still smelled bad for a month!
    With S-V, my wife revoked the “octopus ban” and it looks like it’s back on the menu! 😀
    I’ll try 4 hours at 77°C like it’s in your recipe.

    Can you S-V diced onions, for a beef goulash? I read somewhere vacuum bags can pop open because of the gasses, which I find really odd?

    Cheers, Denis

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Yes you can sous vide onions and it is great. This is an example recipe: https://stefangourmet.com/2017/04/14/la-genovese-alla-napoletana-sous-vide-ziti-and-beef-with-onion-sauce/
      I have tried raw onions and there were no gasses.
      To make the beef goulash, the onions need more time and a higher temperature than the beef. My advice would be to sous vide the onions first, cool, and then vacuum seal with the beef, and cook the beef 24 hours at 74C.

      Like

  54. Hey Stefan I had a question about your Barolo Chinato recipe! When you add the 3 cups of sugar into the wine and spiced alcohol mixture do you add any heat at all or just continue to stir until the sugar dissolves? I’m almost at that step now

    Like

    1. It is better not to heat if you can manage to dissolve the sugar without it. Otherwise, use very moderate heat because you will lose the alcohol and flavor if you heat by too much.

      Like

  55. Hello Stefan,
    if possible, could you make a list of cuts of meat in both Dutch and English and vice versa? Dutch cuts are much simpler it’s hard to find names of other cuts (so I can order from the butcher). The butcher says it’s not always possible to order cuts which are normal in other countries. Sweetbreads are hard to find. No one can order it for me.

    Thank you.

    Like

      1. Many thanks.

        I wonder what they do with the rest of the animal. Where do the short ribs, or sweetbreads go to then? And I don’t think they actually put tender cuts such as “pluma”, “secreto” and “presa” in sausages (but can’t be found or ordered). These are normal cuts of pork in Spain.

        Like

        1. A problem is that there are not so many butchers that do their own butchering. So they receive meat in the “technical parts” that are different from how it is done in Spain. For instance the ribs are removed. Short ribs then becomes klapstuk. My butcher does his own butchering for pork and lamb, but not for beef. So I can order secreto (sausage) or neck of lamb (which is otherwise turned into shawarma), but not short ribs.

          Like

          1. Too bad for me then. Wish I could bring back meat from Germany or Austria (no big freezer to store). A typical butcher’s shop in Germany/Austria is a meat (lover’s) paradise. So many cuts one never sees in NL.

            Many years ago I wanted to order a cut called “Tafelspitz” and showed the bio “butcher” the diagram of the location. He said “itsh not posshible” (to order). 🙂 These days I use the shoulder to make Tafelspitz.

            If you know of real butchers of shops where I can order non standard cuts of meat in NL please let me know.

            Cheers.

            Liked by 1 person

  56. Found your blog this morning looking to use a hare stock .Do you have access to Winter Chanterelles ? It’s latin name is Craterellus tubaeformis .We have a wonderful soup recipe for it and you must use rochefort -no other blue will do .
    Here is the recipe forgive me as I copied it from a mail to my son Matt

    ingredients
    3dl Dried winter chanterelle Mushrooms
    50gms butter
    4 desert spoons plain flour
    1lt veg stock
    1 small tin tomato puree (70 gms)
    100 gms Roquefort cheese ( essential)
    2dl double cream
    juice only of 1/2 lemon
    Handful of freshly chopped parsley

    First read the instructions thoroughly

    Soak the mushrooms just covered in cold water for a minimum of 30 minutes

    In a fairly large pan ,melt the butter
    drain the water from the mushrooms and add to the pan fry for about 30 seconds
    Sprinkle the flour on top stirring all the time , quickly , to coat the mushrooms
    Add the beef stock slowly stirring all the time to prevent the flour from going lumpy
    add the tomato puree ( dont forget to open the tin Matt)
    add between 50/100 grams of Roquefort (Arja used 100 when you had it but it is your soup)
    let it boil for 10 mins stirring occasionally
    Check cheese taste and adjust if necessary
    Just before serving add the cream and lemon juice
    at the table sprinkle the parsley on top

    You can of course substitute a vegetable stock but we think some of the flavour is lost

    Like

  57. Have you ever thought about writing an informative sous vide book, not just a cookbook? You have the ability to simplify information without dumbing it down.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you. I have thought about it, but I would need a publisher as it would be way too much work to self publish and self promote. And it’d only be worth the effort if enough people would read it (which would never happen without promotion).

      Like

  58. Hoi Stefan, ik heb net een recept van jou voor duivekater gevonden , iets dat ik al bijna vergeten was! Leuk want Dat ga ik deze voor deze Pasen proberen. Heb gedeeld met een Facebook group Dutch recipes in English. Groeten uit Nova Scotia Canada

    Liked by 1 person

  59. Hello Stefan, and thank you for your meticulous and structured approach to gourmet cuisine.

    Your Pork Belly experiment was scientific, and i am very appreciative. (https://stefangourmet.com/2019/04/21/pork-belly-sous-vide-time-and-temperature-experiment/).

    The one thing I wanted to ask you was, would your approach be any different for pork belly slices (pre-sliced). Same temp and duration? or different temp, or different duration, or both?

    Like

    1. Hi Prinesh, a whole slab of pork belly is usually less than 5 centimeters / 2 inches thick, so the time to heat that up is about 2 hours. A slice would take half an hour or so. With the 24 hour cooking time I advocate in this post, the difference between the heating up time for a slice versus a slab will not make a noticeable difference. Please note that as soon as the whole piece of pork belly has reached the cooking temperature, it doesn’t matter anymore what the size is.

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      1. Hi Stefan, you are my “go to person” when it comes to Sous Vide (and other lovely stuff!). Great job! Just wanted to let you know your work is really appreciated. Thanks a lot😀.
        Best wishes, Edmée

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  60. Ciao Stefan
    Complimenti per il tuo blog. Ci sono capitato facendo ricerca sui principi di sous vide. Nel tuo blog ho trovato tantissime informazioni, e i risultati sono eccellenti.
    Oggi ho fatto cosce con sopracosce di pollo a 57°C per 6 ore. Poi friite un attimo in padella. Ottime, molto succose e si staccavano facilmente dell’osso.
    Ti scrivo dal camper in cui vivo con la mia famiglia girando l Europa, attualmente Francia.
    Ho dovuto adattare l idea di sous vide allo spazio e energia molto ridotta nel nostro abitacolo. Abbiamo dei panelli sul tetto che durante il giorno forniscono l’ energia che però per un sistema di sous vide convenzionale non sarebbero sufficiente.
    Poi ce il fatto che ci spostiamo…..
    Anche la necessità di usare la plastica per cucinare non ci piaceva.
    Il nostro sistema esiste di una cosidetta “heybox” con una piastra elettrica integrata,. All interno si trova una pentola a pressione con un inserto a vapore. Mettiamo un bicchiere di acqua o vino, a volte con spezie al fondo della pentola e la carne nell inserto. Attraverso un thermostato al interno si crea una “sauna a vapore” cuocendo il cibo.
    Ho avuto buonissimi risultati con questa “macchina” e a un consumo energetico basissimo.
    Purtroppo non ho comparazioni con dei risultati di un sistema convenzionale.
    Secondo té quali potrebbero essere i svantaggi della cottura a vapore in confronto all bagno maria?
    Il vapore forse trasporta meno energia che l’acqua, ma si dovrebbe trattare di una differenza minima.

    Ti ringrazio, saluti Michele

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  61. I live in California, USA but my in-laws were from The Netherlands. My husband’s family remembers a recipe his mother made called Snijbonen patazzi (that is my phonetic pronunciation of patazzi). They remember it having long beans, pork and maybe cabbage in it; like a stew. Have you heard of something like this and, if so, do you have a recipe for it? Thank you for helping with this old family recipe.

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    1. Hi Debbie, the word patazzi does not ring a bell, and neither does the combination of long beans, pork, and maybe cabbage. Google doesn’t help either. I’m sorry but I don’t think I can help you.

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        1. PS I have been thinking about this some more, about what could be the non-phonetic spelling of patazzi. I think it may be “potage”. That is French for a soupy stew (or stewy soup, a soup with larger items in it, as a “soupe” in French is a puréed soup, just like zuppa/minestra in Italian). It is very common, and it was even more common to use French terms in Dutch cooking. Then the recipe may be as simple as: simmer pork in water with carrot, leek, onion, salt, pepper until it falls off the bone (must be fatty, ham hock for example). Take the pork out, take the meat off the bone, chop, and return to the pot. Now boil the snijbonen (and cabbage, if using) in the stock and serve. It should probably also contain some form of carbs by boiling chunks of potato or spaghetti broken into short pieces (called vermicelli in the Netherlands) along with the snijbonen. This is just an educated guess.

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  62. Should I assume that, when you refer to a tablespoon in a recipe, you mean a UK/European tablespoon, not a US tablespoon?

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  63. Hi Stefan, ik heb eindelijk eens je blog gedetailleerd bekeken. Zeer indrukwekkend. Wat een detail zoals bijvoorbeeld bij het sous-vide hoofdstuk. Wat een enorme hoeveelheid goed toegankelijke info. Ik ga zeker eens wat recepten uitproberen.

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