Food Thread

Octopus – Sous Vide
Rev: 220403 1510
Ref: Modernist Cuisine, Vol. 6, p. 83

1.1 lb Total (5 pieces)

Marinade / seasoning:
1. Plain
2. Olive + avocado oil
3. Olive oil, minced garlic, tamari, black pepper

Sous Vide:
185°F for 4 hrs

Finish Dressing:
Olive oil
Lemon juice
Fleur de Sel salt
Tellicherry black pepper – fresh ground

220403 Octopus prep -IMG_0826.JPG
220403 Octopus bagged -IMG_0827.JPG
220403 Octopus cooked -IMG_0828.JPG
220403 Octopus cooked + cut -IMG_0829.JPG
220403 Octopus finished + dressed -IMG_0830.JPG
 
Octopus – Sous Vide
Rev: 220403 1510
Ref: Modernist Cuisine, Vol. 6, p. 83

1.1 lb Total (5 pieces)

Marinade / seasoning:
1. Plain
2. Olive + avocado oil
3. Olive oil, minced garlic, tamari, black pepper

Sous Vide:
185°F for 4 hrs

Finish Dressing:
Olive oil
Lemon juice
Fleur de Sel salt
Tellicherry black pepper – fresh ground

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Ok, so I think I can safely say that is the first thing you have cooked that did not look good to me.

If the wind doesn’t blow all my heat away forever, I will have pulled pork and ribs to share in a couple hours. This is the first time I’ve ever had to crank the heat as high as possible in the smoker just to break 200 degrees!
 
Ok, so I think I can safely say that is the first thing you have cooked that did not look good to me.

If the wind doesn’t blow all my heat away forever, I will have pulled pork and ribs to share in a couple hours. This is the first time I’ve ever had to crank the heat as high as possible in the smoker just to break 200 degrees!
OK, not a bad batting %. ;)
 
You got poorly cooked octopus.
Look up recipes.

1. Cook of for a short time.
2. Cook for a long time.

In between, the octopus will be tough.
I will have to try it again some time. I figured it was cooked wrong, since squid is the same way. I like good calamari, but not rubber squid bands.
 
Dinner is served! Pork ribs, smoked very low over Cherry for seven hours, sauced with a blend of Rib Rack and Sweet Baby Ray’s. Home made baked beans to top it off.
And, because it looked so good once I pulled it, here’s some of the pulled pork.
 

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You got poorly cooked octopus.
Look up recipes.

1. Cook of for a short time.
2. Cook for a long time.

In between, the octopus will be tough.
Octopus – Cooking it to NOT be Tough

This info is “lifted” from the “Modernist Cuisine”, Vol. 5, p. 193:

“Culinary traditions abound with stories about how to make octopus tender. One popular suggestion is to soak it with wine corks, allegedly enzyme rich. Don’t bother, this has proven to be a myth. Octopus is tough because of its uniquely designed constrictor muscle. Past a certain point of cooking, the collagen shrinks and greatly toughens the meat. So, you have two choices. One is to pound the octopus to tenderize it, sear it so that it is still raw inside, then enjoy its natural chewiness. A second approach is to cook it long and hot enough, with enough moisture, to melt the collagen into gelatin. Sous vide is the perfect technique for doing just that and thus ideal for cooking [octopus].”
 
Pretty lady whipped up some scrambled breakfast chow.
Fry some bacon first, then leave the grease in the pan for the eggs.
Eggs with a little half and half, tomato, spinach, shredded cheddar, minced garlic, onion powder, salt and peppers all just scrambled and fried in the bacon grease.
The toast is from the zero carb bread at Aldi’s. Not exactly a great bread for toast, but still feels like a cheat code when I’m on a low carb diet. I think the whole plate might have 2 or 3 grams net carbs from the tomato and garlic.
Delicious
1682235D-2528-4AF6-9B1C-B133D187A2C0.jpeg
 

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