Care to share your technique?So don't ban me but I just now started a Sous Vide pork shoulder![]()
So don't ban me but I just now started a Sous Vide pork shoulder![]()
Given what I think I know about smoke and meat, I'd think you'd be better off starting on the smoker and then shifting to the sous vide after three or four hours of taking on smoke. I'd probably finish in the smoker as well just to reset the bark. Not sure if the trade-off between one very long cook and two short cooks would be worth it, but my initial thoughts are that it would be. Start at a reasonable hour on day one. Put it in the sous vide for 18-20 hours, then complete on the smoker well before dinner time. So you'd be exchanging 12 hours of tending the smoker for starting a fire twice. Sounds like a good swap to me.I'm using the technique from the first recipe I spotted, found here: https://recipes.anovaculinary.com/recipe/sous-vide-bbq-pork-shoulder
But for the rub I'm just using A1 Sweet Mesquite BBQ rub, no curing salt, using the 165* method. For the finish I'll load it on the smoker tomorrow.
I can't see where using the kettle at the end would alter the results. You aren't looking for more smoke at that point, just to dry out the surface. For that matter, you could probably just stick it in the oven sitting on a rack and it would work out much the same. The one thing here that confuses me quite a lot is the temperature. All these sous vide recipes are using much lower temps than you typically see as guides for brisket and pork butt. I realize it's a much longer time at those lower temps, but given how many different approaches I've seen for BBQ, if holding 165F for 24 hours was a superior approach I have to think somebody in the BBQ world would have stumbled on that. Perhaps it's the sealed environment with sous vide, taking evaporation out of the equation, that makes the difference.Interesting Jay, I like your thought process and the method sounds pretty smart but, what about smoke, Sous Vide then. “Set” on an indirect kettle?
I can't see where using the kettle at the end would alter the results. You aren't looking for more smoke at that point, just to dry out the surface. For that matter, you could probably just stick it in the oven sitting on a rack and it would work out much the same. The one thing here that confuses me quite a lot is the temperature. All these sous vide recipes are using much lower temps than you typically see as guides for brisket and pork butt. I realize it's a much longer time at those lower temps, but given how many different approaches I've seen for BBQ, if holding 165F for 24 hours was a superior approach I have to think somebody in the BBQ world would have stumbled on that. Perhaps it's the sealed environment with sous vide, taking evaporation out of the equation, that makes the difference.
Bear in mind, I've never done sous vide so this is all theory, no practice. I may need to pay more attention next time Costco has sous vide heater/circulators on sale.
I remember asking this same question on the old forum
Some fine looking meat by both of you!
I remember asking this same question on the old forum before Sous-Vide was popular.
https://tvwbb.com/showthread.php?26392-Improving-Cheap-Roast-Beef
The thing I like about SV is you don't have to go out of your way to buy prime or Waygu cuts.
Choice or even select/no roll come out fantastic and I'll vouch on that
Tim
I've done a number of Briskets with an Anova Sous Vide setup. The reason for the long cook at 150 - 155 is to break down the connective tissues and make it tender. The more time the meat spends in the sous vide, the more tender it becomes. At 155 the fat won't render out, so you need to trim and remove most of the fat before starting the water bath.