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Under Pressure: Cooking Sous Vide

Under Pressure: Cooking Sous Vide
Author: Thomas Keller
Creator: Harold Mcgee
Publisher: Artisan
Category: Book

List Price: $75.00
Buy New: $47.25
You Save: $27.75 (37%)

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Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 11 reviews
Sales Rank: 463

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 295
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.9
Dimensions (in): 11.4 x 11.2 x 1.3

ISBN: 1579653510
Dewey Decimal Number: 641.587
EAN: 9781579653514
ASIN: 1579653510

Publication Date: October 15, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
The ground-breaking under-pressure method, usually called sous vide, involves submerging food for minutes or even days in sealed, airless bags at precisely the temperature required to produce perfect doneness. Flavors and textures unattainable by other cooking methods can also be achieved.

The technique has been in the pipeline for awhile--one forerunner is the boil-in bag mom used to put veggies on the table--but has only recently attracted top chefs. One is Thomas Keller, famed chef-proprietor of The French Laundry and Per Se. His mightily sized, gorgeously produced Under Pressure explores every inch of sous vide, including the ramifications of using this precision-cooking technique (once time and temperature are established, best results follow automatically) on the craft of cooking, which has always meant a potentially rewarding engagement with the possibility of failure.

The book makes no bones about being addressed to professionals. Typical recipes, like Marinated Toy Box Tomatoes with Compressed Cucumber-Red Onion Relish, Toasted Brioche, and Diane St. Claire Butter, involve multiple preparations and dernier cri ingredients, and thus resist home duplication. There’s also the matter of the pricey equipment required--chamber vacuum packers and temperature-maintaining immersion circulators--not to mention the precautions required to ensure that foods, usually cooked at low temps, are safe to eat.

What the book does offer the home cook is, however, thrilling. It introduces something new under the sun--an exciting, transformative technique of great potential. Anyone interested in food and cooking--not to mention lovers of extraordinarily well produced books--will want to explore Under Pressure. --Arthur Boehm

Product Description
A revolution in cooking

Sous vide is the culinary innovation that has everyone in the food world talking. In this revolutionary new cookbook, Thomas Keller, America's most respected chef, explains why this foolproof technique, which involves cooking at precise temperatures below simmering, yields results that other culinary methods cannot. For the first time, one can achieve short ribs that are meltingly tender even when cooked medium rare. Fish, which has a small window of doneness, is easier to finesse, and shellfish stays succulent no matter how long it's been on the stove. Fruit and vegetables benefit, too, retaining color and flavor while undergoing remarkable transformations in texture.

The secret to sous vide is in discovering the precise amount of heat required to achieve the most sublime results. Through years of trial and error, Keller and his chefs de cuisine have blazed the trail to perfection—and they show the way in this collection of never-before-published recipes from his landmark restaurants—The French Laundry in Napa Valley and per se in New York. With an introduction by the eminent food-science writer Harold McGee, and artful photography by Deborah Jones, who photographed Keller's best-selling The French Laundry Cookbook, this book will be a must for every culinary professional and anyone who wants to up the ante and experience food at the highest level.



Customer Reviews:   Read 6 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars this might be a long review...   October 31, 2008
Robert M. Katz
8 out of 8 found this review helpful

the french laundry cookbook is one of my favorite books, but i thought id never be able to do most of the recipes in it when i first looked at it. after time, as my experience grew, and constantly referring back to the book, i find myself now able to do most of those dishes in it (though i havent tackled head-to-toe yet) and looked at the book more as a place to get ideas from. "under pressure" seems like the same type of book.
when i opened this book i felt the same experience i felt opening the french laundry. the books pretty much even look the same. neither are designed with the home cook in mind.
that said, most of the recipes can be replicated at home, given the right equipment. i seriously doubt anyone is going to buy a chamber vacuum sealer (costing up to or exceeding 5 grand) or an immersion circulator (costing over a grand) but there is hope for people on a budget, like myself.
i, myself, have been doing some sous-vide cooking at home and at work for about a year now. i tested the way the technique can change the texture and taste of food. the results i got ranged from disasterious to sublime. i never had a real guide to sous vide cooking (not being able to spend over 200 bucks for the only book printed on the subject). but now i do. but i dont have the expensive hardware that this book calls for, but im pretty sure i can get the same results they get on MOST of these dishes.
its true, food savers and chamber sealers are alot different. you cant get the results of a "compressed" watermelon (as in the steak tartare)using something you got at target, but you can get the same type of pork belly. with the old foodsavers, you werent able to seal food with a liquid (unless you froze it and then placed it with the food in the bag). the new ones, allow you to seal with liquids and marinades, so most of the recipes are do-able.
and it is true, a sous vide magic wont give the same results as a immersion circulator will give you as far as the poached egg is concerned. but it will allow you to get pretty much the same reults you would get from the braised veal cheeks.
i use a foodsaver V2860 and a Ranco temperature controller, with a plug-in electric burner at home (at work we got the Rational combi) and found it relatively easy to do the "glazed breast of pork with swiss chard, white wine poached granny smith apples and green mustard vinaigrette" at home.
and as far as the "molecular chemicals" used in this book, you can easily get them online from the places they refer to on the sources page in reasonable quantities. you wont need to buy a 50 lb bucket of transglutaminase in order to do them.
this book isnt for someone wanting to make a 30-minute meal. nor should it be. its for someone who takes food and cooking SERIOUSLY. as with the french laundry, this book is strictly dedicated with a serious hobbyist and the professional chef in mind.



5 out of 5 stars Incredible   October 23, 2008
Peter O'Henley
9 out of 10 found this review helpful

I don't normally review stuff on Amazon, but I felt compelled to for Thomas Keller's latest - "Under Pressure" is an amazing book.

I hesitate to consider this a cook book - in order to prepare most of the recipes described, a home cook will have to purchase close to $3000 of special sous vide equipment. What it is though is a fantastic reference, and introduction to the world of sous vide cooking.

In order to fully appreciate the content Thomas Keller provides, it helps to have a solid foundation of culinary knowledge, but the information is presented so clearly and organized so well, that anyone could pick this up and enjoy it.

Very highly recommended.



5 out of 5 stars Not for the home chef.   October 31, 2008
Benjamin J. Parks (San Francisco, CA)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This book is fantastic. Not at all for the home chef, but so what! For professionals, there are so many levels on which to you will enjoy this book. If you are an enthusiastic amateur, this is a great window into the standards and techniques of many of the world's best restaurant. THIS IS A MUST BUY!


5 out of 5 stars The Manhatten Project of Sous Vide... Fantastic Book!!!   October 28, 2008
J. Al-hashimi
3 out of 7 found this review helpful

First off, this is the sexiest coffeetable book on food you will find, not because they are lighting an eggplant to look like a nightgown fell off its' shoulder but because it is a beautiful explanatory and picturesque insight into the highly scientific Manhatten Project of Sous Vide, shaped into something quite fantasticly aesthetic by chef-artists. The book itself is stunningly beautiful, kind of perfect. I think it is Thomas Keller's best and boldest book of all, a glorious coming-out party for sous vide. A standard has been set, a classic has been published.

Any venture this futuristic and ironic requires an understanding of the subject which can only be described as philosophical. Not to worry. This book delivers plenty of understanding by four stellar chefs and a forward by Harold McGee; for me their thoughts on the subject is the best part.

Pretty much anyone interested in sous vide and techniques from Ferran Adria over the past years knows that it requires certain precise equipment for production; that in itself shouldn't come as a surprise, but I expect that most people want to read this to learn of it, rather than to exactly replicate the exact processes in their home kitchens. Other techniques aside, the sous vide method allows a different kind of heat interaction with food that makes radical change possible.

The fun of all of this is that it is once-removed, a tentative step out of the priordial swamp of the way things always were, for the first time a truly new way to do the business of cooking. Not that all will be abandoned; nothing will be. But it is a truly new technique, asking new questions, redefining what was assumed to be the only way, and it comes together, spinning off and spingboarding with other techniques to create something newly refined. We who love this stuff really need to know.

What bothered me about sous vide was addressed by page 11. How to bridge the ease and consistency of sous vide and the risk-filled craft of cooking? It seems that any hack could learn sous vide. Which drives the next question, so what? So maybe it doesn't take the heart of an artist and long experience to create perfectly cooked meals. And probably that will be the case in many places, but here it is not. Thomas Keller, Jonathan Benno, Corey Lee, and Sebastien Rouxel take Sous Vide to a very lofty and enriching place.

Just when the big questions start to set in, I read the Compressed Watermelon and Hayden Mango "Yolk" recipe, working to visualize what it must look like, a fabuously unique combo, figuring they should put it on a plain white plate to show off watermelon pink and golden orange mango colors... Oh ye of little faith. Turned the page and there it was in full color. a kosher crystal of salt set atop the "yolk" like a tiny crystal hat and an artistic sprinkling of coarse and fine black pepper, just the way you'd do a real egg if you were careful. You just have to grin at the fabulous result.

What is it with this stuff that makes us into kids and artists at the same time? I suppose an element of funness. I started paging through for the pictures because they depict the artistry of food, a snapshot of a moment. I thought the selection of pictures was exquisite; the simple played against the futuristic, sunlight on an olive or a fig still on the tree opposite of intricate finessing and plating. The completeness of the recipe and plating directions and pictures gives you the full taste of the dish even if you never eat it.

Who gets excited about a shift in cooking techniques, vivid presentations and new definitions of the cookedness of food? It's probably either in one's DNA or their soul, or it's not. Liking this subject may as simple and complex as what you are attracted to. One thing comes clear in this book. Sous vide is part of many things; big business and serious business (there's a lot of potential and ramifications of sous vide in terms of handling food at the source); science and art, simple and complex, traditional pleasures and changing tastes of the future. In Thomas Keller's and fellow chef's hands it becomes something quite exquisite and thrilling.






5 out of 5 stars so what   November 4, 2008
E. Jordan (Sousvide, FL)
1 out of 7 found this review helpful

There are probably over 500,000 cookbooks out there for the home cook and not many for the professional cook, so please don't penalize this book because it is not for the martha sytle cook. This is one of the best professional cookbooks out and probably the best book out on Sous Vide cooking. So what home cooks, keep boiling eggs and deep frying asparagus.
This is a 5 star book


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