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Bon Apetite!
(lemmy.world)
Welcome to Food Crimes! This community is here to collect all and any post about cursed food and generally unusual consumables.
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As explained by another its kinda shit anyways. But to answer the question, this sort of thing would have been done using leathery parts of animal intestines before plastic was a thing. Just like with sausages.
"Sous vide is high-tech haggis" is not the revelation I expected to have today.
The benefit of sous vide for a restaurant is you can hold multiple steaks at rare and give them a quick sear when ordered. The soaking breaks down the collagen which ultimately makes the steak tender.
However, for a home cook a reverse sear will give a superior steak. It will similarly break down the collagen, but also creates a nice crust that sous vide can't create.
Restaurants don't reverse sear because it's unpredictable and takes too much time.
could also be done with ceramics (like beggar's chicken)