Sous Vide SVD-00101 Supreme Demi Water Oven, Black

This can be a MUST HAVE product !!
Sous Vide SVD-00101 Supreme Demi Water Oven, Black
We have searched on the web to find the best cheapest price, BUY NOW to avoid disappointment.

Product Description

The compact Demi offers the same unparalleled cooking convenience as the SousVide Supreme, but in a smaller appliance. With hands-off cooking that is gentle and forgiving, the Demi makes it easy to have meals ready in minutes at the end of the day. Everyone-from the accomplished cook to the rank novice-can turn out gourmet-quality meals with minimal preparation time. It's as easy as heating water. Just season your dish, vacuum-seal in cooking pouches, simmer in the water oven, sear or sauce your dish if desired and serve.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #14800 in Kitchen & Housewares
  • Size: Black
  • Color: Black
  • Brand: Sous Vide
  • Model: SVD-00101
  • Dimensions: 11.30" h x 10.96" w x 12.99" l, 9.08 pounds

Features

  • Provides an easy way to prepare gourmet meals
  • Silent operation and push-button convenience
  • Temperature control keeps water within one degree of its ideal setting
  • Temperature can be held for hours or days
  • Holds 8.7 Liters of water

Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

240 of 244 people found the following review helpful.
4Does exactly what you'd hope ... for a price
By a scientist
EDIT: Still enjoying this machine after more than 1 year. I tend to use it at least once a week for fish. I also occasionally use it for (not-so-good) steak. Oh, and it excels at leg of lamb. I do want to note that the difference between tenderness and juiciness has never been more apparent to me than when I used this device - there's a reason it's recommended to serve sous vide meat with a sauce or jus. I note that there is a sous vide machine available through Amazon that's about half the size and half the price. I've never used it, but it looks like it might be a way to try this method of cooking without spending a fortune, although I question if the size is large enough for a small family. Finally, there's an excellent comment about cooking meat to two different levels of doneness in the comments section that I encourage you to check out...
--
This review is for the SousVide Supreme Demi. I've never seen or used the larger Supreme model, which is abo ut 50% more expensive, for a slightly larger capacity. My understanding is that you probably get 1/3rd more space for the money. The only difference appears to be capacity, so this review may still be useful to read. See my warning at the end for what the machine won't do, but to be clear: you'll need to buy or already own a separate device that will allow you to vacuum seal food in plastic bags. This "oven" can't be used without that sealer and it's not included in this package, although certain warehouse stores have been known to sell a bundle that includes a sealer for not too much more money.

I will not claim to be an expert at SousVide cooking, but this seems to do exactly what you'd want. Briefly, what you'd want is a very precisely controlled water bath. The idea is that the food is put into a bag and vacuum-packed using a separate device, and then thrown into this "oven" to be brought to its perfect final eating temperature. Since there's no risk of over-cooking, food can be left in this state for relatively long periods of time: from hours to days. It is a great way of cooking steaks, fish, soft-boiled eggs/custards, and certain vegetables. It is not necessarily a faster way of cooking, nor does it seem optimized for the vast majority of baking applications. Note that you can't cook at two different temperatures without two different ovens, so you're probably either cooking meat/fish OR vegetables. Given the length of time it takes to cook foods, you probably wouldn't be doing both.

So, it's a device for holding water at a constant temperature for an indefinite period of time. Does this model do the trick? In a word, yes.

First, it is completely silent. There's not even a fan whirring gently in the background. There's not even the whine from the small LCD display. It's silent.

Second, it holds the temperature of the water plus or minus a degree or two (fahrenheit). You can se t the temperature to display in celsius or fahrenheit. It relies entirely on convection to circulate the water (no blades or pumps to break) but that seems to work pretty well. Every time I reached into the water, it felt evenly hot throughout. Since one tends to cook things for long periods of time in one of these "ovens", I think convection works just fine. There is a timer that counts down time and then turns OFF the oven. Sadly, there is no count down timer to count down time and then turn the oven on.

Third, it comes up to temperature very quickly - from water out of the tap to cooking temperature in less than 15 minutes. Since you're cooking for long periods of time, you can probably ignore the warm-up and just throw your food in after you plug it in. The one cautiion here is that it takes a full three seconds of pressing the button before the power turns on. Three seconds does not sound like a long time, but it will stop the machine from being switch ed on or off by mistake. It sure feels like a long time when you plug it in for the first time.

Fourth, the capacity seems fine for anything up to a small family/6 people. If you're going to use it for entertaining or more than 6 people, you'll need the bigger model. I could fit six steaks into the oven. If you were really careful, and the pieces were small, you could probably fit 8. In terms of size, you can get the dimensions from the specs above, but it seemed like it would take a couple of small whole fish, or 6 inch-thick salmon steaks. Again, not great for big families.

Fifth, the lid and (optional) heat mat (which looks/feels like a mousepad) do a nice job of conserving heat in the unit. There's no steam and water at 130 degrees F, for medium-rare meat, just isn't that warm. I'm pretty happy reaching in and grabbing things without gloves or tongs. It's definitely warmer than a hot-tub, but no-one's going to get badly scalded. I'm not su re how high it will heat: up to 200 degrees F should be possible. I don't think it will boil water, but I've never tried. Certainly, that's not the point of this device, since the lid does not lock so it will never function as a pressure cooker. And if you wanted to boil food, you could do that in any pot.

Sixth, at the end, it's easy to take off the lid, pull out the tray, and use the two off-set handles to pick the whole thing up and empty out the water. You don't want this water sitting around for repeated runs - things will start to grow in it unless you add some salt or perhaps a copper penny or two. By the way, I'm sure that either of those approaches will invalidate the warranty.

Yes, this is basically a super accurate, very expensive crock-pot that's designed to be used with water and bags of meat instead of stew. Advantages: the meat will retain it's shape and consistency much better when cooked in the bag.

Ok, so what doesn't t his product do?
Well, in order to cook food in this gizmo, you really have to buy a SEPARATE vacuum sealer and then a supply of bags. The sealer creates a vacuum inside special food-safe bags and then melts it closed. Note that the bags are not really re-usable and regular zip locks won't really do the trick, so you'll have to buy a supply of bags OR rolls of plastic that you can seal to create bags. The SousVide company makes a sealer (which I bought) that is not cheap, but that's because it has an important extra functionality: Some vacuum sealers will only seal the bag after a vacuum has formed completely. That will suck out any marinade/juices from the food. However, the SousVide sealer (and certain others, eg some FoodSaver models) allow you to seal the bag, independently of applying a vacuum. In this case, that means I can apply a vacuum until I see the marinade beginning to be sucked out, then hit the other button to seal the bag immediately. It works rea lly quite well.

That's it. So why only four stars? Well, it's really expensive for what it is: a very nicely built waterbath. As an ex-scientist, I've used these in a laboratory setting and I couldn't find one cheaper ... but that's not really surprising since scientists get ripped off anyway. Basically, you're paying for being an early adopter. As these become more mainstream, I would expect the price to go down. Until then, c'est la vide (couldn't resist).

75 of 76 people found the following review helpful.
5It's like there's a Michelin Star chef in my kitchen
By Ryan
The Sous Vide Supreme Demi is absolutely amazing. It has done a brilliant job on the meats and vegetables I've cooked in this unit. It has easily been the best purchase I made for my kitchen ever (along with the FoodSaver vacuum sealer of course). I usually hate cooking, but I'm having so much fun cooking with this unit, because the food comes out amazing. I think its harder to screw up the cooking with the Sous Vide Supreme than it is to do it right.

I've experimented with all kinds of tough cuts of beef (because the manufacturer says it can do it) and boy does it ever. I took some tough beef shoulder steaks that were cut bigger than I wanted as a steak, I tried to cut them down raw into smaller steaks but they weren't budging with my knives, I cooked them for about 16 hours overnight in the Sous Vide Supreme Demi overnight at the 134 degrees and when I took out the huge steak to sear it, the steak literally fell into three smaller steaks while trying to fl ip it. And the meat was amazingly tender. And it's turned bacon wrapped fillets I've gotten from Costco into wonderful steaks as well.

Probably the most amazing difference was when I bought a turkey breast to cook up. I've never cooked a turkey in my life and I watched the YouTube videos for the William-Sonoma Immersion Cooker to get an idea of how to do it. I didn't want to deal with the cutting up a whole turkey, so I bought just the breast portion of the turkey at Whole Foods, brined it like it was suggested, cut off the skin, seasoned it, put the turkey in a Foodsaver bag, added some butter, vacuum sealed it and cooked it, it turned into the most amazingly moist and tender turkey breast I've ever tasted, and I can't believe I cooked it. This is going to totally transform thanksgiving turkey cooking in my house.

It is completely true when it says the Sous Vide Supreme Demi cooks meat that falls off the bone, as I discovered with cooking ribs and turkey legs. With the turkey legs in particular, I took them out of the bag and could literally shake the bone right out of the meat. With ribs, the bones are just barely attached to the meat making them very flavorful and delicious.

Vegetables come out brilliant, but what I find works best is to cook a whole batch of bags of vegetables at once then transfer the bags to an ice bath, then freeze them. As vegetables get cooked at a higher temperature than the meat does, you can't "cook" both at the same time. Doing a batch of vegetable bags at once solves this problem because I can throw one of the pre-cooked veggie packs in with the meat about an hour before I'm ready to eat and they reheat with the meat. And because all the bags are separately sealed you can cook several kinds of vegetables at once then ice bath them for the freezer. I've never liked cauliflower, and not been the biggest fan of broccoli but both have come out amazing. So far my favorite vegg ies to cook are green beans with a little bacon, sea salt, and butter. It's important on the ice bath to make sure to get them completely cold before freezing them otherwise the veggies get a little mushy when they get reheated.

My favorite seasoning from all my experimenting has been the McCormick's ITALIAN SEASONING(NO MSG) which has thyme, garlic, basil, onion, and sage in it. It seems to provide the best flavor from the various ones I've tried and is really cheap to get at Costco (huge 4 oz bottle for about $3). I ended up getting a Iwatani Torch Burner Professional #Cb-tc-pro to sear the finished meats because it was just easier to use and less clean up than buttering a pan and searing the meats that way.

Probably my only complaints about the unit are the included bag rack is not like the one in the full size Sous Vide Supreme unit (so I ordered one from the manufacturer and I like it much better than the included one). And the shiny metal gril l (with all the circular holes) that goes in the bottom of the cooker has completely discolored through the use. I don't know if that's normal, but it hasn't affected the results of any of the food I've cooked. My guess is that some salt might have been in the edges of the bag when I sealed them and have gotten on the grill to cause some discoloration through the cooking.

Thanks to the Sous Vide Supreme Demi and the FoodSaver vacuum sealer, my freezer is now stocked with vacuum sealed and seasoned meats and vegetables instead of all the frozen meals I used to buy. I know I'm eating far healthier now without all those added preservatives and mile long ingredient lists.

And perhaps the most glowing testimonial I can give about the the Sous Vide Supreme Demi is that I love mine so much, I got a second unit to give to my mother.

48 of 50 people found the following review helpful.
5Excellent little device
By J. Caughman
These were available for a limited time at costco and I'm very happy I jumped when I saw one (costco's return policy = no risk early adoption). I've only had it a week, but have cooked a few things in it. Chicken breasts @ 140f for 2 hours was delish, carrots with a little butter magnificent, scrambled eggs were custardy in a way I thought impossible. The critical thing it does well that a lot of hack sous vide options can miss on is the constant temperature. Various levels of water have fluctuated no more than 1 F for this first week of use. I'm looking forward to doing to some longer cooks with beef this weekend.

If you're the type of person that thinks "ok tonight I'm shooting for a michelin star dinner at home" this is a nice weapon to have in your arsenal. Is it necessary? No, but the hands free consistency that it provides, especially for proteins frees you focus on other details that can really elevate your food to new levels. There's a lot of coo k ahead uses for it as well, but I purchased for the curiousity and mad scientist opportunities, not the convenience of midweek meal prep.

Powered by Blogger