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• #1852
Can anyone recommend a vacuum sealing machine for use before freezing food? As usual most of the online reviews seem to be unreliable, hopefully under £50 if possible (is that realistic?).
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• #1853
I have a Vacuum Sealer Pro - a bit pricier, but works well.
There is a smaller version.
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• #1854
You might do, the shit ones on Amazon are properly shit.
I spent about £30 on one and I hate it.
It sort of works some of the time, but looking forward to it breaking so I can throw it away. -
• #1856
Is vacuum sealing necessary? I’ve been putting stuff in boxes and freezer bags, I feel like a fool.
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• #1857
I have a vacuum sealer and items get much less freezer burn than using normal freezer bags. Plus it can be used for sous vide cooking, compressed fruit etc.
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• #1858
I had no idea vacuum sealers had a use beyond sous-vide cooking.
And this is coming from someone who bought a meat slicer. -
• #1859
I cured salmon gravadlax with dill and beetroot at Christmas with a vacuum bag.
It was phenomenal.
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• #1860
Oooh
Recipe pls
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• #1861
https://www.oneofeverything.ca/blog/2017/10/19/recipe-beet-cured-gravlax
Super simple really.
First batch I made the mistake of using pre shredded beetroot, which had added water, vinegar and sugar.
Grated beetroot was better for reducing the excess liquid.Demolished 2 whole salmon sides between 8 people across 2 days.
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• #1862
I have a cheap one and it's a bit shit. If I was going to buy a sub £50 one I'd probably get an Inkbird one as other stuff of theirs that I've had has been decent.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B09Z6C1CZD/
I imagine the ANOVA one is decent though, although I've resisted getting a new one due to all the plastic you end up using. -
• #1863
My mum used to do this with bricks in the garage
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• #1864
My father in law did the same, with clingfilmed bricks.
The vacuum bag means that the salt and sugar draw into salmon without extra weight (though I did add something on top to shape the fillet).
A lot less salt and sugar needed too, as there is less wastage. -
• #1865
Aha, I smoke a few sides every year for Christmas - it makes buying pissy little backs so underwhelming.
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• #1866
Anyone who's done research to pick between the Waterdrop and Brita DIY below sink water filters? I need to replace our jug and thought this could be a better solution?
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• #1867
I did a bit of research and found that it likely impacted the flow rates enough that you really needed a separate filtered water tap and cold water tap and I gave up at that point.
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• #1868
Im not sure. I have an osmio water filter in my van and the flow is good.
Water drop seem to say 0.75g/m so 3.5l/m ish
Actually seems a tap is 10-15l/m so not so great
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• #1869
I'm guessing your van probably has lower pressure than mains though so maybe less noticeable. The Brita one was something like 3l/min which was much lower than my tap (something like a third or a quarter, can't remember exactly).
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• #1870
yeah just edited.
it does seem osmio do 'whole house' ones that can do 30l/m.
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• #1871
Makes no sense without a separate tap/2 (3?)way tap in my opinion. You don't need filtered for pasta etc and flow rate is slow on filtered.
We have a second hand Franke/Brita tap with BRITA PURITY C50 Quell ST Filter. Tap was something like 100€. Filter is set to let 30% unfiltered through.
I wouldn't go back to jug because space and convenience. And it definitely makes a difference on filter coffe and green tea especially.
Only problem I see is finding someone that takes the huge filters back for recycling. -
• #1873
A jug can also go in the fridge.
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• #1874
We have a jug, it's so annoying.
You post reminded me how annoying it is! -
• #1875
Haha yeah, ours just became a bit grim after a couple of years so need to swap it which also annoys me
Yes.
Don't.