sous vide for high altitude
Asked by Phyllis on Tuesday, May 31
I have always been envious of all you techie types who can look at a problem and know how to go about finding the answer. While I'm usually a wizard with words (I'm an editor by trade), math and science completely baffle me. So my question is this. I live in the Rocky Mountains at 6,200 feet. At this elevation, water boils at about 195 degrees. I've read that it's because there is less atmospheric pressure, so the water comes to boiling sooner than at sea level.
Now, part of me wants to believe that 130 degrees is 130 degrees no matter where you live. But I tried my first sous vide cooking experiment yesterday (the beer cooler method described on this site), and even though I had my water at 140 degrees, my meat only got to 120 and was way too rare (and maybe not even safe). So I cooked the meat in my cast iron skillet at a lower temperature to finish the cooking and to give a little color to the outside. It was delish, and I think the texture was better than my usual grilling or pan searing, but I don't think it was a fair test for evaluating the sous vide technique.
Anybody got any ideas about whether I probably just didn't monitor the cooking closely enough or whether I need to make an adjustment for high altitude?
3 Answers to This Question
Please vote for your favorite answer by using the up and down arrows next to it.

1
Quite correct that at that altitude the boiling point of water will not affect the cooking time. The boiling point on top of Everest is still around 70C so you'd still be able to SV a steak even at the highest point on the planet.
One thing that might be have a bearing is that due to the reduced atmospheric pressure the vaporisation point of water is reduced. This will lead to increased evaporation and hence may cause the water to cool quicker than you expect, so more regular monitoring would be needed.
Answered by DaveyT on Sunday, June 05

0
My understanding is that the food will cook at the temperature you set the water bath at. If you were cooking it above the boiling point then it would make a difference. Below boiling the water still is the same temperature though.
My guess is the water temperature in the cooler dropped too much during cooking or it wasn't in for long enough.
I hope this helps!
Answered by Jason Logsdon on Wednesday, June 01

0
I also live at 6200 feet in Colorado and I SV all the time. Your thoughts are correct, 130F is 130F no matter were you are. Altitude and boiling points only come into play when you are cooking with "Boiling", that's why a pressure cooker is such a great cooking tool here at 6200 feet. (Needs to be one that can get to 15 lbs)
Answered by John Biswanger on Thursday, May 10
You can also find a lot of sous vide information, as well as over 100 recipes, in our book
Beginning Sous Vide which you can get at Amazon.com or as a
pdf download.
Know the Answer to this Question?
In order to post an answer please
log in or
create an account, it's free and only takes 30 seconds.
Want more great Sous Vide content?
Our free Cooking Sous Vide newsletter will be sent every few weeks and each edition will contain tips, tricks, recipes, and how-to's for Cooking Sous Vide. They will also contain links to some of the best sous vide information on the internet.
Subscribe Now!
Like This Article? Then Please Share It
Digg It |
Save to del.icio.us |
Stumble It |
Reddit It |
Or subscribe to the RSS Feed of our Content
to get notified
when new pages are added