Does a Vacuum HURT Marinades??

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  • čas přidán 10. 05. 2024
  • Does using different forms of vacuum cooking help or hurt meat marinading?
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Komentáře • 531

  • @NFTI
    @NFTI  Před 23 dny +53

    Hi everyone! You should come to OpenSauce, June 15-16 in San Francisco! I'll be there along with dozens of extremely cool and talented creators! It'll be amazing!!

    • @8875rx
      @8875rx Před 23 dny

      What happened to king of random?

    • @EGG45676
      @EGG45676 Před 22 dny +1

      Here before poplar

    • @Rabbit505
      @Rabbit505 Před 22 dny

      What if you poke holes in them first?

    • @ikitclaw7146
      @ikitclaw7146 Před 22 dny

      It makes sense the vacuum meat will be more tender, while sat in that vacuum the cells would start to burst and reduce the overall integrity of the meat.

    • @motorcyclemayham
      @motorcyclemayham Před 22 dny +1

      I find freezing my left over fajita meat in a vacuum bag makes it more tinder on the reheat. my logic is the juices expand when frozen, tenderizing the meat.. left overs better than off the grill. something you can do a blind taste test with your friends with. tomatillo, avocado, onion, cilantro, lime. all that in a blender, great with chips or on a taco.

  • @laser8389
    @laser8389 Před 23 dny +162

    Quick math: 15 psi over a square foot is literally a ton. To open that vacuum chamber at full vacuum would require a literal ton of force.

    • @quinton1661
      @quinton1661 Před 23 dny +19

      His pressure is closer to 13 psi - but the point still stands.

    • @No_Way_NO_WAY
      @No_Way_NO_WAY Před 23 dny +5

      a ton? everyone should be able to lift that lid off..... (after opening the valve)

    • @nohjrd
      @nohjrd Před 22 dny +3

      You only have to lift an edge enough to break the seal though (not saying I could do that, but someone might).

    • @No_Way_NO_WAY
      @No_Way_NO_WAY Před 21 dnem +1

      @@nohjrd if you would lift a ton only on one edge, you would still have to lift at least 1/4 of it (probably even more than 50%). As long as there are no specific handles that could take that force, i would assume they would just break off, if a person strong enough would try.

    • @ronwbrown
      @ronwbrown Před 21 dnem +1

      Exactly, not a simple task. (15psi * 144² inches (12in x 12in) = 2160lbs per square foot)

  • @jimbo386
    @jimbo386 Před 23 dny +53

    Another idea: Compare Vacuum marinated meat vs pressure marinated meat (putting the meat with marinade in a vacuum sealed bag, and putting the bag inside a pressure chamber).

    • @pan2aja
      @pan2aja Před 23 dny +7

      Don't forget ultrasonic sonication while we're at it

    • @groper.not.grouper9501
      @groper.not.grouper9501 Před 21 dnem

      no simple deduction would assume it’s considerably less effective than the actual vacuum

    • @100GTAGUY
      @100GTAGUY Před 20 dny

      ​@@pan2aja finally a reason to break out my turbo encabulator.

    • @cbtillery135
      @cbtillery135 Před 17 dny

      @@pan2aja the ultrasonic stuff is for making instant whiskey out of vodka, not steak

    • @mrimmortal1579
      @mrimmortal1579 Před 17 dny

      @@cbtillery135hmmmm…. Steak Whiskey. That sounds like a bajillion dollar idea!

  • @krisqo
    @krisqo Před 23 dny +241

    it would be interesting to see if a pressure chamber did anything

    • @keithsalter6832
      @keithsalter6832 Před 23 dny +16

      I agree, I think the marinade would soak in deeper than the other methods. So Nate, get a pressure pot and try different pressures etc. Or you can try a method used for epoxy, vacuum first then the pressure pot.

    • @craftiebrown
      @craftiebrown Před 23 dny +3

      Put something heavy on it. A pressure chamber would crush it, so it's essentially the same thing. There's no way to simulate a vacuum without special equipment, though.

    • @krisqo
      @krisqo Před 22 dny +10

      @@craftiebrown not really places like kfc use pressure cookers to cook food faster so doesnt really squash it. would would be really interesting is pressure pot then vacuum chamber then back to the pressure pot or even vacuum chamber to pull the air out then pressure pot to push marinade in where the air was

    • @Graytail
      @Graytail Před 22 dny +1

      I was going to suggest this, I'm glad I looked to see if someone else had first ^_^'

    • @Graytail
      @Graytail Před 22 dny +2

      @@krisqo I'm sure theres a way to hook both a vacuum and a compressor up to the same pot, to save swapping vessels for each cycle, but I was going to suggest this too.
      Maybe for a laugh, stick some of the result into a freezedrier too, just to see what that does ontop of everything else

  • @notuxnobux
    @notuxnobux Před 22 dny +30

    I dont know if food coloring accurately shows marinade penetration as food coloring binds to protein but the marinade doesn't, so the food coloring and the marinade can separate when you put it on protein

    • @bochapman1058
      @bochapman1058 Před 20 dny +1

      You might be right, but mixing it with the marinade. You would assume that it would be sucked in with the marinade because it’s diluted. It’s hard to say really.

    • @Punnikin1969
      @Punnikin1969 Před 20 dny +1

      So essentially you would be eating a chicken flavored filter. That would explain the texture.

  • @sebebalios1906
    @sebebalios1906 Před 21 dnem +7

    When I worked for Maple Leaf Foods, the process of making Pastrami deli meat included large steel rotating cylinders that used vacuum suction to stretch the meat so the spices and nitrates could penetrate deep in the meat, then we spiked them, hang them, cook to temp, cool, slice, packaged and shipped out.

    • @sebebalios1906
      @sebebalios1906 Před 21 dnem +3

      And using pressure to marinade meat would somewhat be useless due to pressure squeezing the meat rather than stretching with vacuum suction!

  • @javadkhusro
    @javadkhusro Před 23 dny +21

    I wonder if the vacuum caused the cells to rupture. It would be interesting to compare the vacuum chicken/beef to one that got freezer burn.

    • @100GTAGUY
      @100GTAGUY Před 20 dny +1

      Freezer burned space chicken, lets just make it a whole new thing and combine the two.
      Plus it could be a pretty cool jazz fusion band name.

    • @DUKE_of_RAMBLE
      @DUKE_of_RAMBLE Před 17 dny

      Both of what you guys said are what I thought might've happened...
      Except I think it wasn't freezer burn, but that it started to COOK from the water boiling as it was drawn out. (vacuum lowers booking point)
      So the rubbery/chewy texture was from the outter layer being basically cooked twice, is my thinking.

  • @YaztromoX
    @YaztromoX Před 23 dny +8

    I have a consumer vacuum chamber for marinading meat. It attaches to the accessory hose port on my food sealer. It works by cycling between pressured and unpressured states (i.e.: depressurizes, holds for several minutes, repressurizes, and repeats this cycle 3 or 4 times). I can’t say it works _better_ than just leaving meat in a marinade in the refrigerator - but it does seem to complete the same process much faster (15 minutes instead of hours).

    • @EthanReesor
      @EthanReesor Před 21 dnem +1

      It makes sense that cycling would work. I'm guessing depressurizing does very little. It seems like it's the repressurization that would push the marinade into the meat. So I can believe cycling would do that more.

    • @markylon
      @markylon Před 20 dny

      Marinating meat, not marinading. You marinate with a marinade.

  • @Dtr146
    @Dtr146 Před 22 dny +9

    "I've never tried that so that's why I'm doing this experiment today" God I love that mindset

  • @nathanjames.
    @nathanjames. Před 23 dny +40

    I’d be interested in seeing the results after multiple hours, maybe even comparing the different methods at different time periods.

    • @WastedDad
      @WastedDad Před 23 dny +1

      And smoke it as well

    • @bobweiram6321
      @bobweiram6321 Před 22 dny

      Marinade the meats in an ultrasonic cleaner.

    • @DUKE_of_RAMBLE
      @DUKE_of_RAMBLE Před 17 dny

      Next stop: overnight vacu-marinade test

    • @DUKE_of_RAMBLE
      @DUKE_of_RAMBLE Před 17 dny

      ​@@bobweiram6321That would be tenderizing the MEAT, and I think Nate - or maybe King of Random, while Nate was running it - had tried this already... Or SOMEONE did... Gouga maybe? 🤷‍♂️
      _(my old brain ain't what it used to be!)_

  • @MoltenPoo
    @MoltenPoo Před 22 dny +3

    Great video, as usual. One point of note...
    "Marinate" is the verb that food soaking in a marinade, "Marinade" is a noun that refers to the liquid or sauce used for marinating.

  • @bishopcorva
    @bishopcorva Před 23 dny +5

    I believe that the meat pieces, like the marshmallows, had a fair number of the inner cells burst resulting in texture differential.
    Only for the meat it was water being moved from a relative higher pressure to lower of the chamber. Which didn't really allow for salts to transfer in since there was a stronger force moving outwards. As for the beef being more tender, similar principle of water being pulled out of the cells.
    It would be interesting to see the meat thing done again, only this time weight prior to vacuum and then again after to see if there's a appreciable difference.

  • @jamesross1003
    @jamesross1003 Před 6 dny +1

    The issue with your experiment that I see is that you must pull a vacuum with the meat submerged in the marinade multiple times in a row. For example pull the vacuum then let the pressure off as quickly as possible, then do it again for several times. Each time the marinade will get slammed a little deeper into the meat. Also using a carder type tenderizer tool to first pierce the meat many times over will make a huge difference in the marinade up take. Thanks Nate! A very interesting video. By the way the vacuum marinating machines in pro-kitchens do this very thing(multiple vacuum pulls and releases of pressure). I have seen this done before and the aromatics penetrate very deeply, color is harder to penetrate. Thanks again!

  • @T.BG822
    @T.BG822 Před 23 dny +64

    Marinades aren't known to be particularly effective after an hour. There's a reason it's typically 6-12 hours depending on tradition, and I'd wager that an hour isn't actually enough time for valid data.

    • @bluej511
      @bluej511 Před 23 dny +6

      Right, but most people who marinate don't do it in a vacuum sealed bag or under vacuum, thats the reason it takes 6-12hrs is because it just sits in the fridge and naturally seeps in. This is a fast way to do it.

    • @Zaviex
      @Zaviex Před 23 dny +3

      A vacuum will be much quicker because the pressure from air is so low to 0. Once the pressure hits max, it will not take long for you to get functionally the maximum amount of marinade into the meat.
      What Nate has done is basically recreate the numbers from the papers that Ragusea was referencing in his video

    • @T.BG822
      @T.BG822 Před 23 dny +2

      What neither of you seem to get is that no, his numbers aren't comparable - it's just another variable, adding complexity rather than a side-grade measure. Calling it the same is lazy/bad science.

    • @bluej511
      @bluej511 Před 22 dny +1

      @@T.BG822 neither one of us called it the same lol.

    • @RKBrumbelow
      @RKBrumbelow Před 22 dny +3

      @@T.BG822 this video is lazy on many levels. In addition to the issue you mentioned, there is also the issue of osmotic movement of food coloring vs anything else.
      This video really just shows how people make assumptions about science but don’t actually think it through, generally because of a lack of understanding what is really happening and why.

  • @Lorentari
    @Lorentari Před 18 dny +1

    Biochemical Engineer here:
    The cell membranes in the meats have ruptured from the vacuum, releasing the juices into the space between the cells, causing a rubbery texture as you eat the deflated cell membranes.
    I would suggest trying to pressurize the meat (maybe 10 bars) to push the marinade into the tissue (inside of the meat will be at lower pressure than the outside of the meat because of the cell membranes

  • @alex_stanley
    @alex_stanley Před 22 dny +2

    Vacuum infusion only works with porous materials with air pockets, like wood being stabilized with infused resin. The best vacuum infusion food recipe I've come up with is watermelon infused with fresh squeezed lime juice. I got the vacuum infusion idea from the NY Times website, where there's a video of cucumber being vacuum infused with a martini.

    • @zierlyn
      @zierlyn Před 21 dnem +1

      Exactly. While it didn't occur to me right away, I realized it after the first blue chicken marinade example.
      The point of the vacuum chamber would be to replace air pockets with liquid. Meat doesn't have air pockets. The vacuum isn't pulling anything out of the meat for the marinade to replace.

  • @Slop_Dogg
    @Slop_Dogg Před 23 dny +4

    Enjoyed this experiment! Anything with food is a plus for me, cooking & baking are just an edible form of chemistry

  • @SateenDuraLuxe
    @SateenDuraLuxe Před 23 dny +3

    What if you put the marinade in a 100psi pressure pot? Maybe the hige pressure air will infuse the meat more. Or you could also put the meat in a hydraulic chamber with no air, but 3000psi of liquid pressure.

  • @ultraokletsgo
    @ultraokletsgo Před 22 dny +1

    Really good editing on this video, Nate. Tight script, succinct, entertaining. Keep up the good work!

  • @averagegremlin
    @averagegremlin Před 16 dny

    I’m honestly so happy you almost have 1mil, you and Cass seriously did amazing on TKR and actually made it educational.

  • @chrislutz7557
    @chrislutz7557 Před 23 dny +1

    The weird texture on the 3rd steak and chicken samples is from the same thing that happened to the marshmallows. Under vacuum, the cell walls rupture, just like the air bubbles in the marshmallow. The longer the vacuum exposure, the more cells rupture, the worse the texture. This is how there is more penetration of the marinade, even if slightly. It's the same thing that happens when meat is frozen slowly and thawed quickly - cell walls rupture from water freezing, and you get a weird squishy texture. Get a microscope and do this again. Thank Alton Brown for explaining this to me in an episode of Good Eats a long time ago.

  • @jamesbreckenridge4484
    @jamesbreckenridge4484 Před 20 dny +1

    i use vacuum marinading when i make beef jerky. i have found that the marinade flavor seems to have better penetration and a more consistent flavor throughout instead of the flavor just being on the surface of the meat. but that's just my experience.

  • @elementary7283
    @elementary7283 Před 22 dny +1

    The preasure of the pressure chamber changes the boiling point of liquids and changes the stability of compounds it also won't infuse flavour unless you do a proper vacuum infusion like prepreg infusion. Chicken is a very easy to break down protein so it's not recommended for this type of experiment

  • @kingofstrike1234
    @kingofstrike1234 Před 23 dny +1

    instead of pulling out the air after instant vacuum in the chamber, you should let it suck air for those marinating hour, bc my theory is the instant vacuum that you're pulling from the chamber is basically the same as the vacuum sealer

  • @hamilde
    @hamilde Před 23 dny +1

    My vacuum bag sealer is a vacuum chamber. You put the bag in the chamber with the opening between heating elements. The chamber is pulled down to a pretty good vacuum, the bag gets sealed, then the vacuum is released.

  • @crated_
    @crated_ Před 13 hodinami +1

    "Bright blue, just like Mom used to make it" Percy Jackson?!

  • @davidelzinga9757
    @davidelzinga9757 Před 21 dnem

    I gave up asking people to try this stuff years ago. Thanks for working on it!

  • @bluej511
    @bluej511 Před 23 dny

    Very cool video Nate, btw the cook on the steaks looks SO good.

  • @GeoffreyMoran
    @GeoffreyMoran Před 16 dny

    I remember, as a kid, my mom had a food saver vacuum saver. It had an attachment for mason jars or mason jar like vessels that you could use to “vacuum save” items in jars or as the infomercial advertised shorten marination times of meats.

  • @jimbo111589
    @jimbo111589 Před 4 dny

    I’m so glad you’re still making interesting videos. Thanks for posting.

  • @adamb89
    @adamb89 Před 19 dny

    6:40 I do a lot of home canning, you don't need the ring once the lid seals. The ring is just there to keep the lid in place BEFORE it seals. Matter of fact, with canned foods, you SHOULD remove the ring. If the canned food isn't perfectly preserved and something alive in there starts spoiling and producing gas, eventually it'll pop the seal and the lid will come off. But if the ring is still in place holding the lid on, it'll form a false-seal, and you've now got yourself a jar of botulism probably.
    So here's something I'd like to try. Take raw meat and just straight up freeze dry it. Pull out all the moisture while keeping the structure intact. Then pressure-cook it in a bowl of marinade, and see how THAT works.

  • @EphyMusicOfficial
    @EphyMusicOfficial Před 23 dny

    Nate, you could try adding an electronic valve like a solenoid to the top with a separate, larger hole to allow a large, more instantaneous release of air in place of lifting the top off.

  • @riuphane
    @riuphane Před 21 dnem +1

    I imagine the vacuum chamber ruptured and separated the cells and fibers of the muscle, leading to the different texture. As many others have pointed out, both the method and time would probably have a bigger impact if changed. Trying a longer time and comparing it with high pressure instead of low pressure would likely have more interesting results. Another comment i liked suggested that using the vacuum chamber and then after a short time repressurizing it repeatedly might have a more significant impact, but again I'd be worried about the texture, especially at that extreme of a vacuum.

  • @adambarron4015
    @adambarron4015 Před 22 dny +1

    So the pink color in cured meats comes from the nitrates in the curing salt binding to the myoglobin in the meat and the pink smoke ring comes from nitrous oxide from the incomplete combustion of the wood binding to the myoglobin.
    I'd be interested in see you use your vacuum chamber to remove the ambient air and fill the chamber with nitrous oxide to see if you could either make a fake smoke ring or completely cure the meat.

  • @juggawest
    @juggawest Před 17 dny +1

    Does a marinade penetrate and taste different via tenderizer {Thor's hammer with spikes, vs stabs via fork} also what's usually suggested 4 hours vs overnight!

  • @charleswise5570
    @charleswise5570 Před 22 dny

    Marinating also uses the process of osmosis. Depending on the level of salinity, adding moisture to a piece of meat, and possibly carrying flavor in to it as well.
    I would do the test a second time, also using a brine solution.

  • @cruzcastillo6984
    @cruzcastillo6984 Před 22 dny +1

    With that experiment of Adam's how do you know that the food coloring can penatrate the meat? I watched his video a while ago, so maybe he addressed this. It could be possible that the food coloring can't go that deep, but things like salt can.

  • @tobysstory4013
    @tobysstory4013 Před 22 dny

    Great video Nate.

  • @OrionXBlaze
    @OrionXBlaze Před 23 dny +1

    Install a larger dump valve in the lid and you can simulate removing the lid under vacuum.

  • @Hardwyre
    @Hardwyre Před 9 hodinami

    I have a pressure pot I used for resin stabilizing wood blanks. It can pull a vacuum and then push about 60 psi. I should clean it out and see how the switch hit of vac-press works on it.

  • @parasharkchari
    @parasharkchari Před 21 dnem

    I wouldn't be surprised if the tenderness has more to do with the mechanical stresses that the meat fibers experienced in the cycling of vacuum and much less to do with marinade exposure. A good way to test that is to see what happens with a marinaded piece of meat in the vacuum chamber vs. one that was cycled through vacuum and then marinaded afterwards; maybe also throw in one piece that was cycled multiple times before marination just to see if it's really all about the vacuum action.

  • @No_Way_NO_WAY
    @No_Way_NO_WAY Před 23 dny

    I work with pressure chambers in my company. I have noticed, that only applying a partial vacuum is not sufficient in my filed. In some of our applications, we have to pressure cycle. So basically applying a vacuum and afterwards slight overpressure. Since you only have a vacuum chamber, releasing and re-applying the vacuum might have a similar effect. (Cycling it in 1hour steps should be good)

  • @SuperbeastOR
    @SuperbeastOR Před 15 dny

    Marinades are usually done from any where 4-12 hours because it takes time for the marinade to really work plus you need salt to help with the osmotic action which helps the marinade to penetrate as well as deepen the flavor because well salt. Try it again with those variables in mind.

  • @danielcole2667
    @danielcole2667 Před 21 dnem

    Almost all marinated industrially made chicken is vacuum tumbled to 28psi for between 10min and 1 hour depending if it is a membrane cut or a nonmembrane cut. Everything from chick fila to walmart pre marinated packages are done this way. Ideal temp is between 25-35f. Tumbler rpm can vary a lot by bone in vs boneless, membrane vs nonmembrane and the type of marination. The internal flights of the tumbler can vary too by angle. You can absorb 10-15% more marination by weight with proper tumble for surface area and vacuum. More with soy based marination.

  • @93lozfan
    @93lozfan Před 17 dny

    My guess is the vacuum chamber applies an almost stretched force on the meat while marinating. And since bird meat has more collagen than cow meat, and it doesn't break down in acid as quickly that's likely what's being left behind and making it feel gummy while the beef just breaks apart.

  • @TheArthurs92
    @TheArthurs92 Před 22 dny

    My guess is the vacuum is pulling down the acid through the meat, and also my guess would be the denser the meat fibres the more difficult it would be to pull the marinade. I would love to see this in a longer time scale

  • @twtchr44
    @twtchr44 Před 21 dnem

    Fascinating that the texture changed. Never would have thought of this, but it makes sense possibly due to cellular rupture?

  • @linearparadox9409
    @linearparadox9409 Před 17 dny

    Thank you so much for doing this! Id long wondered this myself, and i finally have an answer to my question.
    I have to say, though, I'm very surprised by the result; I very much expected that, if not the vaccum itself, then at least the repressurization would drive the surrounding fluid into the meat.
    Perhaps there's not enough rigidity in the protein/substrate of the meat to 'spring back' and exhert a drawing force on the marinade/atmosphere?
    Very strange. A part of me still expects the mechanics to work, even after very difinitively seeing them not.

  • @RavenRose91
    @RavenRose91 Před 22 dny

    My father made a kind of low vacuum/pressure chamber out of a Sam’s club pickle jar and a hand pump that he used to switch between adding pressure & and taking it away. He said it helps the fibers “push & pull” apart to let the marinade get between them. He would spend hours marinating everything overnight changing between the low & higher pressure.
    He swears by it but I think it’s more likely the fact that he used one of those meat tenderizer blade things on anything he put in there 🤷‍♀️

  • @thassalantekreskel5742

    I would like to see some experiments involving caramelization. In particular, I'm wondering if there are ways you can devise to get the same kind of reaction on seared steak or sautéed vegetables with foods you normally wouldn't expect.

  • @omegasight
    @omegasight Před 19 dny

    My understanding of stabilizing (the resin method you compared the camber marinade to), is that you have to leave the object in the liquid for 2x the time in was under vacuum, to allow the liquid to get full penetration. Maybe that was a factor for the color test.

  • @tjiddenl
    @tjiddenl Před 21 dnem

    I always use a vacuumbag because you need a bit less marinade. And it will also prevent meat from floating on above the liquid.

  • @jps26
    @jps26 Před 22 dny

    Nice to see you cutting the meat with one of your home made knifes aswell. Good going nate :) also rubberised gummy chicken a new taste experience!

  • @Antifag1977
    @Antifag1977 Před 15 dny

    I always stab the hell out of meat with a fork before marinating. All those tiny channels seem to allow flavor to penetrate deeper and all the holes pretty much tighten and seal back up during cooking.

  • @Alphadragon1979
    @Alphadragon1979 Před 20 dny

    I wish you had used a vacuum chamber sealer as well. I know it's pretty close to a normal vacuum chamber but I have never noticed a texture difference and I do taste a difference when marinating in a bag using it.

  • @u2bst1nks
    @u2bst1nks Před 22 dny +1

    If I had to guess the vacuum chamber is causing gasses dissolved in the meat liquids to expand and come out of solution. These expanding gasses are trapped inside the meat and this might end up rupturing cell walls or stretching meat fibers. This is my speculation as to why there's a tenderization effect.

  • @Sembazuru
    @Sembazuru Před 21 dnem

    My vacuum sealer (foodsaver 5000 series) has an add-on and operation mode that is supposed to help quick pickling. I use it, but I haven't done any testing against a control. The add-on is basically a rigid vacuum chamber, but the magic is supposedly the operation mode. It pulls a vacuum, holds it for a few minutes, releases and then pulls another vacuum. It does three cycles over about 12 minutes. I think the idea is to use the pressure release to pump the marinade/pickling solution into the food. Maybe you could try to replicate this with your vacuum chamber to see if the idea is valid, or if it's just a marketing gimmick. See if it works for marinades, quick pickle on veggies, and ceviche. After this video, I'm skeptical that it is anything more than a marketing gimmick...

  • @ReviewThisTestThat
    @ReviewThisTestThat Před 23 dny

    I’ve done this for years with my chamber you should do something like caribou it interesting how the meat expands and changes color it also boils the water at room temperature and breaks all the cells and it stays expanded when I released the pressure.

  • @burtmacklin6443
    @burtmacklin6443 Před 23 dny

    You should try to cycle the vacuum. Texas Distillers have a tough time aging their spirits because of the temperature fluctuation between day and night, forcing spirits in and out of the barrels via expansion and contraction. A 5 year age in some cases can be similar to a 20 year age in a stable environment. This same idea could be tested in with your marinade, sucking the air out and letting it return on a cycle.

  • @NeoMatrixYT
    @NeoMatrixYT Před 17 dny

    The knowledge that de-pressurized meat is squishier is helpful for scientists trying to “grow” edible meat in cultures. In other words, the meat may require some special “pressurization” to more-resemble traditional meat.

  • @DerSolinski
    @DerSolinski Před 14 dny

    Vacuum bag -> Pressure chamber.
    Also interesting: vacuum bag > ultrasonic cleaner on low setting in ice bath < on high you cook it.
    And an hour isn't nearly enough for any results.

  • @xanthpuns
    @xanthpuns Před dnem

    Vacuums lower the boiling point of liquid. So the marinades done in an actual vacuum will cause the outer layer of meat to lose some of it's moisture. Yes it was in a marinade but the direction that the liquid travels between the marinade and the meat is reversed. So while you would get the flavor the texture would alter significantly.

  • @kgsbowtie
    @kgsbowtie Před 21 dnem

    It’d be interesting to see if *vacuum cycles* do something different, kind of like what you do with resins. Thinking being that might actually infuse the marinade in the meat.

  • @Dave-zc6mx
    @Dave-zc6mx Před 22 dny

    we miss you ... please make more videos. we really enjoy them, thank you

  • @Zzz_top
    @Zzz_top Před 20 dny

    Interested in this one.

  • @JeffreyKelley
    @JeffreyKelley Před 23 dny

    A followup on this would be cool. Maybe longer times. Try 24 hours, 48 hours and 72 hours maybe. Also maybe try a pressure pot. Sort of like a vacuum chamber but instead of pulling a vacuum you add pressure to it could force the marinade into the meat better.
    Also, the texture change is interesting. As far as I know the main use of vacuum marinators is to make jerky so the texture change might not matter as much there or it might even help it since it made the beef more tender

  • @pokrog
    @pokrog Před 17 dny +1

    You totally missed out on a massive opportunity to simply put holes in the meat with a fork. In my experience using a vacuum chamber and doing it right, it basically equates to 1 minute of punctured meat being as marinated as a whole day just sitting in the marinade. Beer marinated bratwurst in a chamber are incredible too because they aren't such a solid piece of meat. When you let the pressure back in with bratwurst, you can see all the marinade squirting out as they shrink back down.

  • @Garney309
    @Garney309 Před 20 dny

    Dude... I've stuck with you since the beginning... this is why... Great video, so interesting~!!

  • @jordanamos1563
    @jordanamos1563 Před 21 dnem +1

    We have to see a eye round with guga sous vide, inside of a vacuum chamber under vacuum for the entire cook and then again pressure say up to 30 psi

  • @MrHubert1710
    @MrHubert1710 Před 19 dny

    Maybe positive pressure would force marinade in? Maybe even instead of pressure chamber, one could use hydraulic press as piston acting upon closed vessel with meat and marinade to achieve high pressures. Not a best way but interesting to think about :)

  • @python2400
    @python2400 Před 23 dny +2

    What if you need to do multiple vacuum cycles to let the air out of the meat then the marinade in to replace it?

    • @JRockySchmidt
      @JRockySchmidt Před 21 dnem

      You do I've actually run this test but my vacuum wasn't nearly as strong...

  • @bbeck104
    @bbeck104 Před 21 dnem

    A thought... Perhaps the desired outcome of marinade penetration could be improved with direct contact with the middle of the meat being treated and the source of the pressure differential. For example using a wedge shaped vacuum nozzle to draw the liquid through the meat because the marinade itself may be causing an impediment yo flow of pressure from inside the meat outward

  • @jordansorenson698
    @jordansorenson698 Před 23 dny +1

    An idea for a future video. Trying different methods to tenderize meat and see if that makes a difference in anything.

  • @ToxicSmasher
    @ToxicSmasher Před 21 dnem

    How about puting it in a presurepot. With high presure the marinade might go deeper. Or first vacume and then presurepot.

  • @DrewCNewOrleans
    @DrewCNewOrleans Před 22 dny

    Please do a test about freezing meat and then thawing it. Different ways to freeze it, different temperatures, different lengths of time frozen and different storage vessels to freeze it in. Then that them in different ways. Microwave, room temp, fridge and maybe cook when frozen.

  • @sleepyseminoob2258
    @sleepyseminoob2258 Před 22 dny

    Hey Nate! Did you remember to poke the meat with a fork before soaking? Poking it alot gives holes for the marinade to soak deep into the fiber

  • @Connor_Crain
    @Connor_Crain Před 17 dny

    Now you need to work with Guga again and try this as a tenderizing experiment!

  • @psnerd8009
    @psnerd8009 Před 21 dnem

    Would love to see you cover this with brines (high salt content for longer marinating time actually penetrates the meat) vs marinades

  • @ETC_Rohaly_USCG
    @ETC_Rohaly_USCG Před 23 dny

    If I understand correctly, vac-bags are more used to prevent oxidation and spoilage; meaning it can be stored for longer and not suffer "Freezer-Burn"
    I have a FoodSaver(tm), and that's what I use when I make a bulk shopping trip.
    The unit I have does have a sous vide setting, but I have yet to try it.

    • @ETC_Rohaly_USCG
      @ETC_Rohaly_USCG Před 23 dny

      It would be interesting to see that if you insert a vacuum probe in the middle of the item that it would pull items in versus out because looks like with the vacuum it's pulling everything outward versus inward

  • @75keg75
    @75keg75 Před 19 dny

    Use pressure. Also try use the beef as reverse osmosis style membrave and force marinade through it.

  • @goffrd137
    @goffrd137 Před 22 dny

    One flaw in this experiment is on the observation side of how the marinade actually affects the food. Most people believe that it puts liquid/flavor inside the meat and more time will make better flavors. But like Nate said it creates a barrier around the surface of the meat, locking moisture and enzymes that make the meat tender and juicy when you eat it. Marinades do not tenderize the meat itself. Marinades ability to seal in moisture is its strength.
    So what if we cook it in the marinade? The quick answer is that the sugars will caramelize and burn before the meat cooks thoroughly. Burnt on the outside, raw in the middle. So what if we reduce the sugar and cook it in a higher moisture environment (boiling/steaming)? Without a barrier to stop moisture from leaving the meat, like what happens when you are searing the meat, more moisture leaves the meat than is introduced to it and it becomes dry and sometimes mealy in texture.
    So circling back to the beginning what a marinade does, like Nate said, is creating a flavorful barrier to hold the good stuff inside. For best results 4 to 6 hours is good but longer than 24 hours and you're not marinating it your preserving it. It will dry out and get like leather. Also don't use guava in your marinade because it will dissolve the meat

  • @IamJustJ.
    @IamJustJ. Před 20 dny

    In a vacuum, the contents of the cells would have a higher pressure than the surrounding vacuum which should cause them to essentially explode. That wouldn't necessarily improve the marinade, as your experiment shows, but it would have some interesting side effects on texture (as your experiment also shows).
    But, it is similar in concept to frozen vegetables (and meat) growing ice crystals and rupturing the cell walls. (This is also why I hate the taste and texture of frozen vegetables and frozen meat in general.)

  • @AuroraGw2
    @AuroraGw2 Před 19 dny +1

    Bro casually cooks perfect chicken breasts for an experiment

  • @forgingluck
    @forgingluck Před 23 dny +1

    Maaan I see a new nfti video right before bed?! Time to do some in the field testing on sleep depravation I guess lol

  • @TheRealAlpha2
    @TheRealAlpha2 Před 22 dny

    All these food experiments make me hungry. I'd even eat the blue chicken.

  • @SilverFoxCooking
    @SilverFoxCooking Před 8 dny

    That was an interesting experiment! I am curious if there is a difference vacuum sealing in a bag, vs vacuum sealing in a bag with a chamber vacuum sealer. I have both and like the chamber because I can seal liquids. I vacuum seal for freezing and never thought it might change the texture.

  • @negpimawon
    @negpimawon Před 20 dny

    It might be interesting to find out if there is a difference marinating overnight... also seeing what increasing the pressure would do, like others have said in both one hour and overnight

  • @Spikeba11
    @Spikeba11 Před 21 dnem

    So if you want to marinade deeper just score the meat. Scoring is cutting 1/8 th to 1/4 inch into the meat about 1 inch apart in parallel lines or a crosshatch.

  • @rachetl12
    @rachetl12 Před 20 dny

    Really wish this was a Guga cameo vid, or Nate going over to Guga

  • @jpawhees
    @jpawhees Před 16 dny

    Try this marinade experiment again but using freeze dried meat. I know you did a freeze dried steak thing a while ago but this might be different results. I figure the dried meat will have air holes that get filled with liquid when the vacume is released. Maybe only need to have it under vacume for a few minutes then leave in bowl to continue soaking. Probably best use if the marinade is the star of the meal. Might work better with tougher cuts since it gets tenderized.
    If you want to make freeze dried yourself cheaply, just stick a dehumidifier in a mini fridge or a freezer and put the meat on grated racks. 😏

  • @falcon3503
    @falcon3503 Před 23 dny

    Try pressure marinating. High pressure works for treated wood penitration. And what about syringe injection?

  • @3rdjrh
    @3rdjrh Před 23 dny +4

    Would love a nfti and Adam collab

    • @vinstinct
      @vinstinct Před 23 dny +1

      Same here. Adam is probably my favorite food CZcamsr.. although he's doing less food and side projects like his fish tanks these days.

  • @patnuthammachote
    @patnuthammachote Před 21 dnem

    I heard that it can make instant pickles. Also I'm assuming that the texture change could be from how the cells rupture from undergoing a vacuum. It would be interesting to see under a microscope.

  • @LarsDonner
    @LarsDonner Před 22 dny

    I've been wondering if a vacuum chamber (and some dry ice) would be enough to freeze-dry little cubes of chicken meat. It would probably have to stay a while in the chamber to give the water time to evaporate.

  • @cmawhz
    @cmawhz Před 19 dny

    what about both vacuum and pressure, oscillating back and forth. like if you put a steak in liquid inside a hydraulic cylinder with the piston almost touching the steak (no air), then pulled and pushed on the piston over and over. maybe have 2 opposing bottle jacks or something to push and pull the piston.
    i hypothesize it would let the marinade soak deeper as the non-marinade juices are pulled out, then marinade forced back into the meat. also a good bit of tenderizing. it would heat and cool a bit possibly slightly cooking the meat.

  • @pyrosinugami
    @pyrosinugami Před 21 dnem

    I'd be interesting to see a crossover with Guga where he dry ages something in a vacuum and then maybe try the tenderizing thing but like with an actual like poking tenderizer versus like a hammer tenderizer

  • @ravenofchrist
    @ravenofchrist Před 23 dny

    I would wonder if dehydrating it first, and then marinade in a vacuum would yield a better diffusion result. Since the marinade would only have to replace the air as it leaves, and doesn't have to compete to replace the high water content already present in the meat. Probably not going to turn out the tastiest results I'd guess, but perhaps a more noteworthy one.

  • @user-rc3iu8hg8s
    @user-rc3iu8hg8s Před 20 dny

    Science based steak experiments? Yes please. Which ones? All of them. Actually propane vs charcoal vs wood to see which is more tender and juicy.

  • @jerotoro2021
    @jerotoro2021 Před 23 dny

    Steak video idea: Can liquid nitrogen improve a steak's sear?
    Generally, searing involves very high heat to rapidly cook the outside of the steak, giving it a deep brown crust on the outside while keeping the inside at the desired doneness (med-rare). But what if you briefly dunked the steak in liquid nitrogen, flash-freezing the surface of the steak right before searing? Theoretically it should give an even deeper, crisp crust. Using a thermometer to achieve the exact same internal doneness level will be necessary here.
    Idea #2: Does flash-freezing a steak improve the taste?
    This one tests to see whether freezing a steak very quickly in liquid nitrogen affects the texture and flavor differently than freezing regularly in a freezer. Test 3 steaks, unfrozen, freezer frozen, and LN2 frozen. (Another LN2 idea so you can maximize the return on investing in some LN2)
    I don't know how to make a video out of this (a short maybe), but freeze a steak in LN2 and then shatter it with a hammer, and then stir fry the chunks. See if it's better/worse/weirder than cutting the meat with a knife.

  • @LFTRnow
    @LFTRnow Před hodinou

    I'm wondering if high pressure (rather than vacuum) might work better. The idea is to force the marinade into the food. Air pressure might be a problem but a hydraulic piston setup might work?