No hay artículos en el carro
No hay artículos en el carroOmar H.
Comentado en México el 10 de octubre de 2024
Lo compre por los comentarios, es muy bueno en cuestión de calentamiento, pero la verdad es que me duró como 2 meses empezó a tener falla y me prendió el foco rojo , jamás lo pude volver a usar eh tenido 2 y al otro se le cayó las tapa de abajo , la verdad me defraudó
Cliente de
Comentado en México el 30 de agosto de 2022
Excelente sous vide. Calienta el agua muy rápido. Sin problemas calienta 20 litros a 90º Celsius y mantiene la temperatura. Por encima de los 70º Celsius, hace como un ruido de "chiflido” muy leve. La aplicación es la mejor que he visto, muy fácil de usar y muy intuitiva, con guías buenísimas. También es muy compacto, se puede guardar en cualquier cajón. Hay que tomar en cuenta que necesitas si o si tu teléfono y la aplicación para echarlo a jalar, ya que el sous vide tiene un solo botón y no tiene pantalla.
Gabriel Ramirez Morales
Comentado en México el 31 de enero de 2022
Me gusto el producto, el tema es el proceso que luego no fluye porque pago con diferentes formas y requiero factura
Viviano
Comentado en México el 6 de marzo de 2021
Me gustó y funciona ... sin embargo NO ES PARA CUALQUIERA ! Lo considero una herramienta de alta cocina adecuada para cortes de regular a gran tamaño ( aun cuando un filete mignon o un ribeye se cuecen muy bien, pero resulta en mi opinión un poco tardado e impráctico ) en donde el tiempo de cocción a “baño María” es estupendo lo mismo en verduras, pescados y postres ! Nótese que tiene su precio y no es ninguna ganga, pertenece a la familia BREVILLE que es calidad !
brecht
Comentado en México el 13 de abril de 2021
Excelente sous vide, fácil de usar y con muchísimas recetas precargado en la app.
Antonio A.
Comentado en México el 9 de enero de 2020
Excelente producto, es muy fácil de usar con la aplicación y la cocción de los alimentos queda perfecta.
Erik Daniel Guerra Rodriguez
Comentado en México el 29 de diciembre de 2019
Me encanta!Es demasiado facil de usar. La precisión con la que cocina es impresionante.Los platillos quedan Deliciosos! Definitivamente es una excelente compra.
alan lopez
Comentado en México el 23 de febrero de 2018
Excelente producto, fácil de usar y cumple todas las expectativas! No duden en comprarlo. Y la aplicación sencilla y cómoda.
SA
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 28 de diciembre de 2018
I have been considering a sous vide cooking appliance for a while and finally decided to get one. Joule seemed like a good choice. I ordered it from Amazon and have been very pleased with it.The product works! It is very well made, has a very clean finish and seems to be sturdy. You get the cooking appliance, in a very nicely packaged box. The accompanying app is NEEDED if you want to cook anything. Without the app, Joule can only be turned on! So in order to make anything, you must download the app.Once you have the appliance, and have it plugged in, it connects to the app, and from there it's very intuitive very easy. You basically choose the food you want to cook, the size, thickness, your preference of how well done you want your food and off you go!A cool thing the Joule app does, is, it shows you images of the food to let you choose the temperature you want to cook. For example, you don't just choose steak rare, medium, well done etc.. you actually see how the meat will look like and choose the temp accordingly.Important things to know:1. You should not turn on joule unless you have it in the water.2. You don't need an expensive vaccum sealer or sous vide bags. Any good quality zip lock bag (BPA free) would do.3. You need to sear the food at a high temperature once its cooked. For that, a high temp grill or a cast iron pan on high heat.4. IF searing indoors, be aware that most likely you will set off your smoke alarm! ;) but it's so worth it.I have done sous vide before and yet I am super impressed with the ease and precision quality results Joule delivers. You will love the results. 100%
M Gerrish
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 13 de febrero de 2017
Sous vide style of cooking hadn't really been on my radar, but an ad for this minimalist and beautifully designed appliance popped up on the internet and I followed along. The ad did what it's supposed to do, it encouraged me to buy. I spent some time outside of the ad to learn how this could benefit our kitchen and after reading lots of testimonials and recipes, decided to give it a try.But I would keep the shipping materials just in case it was yet another "thing" that would ultimately prove a space-waster.First, what did I hope for from this appliance? Ease of use, yes. Save time, yes. Great results, yes.The Joule is about as beautifully basic and easy to use as any appliance could be. I have the app on a Kindle Fire (I use a Windows phone, so Kindle provides the only access to Joule for me). The app for Kindle works perfectly. After your ingredients are bagged up, you truly just set it and forget it. You can set, forget and then eat. Or you can set, forget, ice down and refrigerate and eat days later. I LOVE that. Cook once, eat whenever.Can I do the same thing with a Dutch oven on the stove? Yes. But then I have to stand at the stove and for various reasons, that's a problem for me. So this is a useful tool for avoiding prolonged stove time. On a Saturday I prepped chicken, set it and forgot it, chilled and refrigerated it, then on Wednesday I threw the chicken into a hot wok for a really quick stir fry and dinner was not only served, it was fantastic.Made a double batch of Chocolate Pots de Creme and had dessert all week (on the downside, we had dessert all week, and the waistline doesn't appreciate a rich dessert every day). Soft boiled eggs are prepared one day and easy to reheat and have all week (we have hens, so we eat and appreciate easy egg recipes). Thick pork chops are something we'd given up on years ago because no matter how they were cooked, they weren't good. Cooking chops sous vide? Not only are the chops moist and yummy, the leftover pork was STILL tender and useful for a new iteration.The results for sous vide cooking, I've found, are just as advertised. The simplicity and ease of use for the Joule is much appreciated. I threw away the shipping materials. This is NOT going back.
Steve W.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 21 de diciembre de 2017
I got my Joule about 3 weeks ago on a Black Friday deal and I have used it several times since then. It is the easiest appliance in my kitchen to use and so far everything I have cooked has turned out great. The Android app makes it really easy to use and to monitor the progress of my cook, but a couple things are a little annoying about it as well. For one, they want this product to appeal to the gourmet cook, so they have lots of recipes that I would make about once or twice a year and almost no everyday recipes, so thank God for Google! The other thing is that the Joule frequently disconnects from my phone. It is easy enough to restart the app and it picks up right where it left off, but that is something ChefSteps needs to work on. I have tons of recipe ideas I want to work on, especially in regard to the combination of BBQ and sous vide, so I am having a lot of fun with my new toy! I wish I was on commission because I have already sold a few of these to my friends and family who have tasted the results... oh, and my butcher. I told him how perfect my beef ribs turned out and how I did it and I could see his eyes light up and his mouth begin to water! I never imagined it could be so easy to obtain such perfect results. And it's the most forgiving cooking method I know of as well; it is very difficult to over or under cook anything. If you do get this, don't bother getting a cookbook for everyday dishes, just Google it.
Jack Donnellly
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 22 de enero de 2017
This is my first venture into sous vide – because Joule promised to make it simple and space conserving. And it has delivered. After using a pot a couple times, I invested in a polycarbonate container and stainless steel racks, which make larger servings in particular easier. And it now just all gets put in the closet when i am finished.Cooking is remarkably easy. The app is clear and (to me at least) intuitive. I personally have not made much use of the time recommendations built into the app. (They seem reasonable, and the pictures to show doneness are a really cool idea, but I am a book guy.) Just fire it up, set a timer, and cook.So far, i have been especially impressed by the fish I have done – both salmon and octopus have been superb – and the pork tenderloin I did a couple nights ago was out of this world; as good as the best of i have ever eaten. Still working on beef, but that should come along.As for the long times, I have a couple times now cooked ahead (octopus takes four hours – at 170, not 180 as the sources I have seen recommend), refrigerated in the bag, and then warmed it back up to just under temperature and seared it. You still have to plan ahead. But you don't have to have a lot of time on the day of the meal.Don't worry about special bags or a vacuum sealer. Freezer thickness Ziploc bags work perfectly and the air can be almost completely eliminated by putting the unsealed bag in the water, carefully pushing it down into the water almost to the sealing line, and then sealing.This really has changed – AND IMPROVED – the way I cook many things. 100% satisfied. In fact, significantly better than i suspected. if you have been thinking about "taking the plunge" my experience suggests that this is a good way to go.UPDATE: April 2017The more I use this, the more I like it. Tougher cuts of beef come out wonderful at medium rare – 48 hour boneless short ribs are especially good – and tender cuts come out perfectly. Ditto for lamb. My only less than ideal experience was with shrimp (but that is probably just a matter of taste). I have also discovered that plastic wrap works well as a cover, almost entirely eliminating evaporation. (I have only tried it up to 140 degrees, though.)
Kevin Doyle
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2017
I am not one who is easily impressed. While I admit a lifelong love for cooking, and the associated collection of kitchen tools, I can tell you I have sent a number of supposedly high-end items back because they did not live up to the hype.I got my Joule 3 weeks ago, and I am compelled to write this. On the day it arrived, and anxious to try the new toy, I scavenged the freezer and came up with a rather sad, most likely somewhat freezer-burnt pair of boneless, skinless chicken breasts. I religiously buy meat fresh from the butcher, so these had been sitting there so long I did not remember when. They were in a ziplock, not vacuum sealed, so I did not expect much. What the heck I just want to experiment. I grabbed the 6qt stainless liner from my Instant Pot, filled it with hot tap water, clipped the Joule on the side and plugged it in. I had already loaded the app on my phone, so I followed the tutorial and got Joule renamed and running on my WiFi. It had me do a control test and heat some water from the phone, worked great and quite fast. I then selected the app’s Guide (their term for recipe) for chicken breast and followed the steps. I selected the “juicy” temp setting of 149°F, looking at the visual doneness videos to choose. I described the breast to the app as frozen and about 1.5 inches, and from that info the app chose the cooking time, and Joule began to heat the water. A few minutes later, my phone notified me the Joule pot was up to temp, and I could put the food in to cook. Since this was an experiment, I took one rock hard frozen breast, dropped it into a 1 gal Ziploc freezer bag, and dumped in some Kosher salt, fresh ground pepper and olive oil. I then slid it into the pot, evacuating the air from the bag by submersion, and zipped it shut. I took the other breast, and left it to thaw, so I could try other things like pounding it to equal thickness, and trimming to shape before cooking. I then left the kitchen and Joule to hopefully do something impressive.My phone alerted me that Joule was done, and also that I could leave it for up to 2 more hours without over cooking. I got back to the kitchen and set my trusty cast iron skillet on to preheat for searing. I waited for my smoking hot pan, threw some olive oil in there, and opened the Ziploc, fresh out of the Joule. I patted the breast dry, seasoned, dusted with flour, and pressed it into the hot pan. I gave it about 2 minutes, and I had a great crisp brown crust. I transferred it to the cutting board and made a half-dozen bias slices. I noted almost no juice loss from cutting, but when I picked up a slice in my fingers, it was soft and a slight squeeze produced glistening juice. I popped it in my mouth and was treated to an exceptional mouthfeel of soft juicy chicken and crisp skin. Literally amazing…I enlisted 3 more family members to taste and they were all completely impressed at how perfectly this was prepared. My son put it best, he said, “I would be impressed if I tasted this at a fine dining restaurant, to taste it in our kitchen with you experimenting with a new toy you have no experience with…just crazy good.”Since then I have cooked probably 20 sous vide meals, my favorite was a dinner party for 4 using Chefsteps Filet Mignon guide with broccoli puree and radicchio salad stack. Plated with puree, then salad, and topped with the meat, cutting down through it all for one great bite is astounding! Puree is silky smooth, flavored with English cheddar, the shredded salad is balsamic, oil and dijon with fresh chives and blue cheese microplaned frozen into perfect flakes of flavor. The sous vide method IMO is the optimum method to do justice to a fine filet, finished with a roaring hot cast iron pan sear in butter and fresh herbs. My guests raved and I just can’t see the point of going to a spendy steakhouse when I can guarantee these repeatable results with sous vide.Probably the most impressive thing I have done so far is cook a 3lb, 2in. thick chuck steak for 48 hours sous vide. I finished it with a sear like the filet, and this cheap chunk of $5@lb meat had a mouthfeel like $45@lb tenderloin, plus a superior beefy taste tenderloin would never have. Understand, the chuck looked red and juicy, not grey like pot roast or beef stew. I may buy a second Joule just for long cooks like this…In conclusion, after 40 years of gourmet cooking, and an extensive knowledge of food chemistry and techniques, literally thousands spent on training, all manner of gadgets to major high-end appliances, I have found something that I am really excited about. I can legitimately say that cooking a protein by any other method will probably not be as good, and absolutely not as reliably consistent. I love the fact that instead of fretting over expensive meats using high heat methods, then having to let them rest, etc.; you can let Joule go past the done time by a couple of hours with no ill effects. It is just holding the meat at a consistent finished temp of say 129°F, waiting for you to finish by a quick sear and serve. Sous vide steak does not need to rest because it is already at temperature equilibrium, and its juices have not migrated…they have remained in place and keeping every morsel equally and perfectly juicy. You have to try this, the results speak for themselves.OK, I will go so far as to say if you are not cooking sous vide, you are not getting all the goodness you paid for in your food…and constantly putting your food at risk of cooking errors by traditional high heat methods. Plus, it is difficult if not impossible to duplicate the exquisite mouthfeel of sous vide. Remember this technique was invented in France in the 70s, initially to cook foie gras with less waste. It resulted in a 20% savings and a much higher profit for the restaurant, given the Rolls Royce pricing of foie gras. French cooking has always been about an obsession with perfection…sous vide cooking is exactly that.One other thing, I have read a number of comments with people concerned about cooking in plastic. My reaction is the sous vide results are so good, I would consider the risk for myself and my family mitigated. There is currently no documented hard corollary between cooking in BPA-free food safe plastic bags and direct health risks…UNLIKE the direct connection that charring food, especially meat, is carcinogenic. Now beyond government regulation, food purity and safety is always a personal choice…For me, I’ll chance my black grill marks and crisp corners…and I demand the thrill of eating sous vide.
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