Italian Osso Buco, Sous Vide


sousvideossobuco.webp
https://stefangourmet.com/2012/06/30/classic-ossobuco-alla-milanese-sous-vide/

TARGET


INGREDIENTS

For the gremolata:

DIRECTIONS

  1. Make cuts in the membrane about every 2 cm (1 inch) around the shanks because the membrane will shrink when you brown the shanks, and otherwise they will be deformed.

  2. Pat the shanks dry with paper towels. Season with salt and freshly ground black pepper and dust with flour. Heat olive oil in a frying pan and brown the shanks, a few minutes on each side.

  3. Discard most of the oil from the pan and add butter. Add onion when the butter foams and sauté until translucent.

  4. Add pancetta and keep sautéing until barely golden.

  5. Deglaze the pan with white wine. As soon as half the wine has evaporated, add veal stock and tomato puree, and stir to mix.

  6. Put the meat with this mixture in a sous-vide zip pouch, releasing most of the air from the pouch by submerging it in water. If you don’t have zip pouches, you could also freeze the mixture if you are using a FoodSaver-style vacuum sealer (make sure it’s thoroughly frozen, this takes more than a few hours) or use a chamber vacuum sealer.

  7. Cook sous-vide for 72 hours at 62C/140F. (For a traditional braise, add the shanks to the sauce and put in an oven at 70C/160F until tender instead.)

  8. When you are ready to serve, mince the ingredients for the gremolata and mix in a bowl. I usually omit the garlic, which is a traditional ingredient of gremolata, because I don’t like raw garlic.

  9. If the sauce isn’t thick enough, cook it in a saucepan until it is to your liking. Taste and adjust seasoning with salt and freshly ground black pepper.

  10. Serve the shanks on warm plates with the sauce, sprinkled with gremolata.