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re: Steaming Crawfish. Ever seen this video?

Posted on 4/20/16 at 9:29 am to
Posted by Poodlebrain
Way Right of Rex
Member since Jan 2004
19860 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 9:29 am to
quote:

I'm sure steaming them is fine and all but why do people have to make simple shite so complicated? The point of the backyard boil is to throw everything in one pot, boil and dump on a table. Now, the recipe this guy uses is absurd. 4 bottles of concentrate, 3 bottles of cayenne, a jar of pickled jalapeños, 12 cups of some boil mix with more cayenne in it and just to make sure your taste buds get burned out of your mouth, he heads some supposedly super hot hot sauce. So silly.
Think of the physics involved. Cooking time is important to avoid overcooking the crawfish. You have limited time for the crawfish to absorb seasoning which is accomplished by diffusion. Steam has lower concentrations of seasonings than a liquid solution, so diffusion occurs at a slower rate than boiling. In order to get sufficient diffusion with steam in limited time you need higher concentrations of seasoning in your water boiled to create the steam than you would need if you cooked the crawfish in the boiling solution.
Posted by unclebuck504
N.O./B.R./ATL
Member since Feb 2010
1716 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 9:40 am to
You didn't watch the video, Poodlebrain.

He steamed them with UNSEASONED water ...

... then soaked them in a different pot that had an insane amount of seasoning that included granulated boil, liquid boil, cayenne pepper, onion puree, celery puree, two bottles of bay leaf, a jar of pickled jalapeños, and some hot sauce ... in 7 inches of water.

So even though he "steamed" them ... the seasoning method was still to soak them. His entire reasoning for steaming them was to clean them. He said he doesn't like the "gunk" that's normally in the heads either.

You really could've watched the video before giving an irrelevant physics lesson on a method that wasn't used.
This post was edited on 4/20/16 at 9:42 am
Posted by cgrand
HAMMOND
Member since Oct 2009
39218 posts
Posted on 4/20/16 at 5:05 pm to
quote:

Steam has lower concentrations of seasonings than a liquid solution


steam is water vapor
it contains zero concentration of seasoning
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