Sous Vide Burgers FTW

I’ve been cooking sous vide for years now: egg cups for breakfast, made for the week each Sunday, a great salmon recipe everyone loves, and plenty of other applications. Hell, even oatmeal. I’ve done burgers a bunch of times, but burgers are a quick and easy dish that I often don’t bother to sous vide because it adds a good bit of time and work to the process.

This past weekend we found ourselves rained out on Sunday, when we planned to have burgers, so I made the patties and chucked them in the freezer. I followed Kenji’s method (exhaustively documented, of course) by cooking them in the tank at 126 for a little over an hour, removed them to a cutting board to cool off, and then grilled them off on the grill, ripping hot.

I will say that making them this way yields a perfectly cooked medium rare burger: nice exterior char, lots of tender pink meat, and… well, that’s that.

Sous Vide Burgers

Finbar

I was using the newish Mac browser Arc to proofread something Rhonda wrote for school, and was confounded about where the URL bar was. Arc, like many newfangled apps, uses a hotkey-activated command palette to open a new URL (among other things). This is potentially confusing UI design for many users, but I happen to like this mode of interaction (starting, I supposed, with my love for LaunchBar).

ARC Browser’s Command Bar

Launchbar

In my quest for ever-more-Camino-like Mac browsers (think light and simple), I was looking for a browser to try out that had minimal UI chrome exposed by default. I forgot about Arc but then remembered that I had installed it and tried it for a bit.

I liked the command bar!

So I thought, maybe someone made a Safari extension. My first search led me to FinBar, a very cool riff on the idea.

FinBar reminds me of Paletro, which I wrote about here, in that it uses a hotkey-enacted palette to expose the menu bar options available to you in the active application. You can accomplish different things in different applications, but the key is, you are always using your keyboard.

;

FinBar in Ulysses

Sunday Serial: UGG Boots, CARROT Weather, and Frozen Blueberries

This week’s things to consider:

  1. UGG: I’ve never cared for UGG much but recently found myself desiring a pair. I pulled the trigger on Amazon ($180 gulp) for a pair of chestnut UGG Men’s Classic Short Boot. They remind of Birkenstock sandals and Doc Martens: lovably ugly and lusciously comfortable.
  2. CARROT Weather: This iOS/iPadOS/macOS weather app got another mention on Upgrade #493: Upgradies Hall of Fame and I thought maybe I should give it a look. I was a long-time subscriber of Dark Sky before Apple bought it, and I’ve really liked Apple’s integration of Dark Sky into their own weather app. But CARROT boasts a few neat tricks: snarky reporting, multiple data sources, and a highly configurable interface. I let the sub continue after the trial. Rhonda likes to pay attention to the phases of the moon, and CARROT Weather has a great feature for tracking this, too.<sup>1</sup>
  3. Frozen blueberries: Buy a pack of blueberries at the market, chuck the whole thing in the freezer, and you can have a guilt-free handful of tiny popsicles whenever you’re craving a sweet.

UGG boots on my feet

CARROT Weather

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<sup>1</sup> Teachers are terribly fond of attributing aberrant behavior to a full moon.

10k Rowing Update

I haven’t had much to crow about my recent 10ks: after my second go-round with COVID1, I was never able to match 11/26/2023’s PR of 41:10.8. Today’s was 41:29.6.

My top 10ks

My Most Recent 10Ks, descending

10k PR

My 10k PR

Today's 10k

Today’s 10k

As I observed in my post from 12/4, I was not as fast as my PR, but I was close, with a stroke rate below 30. Lowering my stroke rate has been a goal of mine.


1 Once again, mercifully mild, with no long-lasting symptoms

Clarks

Picked up these orange suede Clarks last weekend cause they had a sale. Nice counterpoint to my blue ones.

My First Mac: The Color Classic

Inspired by Episode 496 of Upgrade, “40th Anniversary of the Mac Draft,” I got to thinking about my first Mac: the Color Classic. I came home from my senior class trip to Busch Gardens in the spring of 1993 to find that my Dad had purchased one for me to take to college, despite my saying that I didn’t really use computers and that it wouldn’t be useful. He knew better for sure.

I fell in love with the Mac in short order and found myself something of techie compared to my peers in college. It was still rare then for people to have their own computer; most students went to one of the labs on campus and suffered the degradation of using DOS and WordPerfect, writing to floppies. I found myself enjoying just using the Mac in my dorm, changing the wallpaper, playing Maelstrom, and installing Shareware my dad would send me on floppy disks. I had an app that played Oscar the Grouch sounds when you emptied the trash, and a another the played a vomit sound when you ejected a floppy disk. I wrote all of my papers in the comfort of my room in WordPerfect at whatever hour I needed, and printed to my StyleWriter II. People would come into my room to write their papers.

We updated the processor with some kind of DayStar accelerator board which must have cost a fortune. I replaced it prematurely with a 630 CD and an external SCSI hard drive in my sophomore year, mostly so I could play Marathon and Doom. It was faster and had a larger display, but never the charm of the Color Classic.

My Favorite/Best Mac Model Ever

Inspired by Episode 496 of Upgrade, “40th Anniversary of the Mac Draft,” I got to thinking about my favorite Mac. I’ve had a solid run of Macs:

That’s a lot of Macs!

If I had to pick a favorite, it would probably be the MacBook Air. It was my first Mac with an SSD, and I absolutely loved it. I only stopped using it because my son needed something to play Minecraft on; I was not in the market for a replacement. The 13” Pro I replaced it with was superior, technically, but I didn’t really need the extra power and the Air was just the right size for everything I needed it for.

The PowerMac G4 was my first pro desktop and holds a special place in my heart; I was in grad school and while I did have the PowerBook Lombard at the time, I didn’t use it unless I was out and about because the G4 was a screamer. I installed Mac OS X, as it was called back then, on both, and only the G4 ran it usably. I gamed a lot on this machine, especially Oni. I have never actively disliked any of my Macs.

The 16” MacBook Pro is the last of my Intel Macs that still sees some usage, but I don’t care for Intel Macs compared to either of my Apple Silicon Macs for reasons of power efficiency; the 16”’s fans fire up a lot and the battery gets nuked fast. And it’s really big.

The MacBook Adorable was (still is, it runs just fine) amazingly portable and I used to carry it around pinched between my index finger and thumb. I would probably go for a 12” M2 or M3 Mac of that size if I work were springing for a new Mac and I needed to replace this 13” M1, which is a great machine but heavy for my needs. I currently covet a 13” M2 Air in Space Black the most, but I’m not due for one any time soon. I suspect an Air will be my next Mac. But who knows.

The Studio, named “Anthem” (I name my Macs after Rush songs) is a fantastic machine, overkill for my use case, but it’s an amazing machine.

But that first Air? Ahh. Fond memories.

Next post: the Color Class, my first Mac.

Sunday Serial: Find My, Brie, and FoodNoms

Here’s this week’s list of things to try out:

  1. Find My: This week, my youngest son (Aaron) went over a friend’s house and they went sledding in the woods. He called in a panic from the site and said he couldn’t find his phone. I used Find My on my phone to send him a pic of where iCloud was seeing the device, but they still struggled to find it. I suggested that he log into iCloud using a friend’s phone (on Safari or Chrome) and try to ping the phone from the woods. Having suggested it, and having his password in 1Password from way back when he got his first iPhone, I decided to try it myself. That did the trick; he was able to recover the phone, buried in a good bit of snow. His friend’s mom, hearing of the solution, declared that she wanted the same setup for herself. I’d suggest everyone who isn’t inclined to buy a new phone the moment theirs is lost to make sure you know how to fire up this valuable service and test it out with the family unit.

  2. DiBruno Bros Brie Cheese: Rhonda has been buying brie of various qualities at the local Shop Rite (and other cheese mongers) for years. I like any kind of brie, I suppose, but having tried a brie from DiBruno Bros at the excellent Bellview Winery, I realized how much the grocery store stuff pales in comparison. What’s funny is my inability to describe the different (I am not usually at a loss for words). The only way I’ve been able to satisfactorily describe it to myself is to call it “stank” and “funk.” DiBruno doesn’t appear to make their own cheese; they sell the crafts of other fromagers. I suspect this is the Normandy Brie.

  3. FoodNoms: I’ve written a fair bit about my weight loss here on Uncorrected. I do, however, remain bewitched by the patterns I (try to) discern. Writ large, I jump on the scale each morning with a notion of what I’m going to see, and while I’m sometimes spot on, I’m often surprised to see things swing a pound or so in either direction. I will eat a handful of M&Ms the day before and some peanuts and find a slight gain; I will split a bottle of wine and some cheese and salami for lunch with Rhonda and find a slight loss. I don’t obsess over my weight (well maybe a little) but I do find the matter vexing.1. So in the same way that I have used Concept2’s ErgData app to track my rowing data in a way that allows me to understand my progress, stagnation, or decline, I thought I’d try a food tracker app. I wanted to answer some questions: how many calories do I actually eat in a day? What habits could lead to gain or loss? If I want to drop a couple of pounds, what can I do? I am hoping FoodNoms will help me with that.

DiBruno Bros Brie

Brie

FoodNoms

FoodNoms (yes, I had a Bellini again


1This is an enjoyable part of my pathology: Having serially lost weight month over month, to the point that I’m at the BMI I should be for my height, with zero instances of mysterious weight gain to frustrate me, I silently fret that one Sunday I’ll wake up and POOF gain ten pounds.

Sous Vide Filet Mignon

I wrote about the filet mignon at Drift in Reboboth Beach back in the fall, and the perfect doneness found me swearing to cook mine a bit lower the next go round. We grabbed a three-pack of filet at an ACME yesterday, and true to my word, I left it in the Anova at 124 instead of 128 for an hour before finishing it on the jet engine method I use to grill off a sous vide cut. (I cribbed this move from Alton Brown, albeit a variation of his innovation.)

Sous Vide Filet Mignon
Filet Mignon

This was one of the best dishes I’ve done, a perfect medium rare, very little “gray line,” as Aaron calls it. I used to fret about overdoing filet, but sous vide neatly solves that problem.

Serial Sunday: Cipriani Bellini, Phô, and NotePlan

Here’s this week’s list of things to check out:

  1. Ciprianni Bellini: this is a premade Bellini, the storied cocktail from Harry’s Bar in Venice. This is sweet for my tastes, but I’ve never had a proper Bellini.1
  2. Phô: The three of us were dining last night and remarked how long it had been since we’d had phô. Aaron and I were into the traditional Vietnamese soup for a while. We found ourselves today at Phô Cali in nearby English Creek. I got the P1 with several proteins: brisket, steak, tendon, tripe, and meatballs. So good.
  3. NotePlan: I test-drove this notes+todo app last week for the duration of the free trial. It’s a Mac-only app that helps you orgnanize your to-do list using both project notes and daily journal pages, all connected intimately with your calendar. NotePlan offers support for tags and other metadata (including due dates), and relies on Markdown. Also works on the iPhone and iPad. I could easily replace my notes and to do managers with NotePlan. I’m an inveterate switch of apps and systems, which is a bad habit I’m keen to break. Sometimes.

Cipriani Bellini
Cipriani Bellini

Phô
Phô

NotePlan
NotePlan


1I traveled to Venice once but never went to Harry’s.