All I knew about steaks was a LIE! Water AGE is here.

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  • Опубліковано 16 вер 2023
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    Not many things impress me anymore with steaks and beef. I love dry ageing so much that I do it quite often. But when I heard about water ageing I was very skeptical but gave it a try anyway. I am so glad I did as I was not expecting of what happened to happen.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,5 тис.

  • @Ilethsamael
    @Ilethsamael 9 місяців тому +4830

    The only important thing to do post water aging is the BLOOMING PROCESS where you let the meat breath in air for about 30 minutes or it kind of keeps an off irony taste.

    • @Teku99
      @Teku99 9 місяців тому +290

      Ohh learnt something, hope guga sees this, he wants to know more about this anyways

    • @goupy07
      @goupy07 9 місяців тому +418

      Oh the irony

    • @JamesThatcher
      @JamesThatcher 9 місяців тому +58

      important safety tip... thanks Egon
      in all honesty though, thanks I would not have thought of that... I'm not sure I could do this though, because I don't have a separate fridge to devote to aging...

    • @DMSProduktions
      @DMSProduktions 9 місяців тому +31

      Breathe.

    • @Ilethsamael
      @Ilethsamael 9 місяців тому +67

      @@JamesThatcher less Egon and more a steakhouse assistant manager XD there is always something to learn in steak cooking. That is why I follow Guga 😄

  • @electrikoptik
    @electrikoptik 9 місяців тому +2402

    I heard that Guga has been building a new swimming pool. I think we all know what he'll use it for.
    Water aged Angel here we come!!

    • @GugaFoods
      @GugaFoods  9 місяців тому +750

      😂 no comment 😂😂😂

    • @nathantran-trinh3086
      @nathantran-trinh3086 9 місяців тому +43

      @@GugaFoods When are you gonna collab with Ordinary Sausage?

    • @gboy6120
      @gboy6120 9 місяців тому +17

      loads of meat will be swimming in the pool soon

    • @Michael_Brock
      @Michael_Brock 9 місяців тому +15

      This by 💯. Expecting angel to disappear from videos for 2 months soon. Angel has been fattened long enough. BTW this coming long pig does NOT forgive for the nearly ruined rusty pan in backyard!

    • @sihk589
      @sihk589 9 місяців тому +4

      @GugaFoods when should we expect this pool party video?

  • @dyderich
    @dyderich 8 місяців тому +670

    It sounds like water aging does similar things to the meat like dry aging without all the waste. Definitely need a dry age vs water age video!

    • @TB-ni4ur
      @TB-ni4ur 8 місяців тому +32

      Sounds like the difference between aerobic vs anaerobic respiration at the surface of the meat. One makes funk, one makes sour. I wonder if the water is simply acting as an extra barrier against oxygen transfer that likely occurs through thin plastic. A better experiment would have been to leave the "wet age" meat in the thick gauge vacuum packaging material that it comes in from the processing plant that does a better job of inhibiting oxygen transfer. I've "wet aged" meat still in the sub-primal vacuum packaging for 50-60 days many, many times and it also comes out with a slight sour smell similar to what is being described here.

    • @matthewroberts6119
      @matthewroberts6119 8 місяців тому +5

      ​@TB-ni4ur same exact experience working at a butcher shop when we open a subprimal that's been in the walkin for a month or 2 usually after getting in too much product. Never tried eating it when it got that sour smell though, assumed it would taste funky in a bad way

    • @TB-ni4ur
      @TB-ni4ur 8 місяців тому +8

      @@matthewroberts6119 There's sour, then there's rancid that will give you the eye squint reflex when you smell it. Rancid is a no go, but the "slight" sour smell is par for the course, you just have to rinse and message the surface with cold water after opening up. Any residual sour smell cooks out under high heat. I've opened tens of thousands of subprimals in a previous life, and the only time I experienced rancid is when product was out of temp for an extended period of time, or if it had lost its seal in the case.

    • @matthewroberts6119
      @matthewroberts6119 8 місяців тому +2

      @TB-ni4ur yeah it was never rancid except for a grass-fed tenderloin that was apparently under a pallet in the walkin for over a year, cut that open and the whole place reaked lol

    • @VenkmanPhD
      @VenkmanPhD 6 місяців тому +2

      Honestly I don't like the funky taste that comes with dry age so I'll pass on wet aging

  • @enflans
    @enflans 9 місяців тому +336

    I'm from Korea, and I always thought Guga doing a Korean wet/water aging experiment would only happen in a parallel universe. My worlds have collided. Thank you Guga!
    Btw, its also very common to water age pork cuts as well like samgyeopsal (pork belly) which makes them very juicy and flavorful.

    • @convincedquaker
      @convincedquaker 8 місяців тому +10

      Same time for beef and pork?

    • @gimlee44222
      @gimlee44222 8 місяців тому +1

      Why would you think that

    • @eetfuk3571
      @eetfuk3571 8 місяців тому +1

      @@gimlee44222 because he certainly already done that thing?

    • @MITCHCZ1
      @MITCHCZ1 7 місяців тому

      Where Can I buy the machine for this ?

    • @IgorLjevak
      @IgorLjevak 7 місяців тому

      its a fish tank and pump system for fishes
      @@MITCHCZ1

  • @pa-mo
    @pa-mo 9 місяців тому +891

    If you don't have to cut off the outside pelicos with water aging, and if it tastes as good, then that seems like a way more efficient/economical way to age things. Definitely need more info on this Guga!

    • @itsblunt8163
      @itsblunt8163 9 місяців тому +135

      If you’ve got the money to empty a spare fridge out and leave a pump on for nearly 2 months you’ve got enough money to cut the outside pelicos off

    • @pa-mo
      @pa-mo 9 місяців тому +70

      @@itsblunt8163 true, but hopefully that was overkill and Guga will find a practical way. I mean it's vaccum sealed and in water, how much bacteria could really get in there from a regular filled fridge?! Even opening the door here and there will not change the temperature of the water much at all.

    • @JaYgRiFfSTuBe
      @JaYgRiFfSTuBe 9 місяців тому +25

      @@pa-mothat is true I water cool pc and water needs alot to change its over all temp simply opening the door grabbing something and closing it back will not be enough to change the over all water temperature inside a fridge

    • @dendrien
      @dendrien 9 місяців тому +1

      videos like this is what i say very practical long termly. consider theres so many options out there that we rarely ever hear of or even come across

    • @survivalpodcasting
      @survivalpodcasting 9 місяців тому +16

      @@pa-mo Indeed it was overkill. Any fridge can do this.

  • @Auguur
    @Auguur 9 місяців тому +104

    That violin as Angel tried to grasp a wonton from the plate as it left his reach and then he pretended to scratch an itch was so perfect, so hilarious!

    • @worldaswar3784
      @worldaswar3784 9 місяців тому +3

      Caught me off guard😂😂😂

    • @LYLEWOLD
      @LYLEWOLD 9 місяців тому +4

      Sad Angel was killing me. LOL

  • @RossPotts
    @RossPotts 8 місяців тому +343

    @GugaFoods, Take a sample of the juices before and after water aging, and send each one to a lab to see what compounds are present in each step. You may find out more that way what the exact changes are.

    • @MeGustaWHAT
      @MeGustaWHAT 8 місяців тому +24

      I'd be curious about that, fermenting is a cool process

    • @VeganSemihCyprus33
      @VeganSemihCyprus33 8 місяців тому

      Dominion 2018

  • @nightsky8079
    @nightsky8079 9 місяців тому +169

    One other thing to note about water aging is the buoyant force. It lets the meat not be squashed by its own weight and so the juice in the meat is more evenly distributed

    • @X3R0D3D
      @X3R0D3D 8 місяців тому +9

      but also being under pressure from the water at all times, like a very low constant tenderizing action.

    • @TB-ni4ur
      @TB-ni4ur 8 місяців тому +7

      If anything the increased pressure acts as a force to keep the juices in the mean and not allow them to seep out. That tough to quantify though, the pressure of vacuum packaging is far more than the pressure of 6 inches of water.

    • @TheBrandonMeek
      @TheBrandonMeek 7 місяців тому +3

      Also, by putting it in the dark, the lack of moonlight will enable the proteins to bond more tightly to the oxidized surface.

    • @JohnSmith-zs1bf
      @JohnSmith-zs1bf 5 місяців тому

      ​@@TB-ni4ur vac pak have less than normal atmospheric pressure. It's literally a vacuum. Definitely less pressure than 6 inches of unsealed water

    • @euhahahah
      @euhahahah 5 місяців тому +1

      ​@@TheBrandonMeekLol

  • @Moley1Moleo
    @Moley1Moleo 9 місяців тому +598

    Comparing water age to dry age would be interesting.
    Also interesting would be comparing the cost of each. You lose a lot of the outside of the steak when trimming dry-age, but I wonder how much extra electrifity you had to spend to keep that other one in constantly circulating cold water for so long!

    • @Ismsanmar
      @Ismsanmar 9 місяців тому +28

      Those aquarium bubbler pumps usually consumes between 2 to 5 watts, so technically I would say that it cost exactly the same both techniques in terms of electricity bill.

    • @fatdoi003
      @fatdoi003 9 місяців тому +14

      funkiness vs sourness.... easily distinguishable but definitely like to see which one wins out

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 9 місяців тому +4

      @Ismsanmar Don’t forget the cost of running the fridge too! That would be most of the electricity cost.

    • @Ismsanmar
      @Ismsanmar 9 місяців тому +14

      ​@@Sniperboy5551 So that cost is free on the dry-aging? Do you dry-age on free air?🤔

    • @MrAlwaysRight
      @MrAlwaysRight 9 місяців тому +1

      Yeah he probably used alot of elecrifity.

  • @zenzeph926
    @zenzeph926 9 місяців тому +372

    I think it would be really interesting to compare dry aged and water aged to really see the differences
    Maybe even wet, dry, and water aged all together

  • @davidbwa
    @davidbwa 8 місяців тому +108

    Enjoyed the video. A couple of thoughts - 1. If you have people taste testing three "same' things, don't insert a totally different taste (the seasoned appetizer) between two of them. That was a trick I think it was Coke did when doing coke / pepsi comparisons. They could give the person a saltine in between and the dry salty cracker made the second product (their coke) taste better. 2. How does this technique work on cheap cuts of meat? For example a Sous Vide can make pretty tender meat but where I've really been blown away by it was how it can make a cheap roast taste more like an expensive one.

    • @TheGeenat
      @TheGeenat 8 місяців тому +8

      Very true. This whole video and many other he does come across as unauthentic to me.

    • @RockIslandYT
      @RockIslandYT 5 місяців тому

      you're both thinking too hard about it

    • @pkohler20
      @pkohler20 5 місяців тому +1

      I think there is something to be said for, say, cleansing the palate with a drink or water or something at least. But I trust these guys to tell the truth.

    • @DJSolistica
      @DJSolistica 5 місяців тому +2

      Completely agree, the whole experiment was shot the moment they ate something entirely different between steaks.
      I'm not convinced at all, the 'water' aged steak looked less attractive and by their reactions did not seem to taste significantly better, and if anything they probably were still tasting deep fried pork anyways.

    • @Kr0N05
      @Kr0N05 4 місяці тому

      Good point. I know if you have a glass of real dry red wine before eating a steak then , within seconds, you will wonder where that steak went. 😊

  • @OzzyKal
    @OzzyKal 8 місяців тому +14

    That "WHY" coming out of guga had me rolling XD Bro I was nervous when I heard the "sour" part thinking it'd be spoiled but I completely forgot about the fermenting process. This is wild!

  • @shadowrealmxz
    @shadowrealmxz 9 місяців тому +202

    Tried a water aging pork in a Korean BBQ in Singapore a couple of months back and was mindblown by it!! Was surprised Guga only found it about it during his recent trip. Was really looking forward to this video and share the awesomeness with the rest of the viewers! Cheers everybody!!

    • @katana292
      @katana292 9 місяців тому +15

      May I know where you tried that in SG? Curious to try it myself!

    • @shadowrealmxz
      @shadowrealmxz 9 місяців тому

      @@katana292 It's at Um Yong Baek near Telok Ayer MRT. Enjoy!!

    • @VeganSemihCyprus33
      @VeganSemihCyprus33 8 місяців тому

      Dominion 2018

    • @satanstan11
      @satanstan11 8 місяців тому +1

      ive been to a ton of korean BBQs and can't say I've ever seen water aged before haha i wanna try T-T

    • @PamPawz
      @PamPawz 8 місяців тому

      Pray tell where is this place?

  • @alexis.d.santos
    @alexis.d.santos 9 місяців тому +298

    It's so incredible how much we're always learning from you Guga. Thanks alot ✌

  • @StevieB8363
    @StevieB8363 7 місяців тому +8

    For what it's worth: I have been experimenting with dry-aging for a few years after seeing it on this channel. After numerous experiments, my best results have come from rinsing and drying the cut, patting it dry and using a hot-air gun to remove all external moisture, then wrapping it in a thin cloth and painting it with melted lard to form an artificial fat cap. The cap is almost water-tight (the meat will still dry out a little with time), while being air-permeable, allowing for the aging process with minimal moisture loss (provided you have a humidified fridge.)
    This has given me the best results, with the meat remaining juicy and tender, the only wastage being trimming the edge of the cut to remove the outer sheath. Those trimmings are put through the mincer and turned into flavour-enhanced burgers. But the water-aged method seems to be superior, involving less fuss. One question: What are the steaks bagged in? I presume it's the dry-aged membranes that Guga has previously used, but he doesn't specify.

  • @theborg5981
    @theborg5981 8 місяців тому +12

    I know you generally stick to beef, but if you get a chance, I would suggest trying some certified Karoo lamb from South Africa. It is absolutely amazing. There are a set of strict requirements that need to be followed in order for lamb to be certified as karoo lamb in South Africa, but the flavour is worth it. My suggested method of cooking it is to get hold of some lamb chops, coat them with some olive oil, grind some salt on both sides of them(no pepper, as it may overwhelm the flavour) and cover with FRESH rosemary leaves, then put them in a hot steel pan (no need for cast iron for this one) and cook until you get a bit of browning on either side. Serve with some nice garlic mashed potatoes.

  • @jbomb1234
    @jbomb1234 9 місяців тому +321

    Water aging seems to be better than dry aging. Now you need to do a water age vs dry age video and see which one comes out on top. Water age has no lose of meat so this is already one big plus over dry age.

    • @user-ed9qu5im2y
      @user-ed9qu5im2y 9 місяців тому +99

      ​@@tvsA.He compared water aged steak with WET aged steak in the video.
      Nice of you to be rude only to immediately self-own 😂

    • @jbomb1234
      @jbomb1234 9 місяців тому +40

      @@tvsA. He made 3 steaks. A control, a wet age and a water age. No dry age here, lol. Guga even took the time to explaine that all steaks in the supermarket are wet aged for 28 days. Wet age and dry are are not the same thing.
      I think you need to rewatch the video. Never seen someone post something so confidentially and be wrong at the same time, lol.

    • @Rawi888
      @Rawi888 9 місяців тому +11

      Water age the dry age ? Dry age the water aged ?

    • @corroded
      @corroded 9 місяців тому +10

      @@tvsA. confidently incorrect.

    • @tjsit832
      @tjsit832 9 місяців тому +5

      @@tvsA. lol, feel like the smart guy now?

  • @derikfreefly1950
    @derikfreefly1950 9 місяців тому +84

    In Italy we do this in some city in the North, there is also a old famous butchery whit resturant that made ACQUA AGED (waterager) their speciality

    • @TexanInItaly
      @TexanInItaly 9 місяців тому +5

      Where?

    • @Purriah
      @Purriah 9 місяців тому +5

      @@TexanInItaly”some city” in the “North” of Italy.

    • @wisdon
      @wisdon 9 місяців тому +7

      ​@@TexanInItalysearch meateatery online, as UA-cam deletes my comment, however is in Bolzano province Valdaora Town, and they have an online shop too

    • @LaurentIpsum
      @LaurentIpsum 9 місяців тому +5

      ​@@TexanInItalygoing by your username I'm guessing this is very, very relevant to your interests

    • @TexanInItaly
      @TexanInItaly 9 місяців тому

      @@wisdon Thank you!

  • @stupidbroad
    @stupidbroad 8 місяців тому +12

    guga, i just have to say- i thought i was pretty good at cooking steak. i've gotten super into your channel in the last few months, and about a week ago I tried cooking a boneless ribeye using your dry brine and usual cooking techniques. no joke- it was literally the best steak i've ever cooked and one of the best i've ever eaten. my family also said it was by far the best steak they've ever had, and my dad has travelled the world and has had many expensive, high-end business dinners. thanks for broadening my culinary capabilities, guga. your videos rock!

  • @toddanderson9574
    @toddanderson9574 8 місяців тому +4

    Holy hell Guga, you’ve taken me to many places on this culinary journey. Now I have to figure out “wet aging”…I will brother! Love the show, love the content, thank you!

  • @amodosandstone9341
    @amodosandstone9341 9 місяців тому +63

    @Guga I have always wondered what it would taste like to age Brisket. The issue is that in doing so, you would loose so much as pelicose. Could you try age a Brisket using this water aging and let us know how it turns out?

    • @anthonybuckingham6312
      @anthonybuckingham6312 8 місяців тому +4

      He's done dry aged briskets, they were awesome but like you said, you lose alot to pelicose, I imagine "I water aged everything" is probably en route

    • @jakecarpenter11
      @jakecarpenter11 8 місяців тому +2

      I do it all the time it’s called wet ageing. I just leave it in it’s vacuum seal unless it’s loose then I might reseal it then just leave it in the fridge for up to 8 weeks. It has an almost blue cheese like flavour note too it and is much more tender. You also don’t have to trim anything off like you do with dry ageing.

  • @mynameisandycook1
    @mynameisandycook1 9 місяців тому +23

    I just love these guys so much! I bought my SnS because of your channel. I have switched almost ALL of my grilling to charcoal (over gas grill) because of your channel. Now I'm going to jump into trying my own aged steaks... again because of your channel.
    I just love when the alert goes off that Guga has a new video. :D

  • @robouchard86
    @robouchard86 9 місяців тому +34

    Guga, you need to keep us posted about any finding and technique to be used with this ageing method. I think you found an old world secret. Keep up the good work

  • @jonburge7370
    @jonburge7370 5 місяців тому

    My favorite channel! Keep ‘em coming.

  • @thomasmroczka1412
    @thomasmroczka1412 9 місяців тому +35

    I tried this when I was stationed in Korea. It is pretty good, very beefy but I can’t get past the subtle taste of sour. After so many pieces I’m done. Flavor starts to linger and build like a hot sauce

    • @McP1mpin
      @McP1mpin 8 місяців тому +4

      I still don't understand why it ferments in the first place. The bag is vapor proof is it not? What's the difference between 35f water and 35f air if it's just keeping the temperature of the steak at 35f?

    • @dustf1nger118
      @dustf1nger118 8 місяців тому +6

      ⁠@@McP1mpinbecause bacteria is already present in meat. That’s why it ferments

    • @desertrat7634
      @desertrat7634 8 місяців тому +2

      ​@@dustf1nger118That doesn't explain why the bacteria isn't as noticeable when wet aged.

    • @Unsensitive
      @Unsensitive 8 місяців тому +8

      ​@@desertrat7634
      ​ different bacteria like different environments.
      Sauerkraut is made by using salt and lack of oxygen to make an environment favoring lactic acid generating bacteria.
      Vinegar and kombucha are formed by yeast and bacteria colonies with oxygen present, which could also be used to ferment flavorful sauces.
      So each method does something which favors or inhibits specific bacteria or other micro organisms.
      It could be as simple as maintaining a specific water content through the steak via buoyancy vs gravity changing the environment, or some other variable I'm not considering.

    • @desertrat7634
      @desertrat7634 8 місяців тому +8

      @@Unsensitive I get that part, but what confuses me is the idea that the environment inside this bag seem to change even though both the water and wet method are still at the same temp. It's vacuum sealed the same way. So what did the water do that the air didn't when both remained outside the sealed bag.

  • @EarlLeeByrd
    @EarlLeeByrd 9 місяців тому +26

    Fun fact, "water aging" is how Native American's used to store meat. Keeping the meat submerged in cold/cool water (like literally just keeping a cleaned carcass underwater in a cold lake or river) prevents the bacteria that causes meat to spoil, allowing them to keep meat for up to a year without needing to cook/pickle/preserve it first.

    • @MrSoarman
      @MrSoarman 9 місяців тому +3

      Interesting, but please post source references please, sounds odd.
      Found it in Michigan news

    • @EarlLeeByrd
      @EarlLeeByrd 9 місяців тому +8

      @@MrSoarman Oh cool, you found it. Never sure if posting links in UA-cam is gonna get my comment deleted or something.
      We learned about it in my Homesteaders class back in highschool (immersive class on early homesteaders, also did basic blacksmithing, rendering tallow to make candles, learned basic wood working with old tools, sewing/knitting and that kinda thing).
      We didn't actually test preserving meat in water though, just discussed it and read some University Professor's study on it.

    • @convincedquaker
      @convincedquaker 8 місяців тому +1

      ​@@EarlLeeByrdSimilar to preserving fresh, unwashed eggs with saltpeter

    • @intersanctum
      @intersanctum 8 місяців тому

      @@EarlLeeByrd when you post a link owner of the channel must approve it because it goes into spam.

    • @Dan.the.Guitarman
      @Dan.the.Guitarman 7 місяців тому

      Wow thnx for the fun fact

  • @chagear
    @chagear 8 місяців тому

    Looking forward to more updates on the water aging after this vid, super excited!

  • @drumminslife
    @drumminslife 8 місяців тому +2

    A tshirt with "A Good Amount of Salt" written on it somewhere among whatever other pictures of you, steaks, etc seems like it could be such a win! We'd buy.

  • @kwagz3314
    @kwagz3314 9 місяців тому +39

    I love seeing you use these interesting techniques to make steaks better. I hope you’re able to make steaks forever, Guga! Great video today.

  • @beakmaster69
    @beakmaster69 9 місяців тому +16

    I’m wondering what exactly makes it different from the wet age. I think it’s a combination of things. First, the water keeps if from not only getting above 32 degrees, but it keeps it from getting below 32 degrees as well. The ice on the water would’ve been the outside of the steak had it not been in water.
    Also, if the steak is 12 inches under water, it’s under an extra ~0.5 psi of pressure. Not sure if that is affecting anything, but it so, it would be interesting to experiment with the depth of your water container. Putting a steak under 1ft of water, 3 ft, and maybe 5 ft if possible with your fridge. They could all go in the same container if you tape them to the wall at their specific depths.

    • @vn0688
      @vn0688 9 місяців тому +1

      My first thought was also the ambient pressure altering the growth conditions. Maybe a variety of refrigerated pressure chamber settings to see how much difference the pressure makes. The water submersion keeping it juuuust over the freezing point definitely helps keep the environment consistent, but as pressure goes up, the freezing temperature also drops... can bacteria survive below freezing temperatures as the pressure rises? and what's the theoretical limit to the bacterias environmental tolerances?

    • @radry100
      @radry100 9 місяців тому +2

      Vacuum sealing bags can diffuse moisture. Keeping it under water keeps the temperature stable and prevents any moisture from escaping. The cointainer doesn't have to be in the fridge, you can just cool the water itself, that's what the korean butcher did.

    • @theboringchannel2027
      @theboringchannel2027 9 місяців тому +3

      water temp is not a stable 32, there is a 5 degree range.
      water depth is not a factor either, as professionally
      they are kept in larger vats and there is different depths
      for each cut of meat, which would create variances in quality
      if this was actually a factor, and be a problem for commercial production.
      So not water pressure.
      Get a FEATHER, rub it on a spot on your arm for 1 minute,
      nothing happened.
      Now rub that feather for 24 hours,
      you skin will be red and raw.
      GENTLY AGITATION is the magic.
      Its a 50 day gentle massage.
      And for a business, you get similar results
      as dry aging, WITHOUT THE WEIGHT LOSS,
      thus price points for the product can be kept lower
      to appeal to more people.

    • @izomiac
      @izomiac 9 місяців тому

      I think it's a combination of two factors:
      First, the water tank keeps an extremely steady temperature. Normally a refrigerator has a cooling cycle, where ice crystals form in the meat, and a period the compressor isn't running where the meat gradually gets warmer and allows for more bacterial growth. Insulating it in a huge water tank avoids both temperature "extremes".
      Second, the aquarium pumps produce a gentle agitation that will slowly tenderize the meat over a long period of time. This is similar to the ultrasonic water bath, just much weaker. It also keeps the water bath at a more even temperature by causing some circulation.
      I don't think the water pressure has much to do with anything because it's fairly low. That said, one could easily test it by changing depth like you suggest, or just throwing a heavy weight on top of a steak.

    • @Denverian
      @Denverian 9 місяців тому +1

      in a good regular fridge (wet aging) case the temperature fluctuates quite a lot and hits freezing every so often, discouraging bacteria growth.
      water bath aging forces the temperature to be above freezing, stimulating bacteria growth.
      The same concept is used in Kimchi fridge where more refined temperature control mechanism is used to maintain very fine temperature range, promoting healthy fermentation in Kimchi for optimum taste. You could technically get a Kimchi fridge and age your meat there instead of using water bath.

  • @kiridashisan3992
    @kiridashisan3992 8 місяців тому +1

    You should do like an ultimate steak prep tier list mega episode. Like directly comparing all the best methods you've tried over the years. You'd probably have to get ALL the boys together since there'd be so much food.

    • @kiridashisan3992
      @kiridashisan3992 8 місяців тому

      Perhaps do it with eye rounds so it wouldn't be to expensive to setup.

  • @karlbjorn1831
    @karlbjorn1831 8 місяців тому +2

    I remember when Guga Foods wasn’t just Guga Steaks. Missing when he cooked various dishes

  • @robertbax8248
    @robertbax8248 9 місяців тому +20

    @guga hey, one variable problem I see, shouldn't you have left the wet aging steak in the same refrigerator to contol the temp like you did the water age steak? Or did I miss that they had different temperature requirements? The shot of the wet steak in the family fridge looked less cared for (consistent) than your water aged...

  • @Marcin_Michas
    @Marcin_Michas 9 місяців тому +14

    Finally! I did already mention to try water aging like a year ago! Deffo keep on going it is amazing!

  • @TheKiingkiller
    @TheKiingkiller 9 місяців тому +1

    i am begging you, please do a series on your side dishes, i love them so much. hell some of your sides i serve as mains they are so good

  • @Movie_Games
    @Movie_Games 5 місяців тому +1

    Is there something you can buy that keeps the tank at the perfect temp outside the refrigerator?

  • @grislyghost
    @grislyghost 9 місяців тому +5

    Really love seeing you take something you saw and try it yourself! This is how food innovations are discovered. :D

  • @wyndoellabridge6208
    @wyndoellabridge6208 9 місяців тому +14

    The ”WHY” reaction got me lmao. You didnt expect it did you?

    • @RepentInReprise
      @RepentInReprise 9 місяців тому +1

      Questioning the meaning of life xD

  • @TheMillennialGardener
    @TheMillennialGardener 8 місяців тому +6

    Well, now you’ve gone and done it. We need a Dry Age VS Water Age steak video, now 🤔

  • @RubenV3_
    @RubenV3_ 8 місяців тому

    Great video, made me smile the whole time!

  • @lucasveronezi9268
    @lucasveronezi9268 9 місяців тому +3

    Im really happy, this means a looot more videos on the way! Um abraço de Bauru/SP guga!! Minha esposa adora as carnes que faço hoje em dia e você tem muito a ver com isso!

  • @SauccyyyBandz
    @SauccyyyBandz 9 місяців тому +20

    definitely need a 100 day vs 50 day water aging. this technique has given guga more content and ideas and i'm ready for it all

    • @l3138
      @l3138 9 місяців тому

      It will be gross... judging by the color I feel like 50 days is already over.
      It sounds like if you keep a steak towards the end of it's expiry date or even a bit longer. I noticed they become more tender but also sour. If you do that for too long it gets a cheesy smell 🤢

    • @superfuss1984
      @superfuss1984 8 місяців тому

      It smells Cheesy because its the Same Bacteria doing the Fermentation... And its allways Blue Cheese Flavor for Beef... 🤷‍♀️

    • @l3138
      @l3138 8 місяців тому

      @@superfuss1984 no.. not like blue cheese. Sour, feety... weird. It was very strong disgusting... had to bin it. Actually I threw it out of the window so foxes and rats can have it.

    • @superfuss1984
      @superfuss1984 8 місяців тому

      @@l3138 It can get oversour in Wet Aging... Usual past Week 4- 5 after Slaughter. Its Lacto Acid Bacteria. Red Meat usual has to ferment/age or it would be inedible...

    • @convincedquaker
      @convincedquaker 8 місяців тому

      I'd venture to guess that the guy in Korea has already tried different time experiments. He's chosen 50 days for a reason.

  • @kiwan5425
    @kiwan5425 8 місяців тому +3

    Water aging is common in Korea. I've seen butchers doing it with fancy Hanwoo cuts. I didn't expect the water to be that cold, tho.

  • @PavewayJDAM
    @PavewayJDAM 8 місяців тому

    Guga is the International Steak King! Your videos over the years have made my family demand I cook all the family get together meals.

  • @clifbradley
    @clifbradley 9 місяців тому +6

    Supposedly Delmomicos Steakhouse in NY trued this years ago. They even bought a giant tank from some afamous aquarium builder.

  • @petergagnonjr5600
    @petergagnonjr5600 9 місяців тому +68

    I remember reading an old National Geographic about how Indians used to store meat. The guy put a buffalo leg into a pond and had it stay submerged. Over the course of a month or so he would take the buffalo out, cut a piece off, cook and eat it. After a while the meat started to turn greenish but was still edible. Very interesting story from decades gone

    • @KirelRed
      @KirelRed 9 місяців тому +16

      When I was a kid, we'd go camping for weeks at a time. My dad would put the meat in a freezer/watertight bag, inside a cooler filled with ice, at the bottom of a hollow in a glacial stream. In hindsight, he was probably poaching but this was back in the 70s. We'd eat fresh wild meat all summer like that.

    • @longemen3000
      @longemen3000 9 місяців тому +4

      There is a Chilean mapuche recipe named Buna potato ("papa Buna") thst seems similar

    • @mattiasdahlstrom2024
      @mattiasdahlstrom2024 9 місяців тому +2

      Wonder if Irish bog butter is related

    • @thelungilife6057
      @thelungilife6057 9 місяців тому +1

      As an Indian, I can assure you we never did this, historically.

    • @HughNeutron-qc7il
      @HughNeutron-qc7il 9 місяців тому +6

      @@thelungilife6057 Maybe he meant american indian as in native americans

  • @bens9422
    @bens9422 7 місяців тому +2

    When I open a really nice steak I immediately start narrating with your accent!

  • @Bryan-hm2ch
    @Bryan-hm2ch 8 місяців тому

    Guga, your side dishes are so genius, sometimes I watch your vids just for the sides.

  • @DarkEyedDrifter
    @DarkEyedDrifter 9 місяців тому +7

    Never stop learning Guga. I love seeing your curiosity at play =]

  • @michaelkrynski7793
    @michaelkrynski7793 9 місяців тому +3

    SO HYPED FOR WATER AGING!!!!
    Thank you, Guga Foods! :)

  • @watashitetsujin4993
    @watashitetsujin4993 2 місяці тому +1

    Most steakhouses use wet ageing unless they specifically use dry aging method which uses a lot of space, time and prep, in comparison wet, dry and water, water ageing produces the most intense flavours that's why she said 'fermenting the meat' in korea.

  • @ojsimpson6688
    @ojsimpson6688 8 місяців тому

    I've been waiting you to do this!!!

  • @eliocjr
    @eliocjr 9 місяців тому +42

    Hey Guga, I think you should know this, but in Brazil it is a kinda old process to age called Maturada. In the açougues is fairly easy to find it. There are big meat brands who do it at scale. You should go back to Brazil more often bro 😘

    • @LordSaliss
      @LordSaliss 8 місяців тому +1

      Maturada vs dry vs wet age taste test time? 🙂

  • @f.b.jeffers0n
    @f.b.jeffers0n 9 місяців тому +4

    I wonder if bigger bubbles would be better. There would be less contact with the steak, but the contact would be 2-3x stronger, so that's one test you could try...

    • @inkermoy
      @inkermoy 9 місяців тому

      are you suggesting that air bubbles provide some kind of massaging effect on the meat over time?

  • @bassocantante51
    @bassocantante51 4 місяці тому

    The somber music when you pulled the side dish away was priceless!!! 🤪🤪

  • @jso2332
    @jso2332 9 місяців тому +1

    I love watching these videos, but they end so abruptly and I'm left feeling sad that it's over.

  • @SoRamdom420
    @SoRamdom420 9 місяців тому +6

    This special method is just phenomenal.

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam 9 місяців тому +9

    Its a great vibe when bro blesses us with his majestic meat

  • @epiceti6356
    @epiceti6356 8 місяців тому

    finnaly ive been asking for this for ages

  • @nicolebogda1482
    @nicolebogda1482 8 місяців тому +28

    Smelling “sour” is something I would not even attempt to eat….. I am still trying to understand the aging process of these not so inexpensive meats! (Without meat going bad) Ty for your channel & also your amazing sides recipes!!!

    • @robotnikkkk001
      @robotnikkkk001 8 місяців тому +1

      =HMMMMPH......AGREE THAT THIS WAS OVERDONE AND STARTED TO DETIREORATE,THAT'S WHY SOURNESS WAS THERE BUT 30 DAYS OR SO WILL DO PRETTY MUCH BETTER......BC OF MEAT DOES AGE TO SOME POINT AFTER WHICH IT JUST ROT
      =BUT A VERY INTERESTING TECHIQUE INDEED BC OF....WHAT IF WATER AGE WITH A SOY SAYCE???...HEHE

    • @xan187
      @xan187 8 місяців тому +13

      @@robotnikkkk001 you don't have to scream man jesus we hear you correctly

    • @robotnikkkk001
      @robotnikkkk001 8 місяців тому

      @@xan187 .....WHEN I *DO* I USE LIKE *_THIS_* .......
      ....BUT AT LEAST U VE GOTTEN TO WHAT I'VE TRIED TO SAY AND THAT ALL THAT MATTERS

    • @aerithgrowsflowers
      @aerithgrowsflowers 8 місяців тому +1

      ​@@robotnikkkk001huh?

    • @HiddenExp
      @HiddenExp 8 місяців тому

      HEHEHEHEHE

  • @HEY_iTs_gia
    @HEY_iTs_gia 9 місяців тому +10

    WAKE UP THE KING OF steak HAS POSTED❤

  • @vinnyc7738
    @vinnyc7738 9 місяців тому +14

    This is awesome. I'm literally in Korea right now on vacation from the US and just found out about water aged meat. Was wondering if you ever heard of it!

    • @jhpak
      @jhpak 9 місяців тому +2

      may i recommend garak market for eating korean beef. you order from the butcher and they cook it (or yourself) upstairs

    • @vinnyc7738
      @vinnyc7738 9 місяців тому +1

      @@jhpak I'll have to try to get there! Thanks for the recommendation

  • @Msfelixthecatz
    @Msfelixthecatz 8 місяців тому

    Guga, thanks to you we just ordered a cast iron hamburger griddle, the smasher, the paint scraper, and your BOOK!! They're coming tomorrow and we're super-excited. I always wondered why our bbq burgers always resemble shoe leather, so I hope those days are over. Anyway, my all-time favorite thing to smoke is brisket. I'd love an episode where you show each grade of brisket, and smoke them, and compare them. I always wondered if you could tell once they're smoked. Thanks for all you do!

  • @yugbe
    @yugbe 9 місяців тому

    We have all be waiting in angst for this video Guga. Thank You!!

  • @l-wolverine2211
    @l-wolverine2211 9 місяців тому +5

    For a Steakhouse to serve Water Aged Steaks, you’ll probably need about more than 50 Fish Tanks equipped with Fish Barometers, one tank per day, and a single Walk-In Cooler specialized for Water Aging. It may be tricky, but I think it can be done, especially if you’re gonna charge customers about $75-$300 per certain cuts of Steak, maybe even more.

    • @convincedquaker
      @convincedquaker 8 місяців тому +2

      Lobster tank

    • @StuninRub
      @StuninRub 8 місяців тому +1

      You dont need the circulator. It does nothing if you are going to submerge it and stick it in a fridge.

    • @dlwogur5462
      @dlwogur5462 7 місяців тому

      but cheaper then dry age loss

  • @IlrysKadiatu
    @IlrysKadiatu 9 місяців тому +103

    Guga: "We're steak guys here!"
    Also Guga: *makes yet another "side dish" that an actual restaurant would charge $30 for*

    • @danielschreier6700
      @danielschreier6700 9 місяців тому +21

      Guga’s excellent sides are just unbelievable icing on the cake, he could totally have another channel called Guga’s Sides!

    • @liesalllies
      @liesalllies 9 місяців тому +1

      Maybe more with the cost of Sriracha these days

    • @notcoleman711
      @notcoleman711 9 місяців тому

      @@liesalllies my first thought was 'where did these guys find Sriracha'

    • @Dzugashvili
      @Dzugashvili 9 місяців тому

      ​@@notcoleman711you can buy it directly from the farmer that grew them for the company. That's the main reason that shortage of whatever you wanna call it occurred. The farmer felt like they were being taken advantage of and is selling it themselves

    • @theboringchannel2027
      @theboringchannel2027 9 місяців тому +1

      even top steak houses dont charge $30 for a side dish,
      in the low 20's at most at expensive places.
      Might see a $30 side, but it would be seafood based,
      not pork or beef.
      Pork too cheap to charge $30 for.

  • @kahnnis
    @kahnnis 9 місяців тому

    "I need to learn more about this technique" is the perfect phrase for genious like Guga! Great video!
    Now please do the Cinnamon dry age!!

  • @DavidWilson-rk2zf
    @DavidWilson-rk2zf 9 місяців тому +1

    im noticing that you mentioned circulation while showing airstones but those are two different things. Airstones oxegenate the water, and while they do provide a bit of circulation due to the effect of the water bubbles, their purpose is not circulation of water.

  • @AndusDominae
    @AndusDominae 9 місяців тому +19

    I do a dry age followed by wet age.
    I have no idea what I did the first time I did it, but I've never had a steak like that again... it was insanely good!
    Actually, now I think about it, that first steak is the reason I was poached by a chef to be his meat prep guy and business partner.

    • @TheLastEpiscopalian
      @TheLastEpiscopalian 8 місяців тому +2

      I thought you would wet age and then dry age, as you would need to remove the pellicles?

  • @Macca81
    @Macca81 9 місяців тому +3

    So I wonder if the difference between water and wet aging, is the more stable temperature, or if the water movement had a very minor amount of mechanical agitation throughout the muscle that somehow altered the environment for any lactobacteria present...

  • @junosensis
    @junosensis 7 місяців тому +1

    Thanks, i've try it and water aged my BigMac ! .. It's fantastic !

  • @Nyannyanggg
    @Nyannyanggg 8 місяців тому

    I've been waiting for his video since the korea trip and I'm so happy its here ! I now wanna try that steak so bad 😢😢

  • @finnmyers9731
    @finnmyers9731 9 місяців тому +4

    Nothing better than waking up to this

  • @peterwendel2282
    @peterwendel2282 9 місяців тому +28

    I wonder if it's the slight pressure of being underwater that keeps the juices inside of the steak when you wet age them like that. Now I wonder what would happen if you did a wet age in a pressure vessel.

    • @owenstevens7151
      @owenstevens7151 9 місяців тому +2

      This. I am so curious.

    • @Puzzlesocks
      @Puzzlesocks 9 місяців тому +3

      Water will keep the temperature more stable and prevent the escape of the moisture you are trying to get rid of in Dry Aging. As the Korean guy said, this is a form of mild fermentation, which as we know, fermentation will soften the meat and a little sourness will enhance the savory flavors. A pressure vessel would probably not make any difference as the beef is already under pressure through vacuum sealing. It might be worth an experiment but I wouldn't expect any significant results.

    • @Chevsilverado
      @Chevsilverado 9 місяців тому +1

      It’s only 0.5 psi at that depth though.
      The weather changes atmospheric pressure by more than that regularly so it seems like it shouldn’t matter.

    • @Chevsilverado
      @Chevsilverado 9 місяців тому +3

      @@Puzzlesocksit’s vacuum sealed so no moisture loss anyway. Any decent fridge will keep the temp stable too anyways. Once the steak is down to temp it doesn’t matter if it’s cooled in water or air.

    • @inkermoy
      @inkermoy 9 місяців тому +3

      @@Chevsilverado but the wet aged and the water aged did look and smell different. what is the water doing that air is not?

  • @mr-vet
    @mr-vet 9 місяців тому

    Local grocery store sells vacuum packed wet-aged rib roasts around certain holidays. They cost anywhere from $7.99 to $9.99 per pound. I buy 4-5 of them and freeze them to use over a 4-5 month period.

  • @greasertv3147
    @greasertv3147 6 місяців тому +1

    I would try to put more air bubbles in the tank with the water aging! A lot of aeration! And see if that makes a substantial difference in the aging process! Great video none the less!

  • @santhosesivan1018
    @santhosesivan1018 9 місяців тому +4

    Hi guga, there is a method in south India that called in Tamil "UppuKandam". which is sun dried meat mostly mutton. Try that if you can. I ate when I was child it's delicious.

  • @daltonwang2923
    @daltonwang2923 9 місяців тому +3

    Expecting a water-aged picanha and A5 wagyu video now lol

  • @krassilverfang5504
    @krassilverfang5504 7 місяців тому

    Please keep trying this technique and give us an update. Looking forward to it.

  • @chrisfaye6655
    @chrisfaye6655 8 місяців тому

    This is the best foodie channel on youtube with amzing cohosts!

  • @drewishaf
    @drewishaf 8 місяців тому +3

    This seems pretty promising from everything I've seen on it. But I definitely would want to get a small, dedicated dorm/apartment refrigerator that can stay closed/chilled for the proper duration. Of course, I've said the same damned thing about getting a dry aging dedicated fridge too... 😆

  • @Leodorant
    @Leodorant 9 місяців тому +3

    This opens up the door for a completely new world of experiemnts. You guys dry aged steaks in all kinds of weird stuff, but now you can water age in all kinds of drinks and fluids! cant wait for the cola aged steak xD

    • @carywhozawhastit2024
      @carywhozawhastit2024 9 місяців тому

      you're right! We need a water/cola aged. And while your at it do the cola wars lol

    • @absoz
      @absoz 9 місяців тому +1

      Given the steaks are in a vacuum sealed bag, how would different fluids alter the result ?
      I can understand using purified water to ensure it causing the least possible contamination thus not affecting the steak

    • @jetah50
      @jetah50 9 місяців тому

      @@absoz you can vacuum seal liquids with meat! Guga has done this on his SV channel.

    • @convincedquaker
      @convincedquaker 8 місяців тому

      In the container instead of water? It would be pointless.

  • @krusmister8608
    @krusmister8608 8 місяців тому

    guga you make life worth living, THANK YOU SO MUCH

  • @nekomancer9157
    @nekomancer9157 8 місяців тому

    ~0:45 when i saw the temperature i said aha! refridgeration brining in water to produce a more stable temperature. the vacuum seal also means the brine is constantly around the steak and not just pooled underneath

  • @chlorines17
    @chlorines17 9 місяців тому +4

    Despite being korean, I've not known this technique my entire life until last year😂 I stumbled upon it during a trip to Jeju Island and had some magical water-aged pork bellies. Maybe you should try this on pork too!

    • @convincedquaker
      @convincedquaker 8 місяців тому

      Did they use 50 days for the pork belly, too?

  • @brei2670
    @brei2670 9 місяців тому +14

    The only thing different about putting it in water, in my opinion, would be more stable temperature control. I can't imagine it does anything else.
    You should have put the normal wet aging steak in the fridge you never open, also. That would have been a fairer comparison.
    The oxidation and sourness makes me think that maybe it wasn't as clean as the other one.

    • @alkaliaurange
      @alkaliaurange 9 місяців тому +2

      It could also be tenderizing the steak slightly with the water circulation

    • @boombox05
      @boombox05 9 місяців тому +2

      Even fridges that are never opened will still fluctuate several degrees as the motors cycle on and off. Maybe the more consistent temp plus constant vibrations from the flowing water agitates the meat just enough to speed fermentation? I’m totally stumped.

    • @convincedquaker
      @convincedquaker 8 місяців тому

      Right. Liquid is 23x more thermally conductive than air. Thus, sous vide cooking.

  • @ashleymiranda17
    @ashleymiranda17 7 місяців тому

    Dude I freaking love your videos

  • @brendanalexander6053
    @brendanalexander6053 8 місяців тому

    U rock Guga. Luv ur channel

  • @dangerteoh587
    @dangerteoh587 9 місяців тому +49

    I watch this video while I am eating one 🥩

  • @kw91
    @kw91 9 місяців тому +36

    A question Guga:
    When you do these videos, are you using by freshly butchered meat, and you're starting the aging on day 1? Or is the beef at least a few days old by the time you get it? Because there might be a mix of aging methods going on from time to time. Just curious.
    EDIT: You could also experiment with combining aging methods. Suppose you both wet age AND dry age a steak.

    • @Phyde4ux
      @Phyde4ux 9 місяців тому +2

      All beef is at least 7 to 10 days old before it's sold.

    • @kw91
      @kw91 9 місяців тому

      @@Phyde4ux that's important to know then for Guga's experiments.

    • @synthetic240
      @synthetic240 9 місяців тому +3

      Seems pretty clear to me that he bought it from the store. It wouldn't be reasonable to expect the average viewer to have access to a farm-fresh butcher.

    • @Phyde4ux
      @Phyde4ux 9 місяців тому +10

      @@synthetic240 You don't want to eat freshly slaughtered beef. Red-blooded animals go through a period of rigor mortis which makes the flesh tough and irony. So all commercial beef is aged for at least a week as primal cuts prior to butchering to sub-primals and finished cuts.

    • @a2d
      @a2d 9 місяців тому +1

      I was thinking the same. Water age then dry age would be interesting to see!

  • @MeGustaWHAT
    @MeGustaWHAT 8 місяців тому +1

    The sour description is probably pretty close because that's the best way for me to personally describe taste differences with fermented foods. It's not soured but sour - like an intriguing tang. If we end up getting a second fridge this may be something I need to try!

    • @MeGustaWHAT
      @MeGustaWHAT 8 місяців тому

      Also I loved that collab with NFTI it would be so awesome to see more sciency collabs with youtubes in that spectrum! Like I'm sure NileRed would absolutely do some weird collabs, you could probably get ZeFrank to do a cameo narration, there's a whole heck of a lotta nerds on here that would make for wonderful collabs and cross-pollination of chanels :D

  • @AyeYoYoYooo
    @AyeYoYoYooo 8 місяців тому +1

    My favorite steak I have ever had in my life, was a WET AGED porterhouse from Bavette’s in Chicago. (And their roasted bone marrow with red onion jam is great too)

  • @spencerbentley3296
    @spencerbentley3296 8 місяців тому +4

    Day one of asking guga to marinade steak in in-n-out special sauce

  • @CN-gw5nt
    @CN-gw5nt 9 місяців тому +6

    You should’ve done a regular dry age as a comparison. Great video tho 🤙🏾

  • @e5211
    @e5211 8 місяців тому

    Theres blue lights in the Korean tank. Thats possibly uv lights to prevent that growth on the outside which wasnt present in the korean cut when they took out of the pack in Korea.

  • @unlimited-limitless
    @unlimited-limitless 8 місяців тому +1

    can you do a ranking of your best dry aging techniques?

  • @user-oz5xf3oh6f
    @user-oz5xf3oh6f 9 місяців тому +3

    This the start of a new Guga arc - he has been humbled.

    • @SBahamondes
      @SBahamondes 9 місяців тому +1

      He was always humble, that's what makes him great

  • @seekfv1
    @seekfv1 9 місяців тому +4

    One important factor might be the water pressure, similar to when you use the displacement method. Try to find a bigger vessel to see if it makes a difference.

  • @man-observing-world
    @man-observing-world 4 місяці тому

    Such a great channel!

  • @AshGintaNarsama
    @AshGintaNarsama 8 місяців тому

    dude angel eying that steak at the end just made that perfect