Hello friends, and welcome back toWill It Sous Vide?, the column where I usually make whatever you want me to with my immersion circulator.

Today we are taking a break from more meaty pursuits, and focusing our sous-vide sights on a few friendly root vegetables.

While its extremely true that exact temperature control and a low-and-slow, extremely moist cooking environment make sous-vide cooking a perfect match for both delicate seafood and big chunks of collagen rich meat, its ability to infuse food with flavor makes it a pretty dope method for cooking vegetables.

I live in a city that loves a very specific restaurant concept, from a dedicated ham bar (that actually didnt make it; RIP), to a spot with a multi-course vegan tasting menu, complete with kombucha pairings.

One night I was talking about the latter with a vegan tattoo artistlike, his tattoo ink is vegan or somethingand he mentioned that the chef of the multi-course, kombucha-paired menu was a fan of sous vide-ing vegetables in their own juice to give them a more concentrated flavor.

I mentioned the idea in last weeks topic-picking session, and one commenter ran with it:

I ended up opting for carrots in orange juice and parsnips in apple juice, mainly because I forgot to get yams and refused to walk back to the store in the rain.

Disaster almost struck, however, when Ofclaire opened and began to drink from the smallish bottle of OJ I had purchased for this experiment, even though Ijusttold him dont drink those juices, for they are blog juices not meant for your consumption.

(He apologized profusely, but like, cant you tell the difference between blog food and food you are allowed to eat?)

Anyway, I treated the vegetables pretty simply, peeling them and tossing them with a bit of salt in their bags before pouring the juice of fruits all over them.

I left the carrots whole, but cut the parsnips into planks, because parsnips are much thicker on one end.

I then clipped the open end of the bags over the side of the sous-vide tubtrying to vacuum seal a bag that contains juice is a bad ideaand let them hang out in a 185-degree bath for an hour.

During that time,I took to Twitterto complain about the lack of parsnip perfume, because a freshly peeled, raw parsnip is something of a sensory wonder.

After an hour, the carrots were tender crisp and the snips were fluffy and soft, but not mushy.

I like my carrots to have a bit more give, so keep them in the tub for another half hour (or more) if youre like me.

Visually, there was nothing remarkable about either root vegetable, but a quick chomp revealed that the fruit juices had indeed penetrated each one with just the right amount of flavor, without overwhelming the vegetable.

The bright, acidic orange juice complimented the sweetness of the carrot, and the apple juice matched up exceedingly well with the parsnips autumnal, spicy flavors.

They were not, however, a finished dish, so I browned some butter with a few leaves of minced sage, and drizzled that ish all over, finishing it up with a bit of flakey salt and some pepper.

This was the most excited I had been to eat my vegetables in recent memory, and it got me thinking about all the possible juice-and-vegetable combinations.

A roasted radish that has been infused with beet juice sounds pretty tasty, as do lemon infused, scalloped potatoes.

As someone who spends most of her time thinking ofnew ways to put duck fat in her mouth, this is huge.