Most of us don’t grow up cooking sous vide, so most of us don’t know how to get the most out of the cooking method. Is it for special occasions? Desserts? Showing off? The answer: all of the above. What a sous vide circulator lacks in cooking speed (most dishes require one to four hours in the bath), it makes up for in functions no other cooking method can claim. Here’s a beginner’s list of the five essential things to cook sous vide beyond a simple steak.
Eggs

Though sous vide steak gets all the headlines, it’s the prospect of flawless egg cooking that deserves more love. Few ingredients are as finnicky as the egg, and the degree-specific precision of a sous vide bath is the ideal vehicle to nail your perfect doneness with consistency. Use Kenji López-Alt as your spirit guide; his 2015 cookbook The Food Lab devotes more pages to the search of egg perfection than any other.
Vegetables

When it comes to vegetables, no one doubts the deliciousness of roasting or the convenience of steaming. But securing the veggie in a bag and cooking it between 180 and 190 degrees is the only method that preserves both the ingredient’s nutrient content and its structural integrity. In their guide to sous vide vegetables, the recipe and kitchen gear testing gurus at Cook’s Illustrated break down why the method works from taste to nutritional value.