Chef Meireles says receptions are still popular at events, and he does a lot of small plates and action stations and adds that sous-vide cooking is a continuing trend. Sous-vide is cooking in a controlled water bath, under a vacuum seal. He explains “There are a lot of different reasons for cooking sous vide, but I like it because it concentrates the flavour in the food. If you’re cooking short ribs, with a little stock, that stock stays in the meat; it’s not leaching out in the cooking broth. If you’re cooking a lamb rack or a beef tenderloin, you can cook it to precisely 130 degrees and it will hold at that temperature.”
Chef Meireles is experimenting sous-vide with fresh fruit as well. “We’re imparting fresh herbal flavours into watermelon, letting some mint and basil marinate in the fruit for 24 hours. It makes the watermelon bright red and imparts a really fresh flavour that the diner isn’t quite expecting. We cut it into whatever shape we need, and then we’ll pair that up with an heirloom tomato and burrata salad. It’s a great dish.”