I have been cooking with sous vide for about 9 months now. I use an Inkbird 1000 watt heater/circulator. The container is an old Rubbermaid cooler designed to hold 12 cans of soda. I made a custom top for the cooler out of a cheap polypropylene cutting board to minimize evaporation. Normally, I am cooking for my wife and I, so it is the perfect size. It won't hold a large piece of meat, but I would rather smoke them on my Traeger pellet grill. The Thanksgiving turkey on the Traeger was great. I am looking forward to cooking a ham for Easter on the Traeger.
When the weather is nice, I cook on theTraeger pellet grill. I usually cook a lot at one time and divide it into meal-size portions for the two of us (plus a couple of cats). The meals are vacuum sealed and stored in the freezer until needed. Tonight I am pulling out a large pork chop that is big enough for two. It was cooked a few months ago. It has already been seasoned cooked, smoked, and seared. This afternoon, it will go into sous vide for 2-3 hours at 145 F. That will make the pork really tender.
Although I love cooking my steaks on the Traeger and then searing them on a gas grill, you can also make great steaks sous vide with reverse sear. I do that in the winter if I don't have precooked steaks available. I normally sous vide at 135F, but you can use whatever temp you want for your steaks. I then sear the steaks in a carbon steel skillet on the gas stovetop in the kitchen. Basting with butter, garlic, and herbs makes them flavorful. In the past, I rarely grilled steaks at home as they never turned out like I wanted. Now that I have a variety of tools and my skills have improved, I much prefer my home cooked steaks to those I get at a restaurant.
To further expand my culinary capabilities, I am considering purchasing a flat top grill this spring.
For most of my marriage, I worked long hours and my wife had dinner ready when I arrived home. Now that I am retired, I am trying to do my share of the cooking duties.