Is It Safe to Cook With Plastic Bags? And Other Sous Vide Questions, Explained (2024)

After we shared a ton of new sous vide recipes recently, one of the most common reader comments was about plastic bag safety. I hear you. I spent a year in college living with a host family in France, and on my first night, I walked to the stove to find a salmon filet in a plastic bag, submerged in a pot of hot water. My first thought was that I’d get cancer, my second was that I’d get botulism. I didn’t know what else to do so I ate the salmon and waited for the poison to set in.

It didn’t, and I lived to tell the tale of sous vide plastic bag safety. The key to sous vide, which is French for “under vacuum,” is putting a protein, often meat, in a plastic bag and removing all the air. This is the part that raises questions for risk-averse home cooks, and we’ll try to answer them below.

Is cooking with plastic safe?

When it comes to cooking, there’s very bad plastic and, uh, not-as-bad plastic. The bad plastic is polycarbonate, which releases the chemical Bisphenol A (BPA). This kind of plastic is found in cling wrap, plastic squeeze bottles, take-out containers, multi-gallon water bottles, and plastic plates. The not-as-bad plastics do not release BPA and count high-density polyethylene, low-density polyethylene, and polypropylene among their ranks. The reason they're not necessarily “good” plastics is because a 2011 study found that when some were heated, these plastics —in fact, most plastics on the market, including those advertised as BPA free—release non-BPA chemicals that disrupt hormone activity. The amount of chemicals released, however, is unknown.

What kind of plastic bags are safe for sous vide?

There currently aren’t any published studies specifically focused on the migration of chemicals in sous vide conditions, so you should sous vide only if you’re comfortable with the gray area surrounding the effect of chemicals in non-BPA plastics.

Sous vide manufacturer ChefSteps recommends using food-grade vacuum sealing bags because they’re BPA-free and made of polyethylene (we like the ones made by FoodSaver). These bags need to be sealed with a vacuum-sealing system, which FoodSaver also makes. If you don’t want to pay for a vacuum sealing system, you can also use sturdy resealable freezer bags, like Ziploc ones made with low-density polyethylene.

However, you shouldn’t use a single Ziploc bag when cooking in water temperatures above 158°F because the heat can cause the bag to open at the seams and expose your food to the water. Double-bagging with two Ziploc bags will avoid this, or using FoodSaver bags. To be on the safe side, do not wrap your food in saran wrap and then put in the bag—cling wrap is the very bad plastic.

How do you seal the bag without a vacuum sealing system?

If you're using a Ziploc bag and don’t have a sealing machine like FoodSaver’s, you can still remove all the air from it. Once your meat is in the bag, press out as much air as you can, but instead of sealing it shut, leave a little room at the top. Then, lower the bag into a pot of water until the water comes up to the seal and zip the bag shut. The pressure of the water will displace all the air you couldn’t remove on your own.

And about that botulism...?

Some skeptics fear getting botulism from sous vide foods because the bacteria that causes the disease, C. botulinum, grows in low oxygen conditions. To prevent it, and other bacteria growth—avoid cooking or storing your food in the danger temperature zone—between 40°F and 140°F—for more than two hours.

Is It Safe to Cook With Plastic Bags? And Other Sous Vide Questions, Explained (2024)

FAQs

Is It Safe to Cook With Plastic Bags? And Other Sous Vide Questions, Explained? ›

The bottom line is that bags made expressly for cooking sous vide are perfectly safe—as are oven bags, popular brands of zip-top bags, and stretchy plastics such as Saran wrap.

Is cooking sous vide with plastic bags safe? ›

There is a lack of data on the chemicals leaching specifically from sous vide bags. The EEP recommends the use of appropriate plastic bags for sous vide that follow current FDA guidelines and are free of BPA and phthalates.

What are the safety concerns of sous vide? ›

To make sure vegetative forms of pathogenic bacteria will be destroyed, always sous vide food at a temperature of 132.8℉ (56℃) or higher.
  • Double check your circulator. ...
  • Use the right kind of plastic bags. ...
  • Don't reuse plastic bags. ...
  • Don't vacuum pack room-temperature food. ...
  • Be smart about storage.

Are FoodSaver bags sous vide safe? ›

FoodSaver® Bags and FoodSaver® rolls are simmer safe for sous vide cooking. Simmering is a food preparation technique in which foods are cooked in hot liquids kept just below the boiling point of water (which is 100 °C or 212 °F).

Can the plastic bag touch the sous vide? ›

To prevent cold spots on the food, make sure the bag isn't touching the sous vide machine or cooking vessel. If cooking with multiple bags, make sure they aren't pressing up against each other.

Will Ziploc bags melt in sous vide? ›

Look for bags made from high-density or low-density polyethylene and/or polypropylene. They can't be boiled, but are food safe (and won't melt) up to about 195F. (You wouldn't sous vide at that high a temperature anyway.) Ziplock and Glad brand bags are made from polyethylene plastic, and are free of BPAs and dioxins.

Do ziploc bags leach microplastics? ›

Ziploc Bags that end up in landfills or in the environment take over 1,000 years to decompose. During this time, animals come in contact with the material and are at risk. As the plastic breaks down, microplastics are leached into the soil and water.

What is a disadvantage of sous vide? ›

If you're not careful about cooking times (as specified by the product manufacturer), your food can become contaminated. In addition, if your food is not properly vacuum sealed, or your food becomes contaminated during prep, cooking sous-vide poses an additional threat.

What are the side effects of sous vide cooking? ›

Sous vide products are exposed to the same risks as other foods during preparation, cooking, cooling and reheating. Risks that could lead to food poisoning include: food held in the temperature danger zone (5°C–60°C) for long periods could allow harmful bacteria to grow.

Do bacteria grow in sous vide? ›

With enough time, most food pathogens are killed at 130°F/54.5°C, according to the FDA and Baldwin. For our sous vide recipes, this is our magic number. We cook almost everything either at or above that temperature.

Are plastic cooking bags safe? ›

The risk of chemical migration from cooking bags into food is generally considered low, as the amount of chemicals that might seep into food is minimal, especially when the bags are used correctly (i.e., not overheated or used for longer than recommended).

Can you sous vide without vacuum sealed bags? ›

No, vacuum sealing is not necessary for sous vide. In fact — and this isverycounterintuitive — foods inside a sealed vacuum bag aren'tunder vacuumat all! A vacuum is defined as a space that contains little to no air [or matter, generally speaking].

Do sous vide bags need to be airtight? ›

The key is that you don't want air between your food and the bag, because it won't conduct the heat from the water. So if you can't make a vacuum, the thing to do is use a zip lock and slowly submerge your bag into a pot of water, or into the sous-vide container.

What plastic bags are safe for sous vide? ›

Sous vide manufacturer ChefSteps recommends using food-grade vacuum sealing bags because they're BPA-free and made of polyethylene (we like the ones made by FoodSaver). These bags need to be sealed with a vacuum-sealing system, which FoodSaver also makes.

Do plastic chemicals leach into food from sous vide sv cooking? ›

What about the plastic bags used for cooking do they pose any risks? No. The bags sold for sous vide cooking are free of phthalates , BPA , and other hormone-disrupting chemicals.

How long can you keep sous vide meat before searing? ›

Sous vide steaks, on the other hand, can be held for several hours before you finish them by searing and serving, which means that your steaks are ready when you and your guests are.

Can you sous vide with saran wrap? ›

Saran Wrap

It should work for sous vide cooking for short amounts of time.

At what temperature does plastic leach? ›

Antimony can be leached from water bottles made of PET plastics. The rate of leaching is low at a storage temperature of 25°C. However, at temperatures of 50°C and above, antimony release can occur very rapidly.

Are oven bags safe for sous vide? ›

As long as the bag is BPA free it is safe for your sous vide cooking. Freezer bags are definitely strong enough for sous vide cooking.

Can you leave food in the bag after cooking sous vide? ›

Once you're done sous viding, if you cook it through to pasteurization and you chill it efficiently and then put it in a refrigerator, the food will last for a long time, a lot longer than normal leftovers do. If you follow that routine, cooked food in unopened sealed bags will last for at least a week, if not longer.

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