yeah. What they're not talking about so much (but which can also help) is keeping the temperature down while frying. Some of the newer induction stoves and hot plates have temperature sensors so you can reliably keep temperatures just below the point where the oil starts to smoke and produce a lot of particulates.
Not just Induction, I have a (new) gas stove with a frying mode on one of the hobs that lets you set the temp from 160-200 Celsius, and it controls the gas level to keep it at temp.
Feel like this would be an amazing selling point to get people to try sous vide style cooking, though I’ve never used it personally, I’ve heard nothing but good things about it, and it seems like it would be pretty sterile since everything is just warming up in a contained bag.
Sous vide has the problem of time and inflexibility.
Don’t get me wrong, it’s easy to produce a literally perfect steak or whatever. The thing with steaks though, is that they look awful unless you take them out and slap a very high heat sear on them- and they lack the browning and carmelization the sear provides (which is a source of the flavor- especially in chicken breasts,)
As for time, it’s going to add a couple hours to it, and for some reason, nobody mentions the time it takes to get up to temp to begin with. (You can shorten this by preheating the water, mind- microwave and stove are both faster.).
The real take away is to use a hood on your cooktop- either one that vents to outside or a filter capable handling it. (Also, clean your hoods. Just saying.)
I don't think you can reduce air pollution by cooking sous vide. After the sous vide part, the food is probably grilled and then you have all the smoke again. See an example in this short video: Steak sous vide
Misophonia is actually a physical thing rather than psychological. Mostly, anyway. I have improved it a lot through exposure therapy, but it still hurts when I hear certain sounds. I can use the vacuum now! Mostly. Slow and steady.