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-   -   Makin' Bacon (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/1042406-makin-bacon.html)

wdfifteen 10-12-2019 06:06 AM

Makin' Bacon
 
I have bacon for breakfast about 4 days a week, and in the summer, a bacon and tomato sandwich is my go-to lunch. But frying a few pieces of bacon takes awhile, and then there is the pan to clean, etc - it's a pain.

So I started baking half a package bacon at a time and storing it in the 'fridge. When I'm ready for breakfast or a sandwich I nuke a few strips on a paper towel in the microwave and Voilà - bacon in 30 seconds with no mess.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1570889088.jpg

Bake it for 15-20 minutes at 400 degrees.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1570889088.jpg

Take it out before it's 100% done. Nuke it for 30 seconds when it's time to eat.

fanaudical 10-12-2019 06:12 AM

I do something similar but use a preheated broiler pan.

id10t 10-12-2019 06:16 AM

When I do bacon in the oven I put it on a rack on the baking sheet, so that the grease drips down/off. Just so happens that if I put the bacon in a cold oven and put it on 450, and start making biscuit dough the bacon is nice and crispy about 5 minutes after the oven is done pre-heating and the biscuits are ready to go in the oven. Start boiling water for grits, and unless the biscuits don't cooperate classic breakfast ready 15 minutes later.

I've also used the boiling trick to make bacon. Deep wide pan (or shallow wide pot I guess), chuck the bacon in (it doesn't have to be all layed out flat, I cut mine into half or thirds and just chuck it in), add just enough water to almost cover and put it on to boil until the water is almost gone, then turn down to medium. The boiling cooks it, then when the water is evaporated it has all the fat and nothing is being burnt and carbonated at that point. Then it fries and crisps up in the fat. If you need bacon bits, freeze the bacon a little so it cuts easy and then use the boil method to cook.

mattdavis11 10-12-2019 06:23 AM

No mess bacon. Take a section of the newspaper (8-10 pages), open the fold, line both sides with paper towels, lay bacon, close newspaper, microwave it, flip news paper, nuke some more. 5-6 minutes total depending on how well your microwave cooks.

Cooked some that way for my uncle, he loved it, and he owned 180 restaurants which primarily served breakfast. His brother, my father, a short order cook in college, taught me that trick.

RWebb 10-12-2019 10:44 AM

where is that Bacon Bomb BBQ thread?

cairns 10-12-2019 11:08 AM

You have inspired me. BLTs for dinner tonight.

Bill Douglas 10-12-2019 02:29 PM

I haven't tried it yet, but there is bacon in the fridge :) Air fryer. It does everything else so well why not bacon done in five minutes. I usually do mine on the BBQ.

dan79brooklyn 10-12-2019 03:59 PM

I smoked these on the Weber grill.



I still prefer to pan fry my bacon though. I can control the crispness. I give the dogs the leftover fat if it’s not too salty.http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1570925142.jpg

stevej37 10-12-2019 04:15 PM

Air fryer for the best bacon...esp if you like it completely crispy with no fat.
Cut the slices in half to cover the basket or tray of the fryer. Cook at 400 for 10 minutes..flipping the slices halfway thru the cooking.
Thin sliced bacon works best.

A930Rocket 10-12-2019 04:30 PM

Six pieces of bacon and five scrambled eggs every Friday morning at this hole in the wall restaurant. I like my bacon crispy, not soggy.

BLT’s for lunch in the summer. Yum.

madcorgi 10-12-2019 05:34 PM

I don’t have the self control required. Once bacon is made, it must be eaten—all of it. After that I snort the crumbs. Then I inject the bacon grease into my arm.

Hugh R 10-12-2019 08:46 PM

, I use a baconator or something like that, plastic with a cover, no mess, right out of the microwave.

For Xmas a year or two ago, my daughter bought me bacon:, mayo, cheese, spread, pickles, mustard,

it was sublime.....

masraum 10-13-2019 08:32 AM

Depends on the bacon and how much we need to make. If we need to make a bunch, then we bake it in the oven on a baking sheet lined with Al foil with the bacon on a rack so the grease drains away from the bacon. THen you can pour the grease into a container, and the backing pan should be clean since the Al foil kept the grease out.

For just a couple of pieces cooked very crispy, the microwave is best with a few paper towels to absorb the grease.

If it's somewhere in between, then possibly cooked in a skillet.

This bacon is the shizzle. It's made the old fashioned way, smoked in a smoke house with real smoke, rubbed in sugar and salt and aged. Nothing artificial or rushed about the process.
https://shop.bentonscountryham.com/ProductDetails.asp?ProductCode=hscb

billybek 10-13-2019 08:21 PM

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/7G2fHegjAFg" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>

jcommin 10-14-2019 03:40 AM

I have cook bacon just about every way. My preference is oven. If I need bacon grease/ drippings for cooking, I will use a cast iron pan.


Not to hyjack the tread, but I'm more picky about the brand of bacon than how to cook it.

wdfifteen 10-14-2019 03:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jcommin (Post 10622772)

Not to hyjack the tread, but I'm more picky about the brand of bacon than how to cook it.

+1
“Indiana” brand available here in the Midwest is a good tasty bacon with medium-thick, consistent slices and good lean to fat ratio. I’ve tried some craft bacon, but it’s a crap shoot. I bought some that tasted great, but the slicing was haphazard with strips that were paper thin on one end and too thick on the other.

gtc 10-14-2019 03:29 PM

If you guys love bacon so much and have a smoker, you should try curing your own. It's dead simple and better than almost any store-bought bacon.
I use a weight-based cure recipe like this:
https://thehungrydogblog.com/2014/09/how-to-make-bacon-at-home/

Shaun @ Tru6 10-14-2019 04:06 PM

All the bacon I cook I have to eat. Sometimes while cooking it which gives me the goodness of floppy fat and grease while I wait for super crispy goodness on the griddle. Best of both worlds.

For over a year now the only bacon I buy is Jansal Valley cob smoked bacon which as the name implies, is twice smoked over dried corn cobs. Absolutely love it.

Now I'm really jonesing for bacon even after having a nice porterhouse for dinner. Would have been good on the baked potato.

wdfifteen 10-14-2019 04:14 PM

I’d like to try curing my own bacon. It sounds better than injecting liquid smoke and chemicals into the meat the way it’s done commercially. I don’t have a problem with using sodium nitrite (pink salt) but some people do.

billybek 10-14-2019 04:37 PM

Finished dinner featuring Big Green Egg bacon.
Mmmm. Bacon.

Maui chicken on the BGE with some mild Italian sausage plus the bacon.
My son's favorite meal right now.


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