Stix ‘n Brix

StixNBrix.com: Houses are for families

Houses Are For Living

June 17, 2007

Cooking Perfect Bacon

by View more articles from Inside Story, Food & Cooking

Bacon is one of life’s great guilty pleasures, but the standard 1-pound package is way too much for one or two people. Our need is for anywhere from two slices (fresh bacon bits are a great garnish for a batch of fresh cooked spinach) to five or six slices when accompanying a pancake breakfast. At our house we eat bacon so seldom that even it’s long refrigerator life isn’t sufficient for us to consume a full pound.

We tried breaking a package into breakfast-sized packs and then freezing those, but that didn’t help when all we needed were a couple of strips for spinach. Besides, pancake breakfasts are typically a last-minute treat so the need to defrost before cooking was an inconvenience.

In recent years pre-cooked bacon has appeared in stores. It’s very convenient, but way too expensive for the convenience, and the selection is limited. Why couldn’t we do that ourselves? We can, and we do. Yesterday we bought a couple of pounds of Oscar Mayer on sale. I fired up my trusty pan and cooked up the entire mess  layering the cooked strips between paper towels on a platter.

Once drained and partially cooled I put the stack into the freezer for about an hour. Then I simply peeled the now-stiff strips from the towels and popped them into a heavy-duty zip-top freezer bag. Since they were frozen separately they won’t stick together in the bag. All we have to do is remove as many strips as the occasion calls for and zing them for a few seconds in the microwave, just enough to heat them up.

Let’s not forget about the bacon grease. A teaspoon or so does wonders for that spinach. While the bacon is cooking I cut 6-inch square pieces of foil and press them into a muffin tin as liners. Into each cup is poured the drippings from a five or six strip batch of bacon. The entire tin is placed in the freezer until the grease has frozen into solid pucks. The foil is folded to enclose, and the entire batch of pucks is frozen in another zip-top bag.

The technique of bacon-frying is becoming a lost art, but I think pan-fried bacon tastes much better than microwaved. I like my bacon chewy-crisp, with (nearly) all the fat cooked off, but not so crisp that it fractures before bending. For those with the same preferences, here follows my technique.

The ideal bacon-frying pan is a nonstick with a lot of mass. This gives the most constant, even heat. A 12-inch diameter fry pan holds up to 6 stips without crowding. Pre-heat the pan over a large burner at dead-center medium heat, 5 on a scale of 10. Avoid the temptation to quick-preheat at a higher setting. You want the pan’s temperature distribution to be as even as possible.

Lay your strips into the pan putting the first strips near the outside and working in towrds the center. The edges will always be colder, so you’ll want those strips to have those few extra seconds of cooking. Temperature control is important: There should be a gentle sizzling, but no big pops or spatters. Adjust your burner setting accordingly.

Once five or six strips are comfortably in the pan, put on a spatter guard if you have one and just WALK AWAY. Resist the temptation to fiddle with things.

In about a minute it will be time to shift the center pieces to the edges and the outer strips to the center. It is NOT time to turn them over yet. Just rearrange them to even out the cooking.

In about another minute the first side will just be starting to brown. (Don’t go by the clock, go by the look.) Now is the time for the first of two turns, before the first side is done.

The second side will brown up much faster. When it’s a beautiful medium-brown with just a few specks of dark, turn again, and also rearrange outer strips to inner again as you do.

In just a few seconds, almost immediately as you turn the last strip, the first strips will be done. Remove all the strips to drain on paper towels for about a minute, then turn them over to drain the other side. Put a paper towel on top, for the next batch.

If your bacon is browning before most of the fat has melted off, lower the heat slightly to slow the cooking process.

When cooking multiple batches, I use a silicone spatula to scrape any brown bits and as much grease as possible from the pan into my muffin-tin “puck molds”.

Every batch is different, but once you find the right heat level don’t mess with it. Best and easiest is to adjust cooking time by using your eyes.

[powered by WordPress.]

General Topics:

search blog:

other:


Add to Google
Add to My AOL

Subscribe to Stix 'n Brix

categories:

Mortgage Rates:

Links:

archives:

November 2008
S M T W T F S
« Jul    
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30  

52 queries. 0.311 seconds