You can cook bacon in the microwave, and it comes out pretty good - evenly cooked and fairly flat, but all those paper towels! What a waste!!!
You can buy pre-cooked bacon, but it's relatively expensive, and there aren't as many flavor/thickness combinations as there are in raw bacon.
Bacon fat in a jar. |
You can cook an entire package at one time, and if you're not going to use it all, you can either freeze or refrigerate the cooked bacon and use it one slice at a time. Just zap it in the microwave and you can make a nice, warm bacon, lettuce, and tomato sandwich.
Some recipes will have you cook some bacon, then add things to the bacon and its fat. In those cases, I start with some of my refrigerated bacon fat, add some of my pre-cooked bacon, get it hot, and there you are - just continue with the recipe as written.
So here it is...
Oven-Cooked Bacon
1 package bacon (1 lb regular thickness or 1 1/2 lb extra thick)
sheet pan (well, technically a half-sheet pan!)
Lots of ingredients, right? Well, it's not really a recipe - more like instructions!
So, preheat the oven to 400 degrees and set the rack in the lower third of the oven. (If you want the bacon extra crispy, put the rack in the lowest position). Separate the bacon slices and place them on in the sheet pan in a single layer. You can shove the slices as close together as you possibly can - just don't overlap them.
Put the pan in the oven. Cook about 20 minutes for regular bacon, and about 30 minutes for extra thick. Check it about 5-10 minutes before it's supposed to be done.
While the bacon is cooking, put one or two paper towels on a plate. When the bacon is finished, carefully remove the pan from the oven. There will be lots of bacon fat in the pan and it is HOT. Don't get burned, and don't spill it!
Using tongs, remove the slices of bacon from the pan and put them on the paper towel-lined plate to soak up the excess fat. Store or serve.
If desired, let the fat cool for several minutes. While it's still liquid, pour it into a GLASS jar. Put a lid on it and refrigerate. Use it where you usually use bacon fat or shortening for cooking.
Might I recommend using the heavy duty foil (it is nice and wide) to line the pan and fold up the edges to make the pan taller if needed. This will not only make clean up a breeze, but once you let the bacon fat cool a bit, it will be easy to pour into the container you want to save it in. If you plan to pitch it, let it congeal and fold it into the foil before pitching it. Works with pork or turkey bacon. So much faster, cleaner and safer than the skillet method!
ReplyDelete