The Best Way to Cook Bacon and The Science Behind Why it Tastes so Good | Bacon | What’s Eating Dan?



Is bacon the most over-exposed food ever? Dan Souza thinks so, and argues that it’s a darn shame because it makes bacon seem like a joke. Learn the science behind bacon’s mass appeal in this week’s episode.

Check out our oven-fried bacon recipe:
Check out our supermarket bacon taste test:
Make your own bacon from scratch:
Cooking bacon with a little water? You bet:
A mess-free method for oven-fried bacon:

Follow Dan on Facebook:
Follow Dan on Instagram:
Follow Dan on Twitter:

Check out our Is it Bad? series with Hannah Crowley:

ABOUT US: Located in Boston’s Seaport District in the historic Innovation and Design Building, America’s Test Kitchen features 15,000 square feet of kitchen space including multiple photography and video studios. It is the home of Cook’s Illustrated magazine and Cook’s Country magazine and is the workday destination for more than 60 test cooks, editors, and cookware specialists. Our mission is to test recipes over and over again until we understand how and why they work and until we arrive at the best version.

If you like us, follow us:

source

Similar Posts

48 Comments

  1. Personally, the best way for me to cook bacon is on a rack set (sprayed with nonstick cooking spray) over a baking pan. I put it in a cold oven and bake at 350° until done to my liking. In this way, the bacon renders the fat slowly and never cooks sitting in the fat. All of the bacon fat drips to the pan below the rack. Yes, this takes longer but 90-95% of the time you tend to get very straight bacon and it not greasy. Looks great for presentation, if that is important to you. Try it! 😉

  2. I could care less about the Kardashians and the scientific reason that I like the smell of bacon jeez Louise shut up the babble and tell us the temperature of the oven and the time you need to keep the bacon in there

  3. If you want that whole roasted bacon texture, particularly texture where the fat can be et comfortably on its own, simmer in a LOT of water, and don't overdo the frying portion (after the water has evaporated).

  4. Cook on the stove in a non stick Dutch oven. Controls the splatter and you can drain the fat off before easy clean up of wipe out with paper towel then hot water and a squirt of dish detergent. No way I'm going to have that splatter all over the oven!

  5. I cook my bacon low and slow on the cooktop, using a spatula to press down on the fatty portions of the bacon to ensure it cooks more evenly. You can't just let bacon sit and cook on its own. You have to really watch it. Good baking requires interaction from the cook.😉 Cooking in the oven makes a bigger mess that's harder to clean up in my opinion because of the splashing grease inside the oven. I have a ceramic cooktop, so all I have to do is cool it down, wipe it off good with soapy water. Then I can just clean it easily using the cooktop cleaner. This is much easier than cleaning the oven in my humble opinion. 😊

  6. As an electrician with thousands of customers, many of my commercial customers are restaurants and ALL OF THEM use the cookie sheet with parchment to cook bacon at 350ºF for 25- 30 minutes. So that's the way I do it at home.

Leave a Reply