Viewing post #1375009 by MISSINGROSIE

You are viewing a single post made by MISSINGROSIE in the thread called Recipes & kitchen stuff.
Image
Feb 20, 2017 10:07 PM CST
Name: Rosie
HILLSBOROUGH, NC (Zone 7b)
If it sparkles - I'm there!
Bookworm Dragonflies Garden Art Region: North Carolina Plays in the sandbox Deer
Cook Your Bacon in Water for Perfect Texture & No Splattering

Bacon isn't hard to cook on the stovetop, but every cook who's been hit by splattering fat knows it's not the most pleasant kitchen task to tackle. If you're cooking bacon for a lot of people, you can avoid this by cooking it in the oven on a roasting rack.

On the days when you just need a few slices for breakfast or a salad garnish, America's Test Kitchen came up with a way to create perfectly crisp bacon and minimize any grease splatters: just add water.


Step 1Add Enough Water to Cover & Cook on High
Place your bacon in a cold skillet on the stovetop and turn the heat to high. Add enough water to cover the bacon slices. This keeps the temperature low and even so the bacon doesn't dry out.


Step 2Let the Water Come to a Boil
When the water reaches a boil (212°F/100°C), turn the heat to medium. At this point, the fat from the bacon has almost completely rendered and you're less likely to burn it.


Step 3 Let the Water Boil Off
Once it's all gone, turn the heat to medium-low.

Step 4 Let the Bacon Get Crispy
Now here's where the bacon starts to crisp up. Since it's been cooked in water, it won't get tough or cook unevenly as it starts to brown.


Et voilà: perfect bacon, and you didn't receive any splatter burns in the process.


A couple of caveats: Epicurious points out that bacon cooked in this fashion does, indeed, have great crispy texture. However, it's less salty and is thinner than bacon cooked in a skillet without water.

The Kitchn also likes this method, but they recommend altering a few crucial details. First, use just enough water to cover the bottom of the pan, rather than adding enough to completely cover the bacon. Next, cook the bacon over medium-high heat until it evaporates, then lower the heat to medium until the bacon reaches the right stage of crispiness. In their estimation, the results were just as good and didn't take as long (waiting for water to boil off can be quite a time investment).

I think this sounds like a great trick to use when I'm cooking bacon just for me. The only drawbacks I can see to it is that you don't get to keep the yummy bacon fat to use in other dishes, and that the bacon still shrinks.
Don't squat with yer spurs on!

People try to turn back their "odometers." Not me. I want people to know 'why' I look this way. I've traveled a long way and some of the roads weren't paved

« Return to the thread "Recipes & kitchen stuff"
« Return to Sandbox forum
« Return to the Garden.org homepage

Member Login:

( No account? Join now! )

Today's site banner is by RootedInDirt and is called "Angel Trumpet"

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.