Author Notes
Nothing could be simpler than makin’ bacon, the king of all fried meats. How many “vegetarians” have you known who just eat the periodic slab of crisp sautéed hog fat? I rest my case. Bacon is God.
To cure your own bacon, plan and shop for ingredients well in advance. You might need to special-order the pork belly from your local butcher or grocery store. And if you can’t find curing salt (Insta-Cure #1) or hickory sawdust from your local kitchen supply shop or butcher, order it from online retailers like SausageMaker.com.
In this recipe, I offer three ways to smoke the bacon. If you go the liquid smoke route, use only the real stuff: fake liquid smoke has an unappealing chemical taste. Once the bacon is ready to eat, note that it will be easiest to slice thinly—a must if you like crispy bacon — when it is partially frozen and your knife is very sharp. —Karen Solomon
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Ingredients
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2 1/2-3 pounds
Skinless pork belly
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1/2 cup
Sugar
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1 tablespoon
Blackstrap molasses
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2 tablespoons
Kosher salt (plus more as needed)
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1 teaspoon
curing salt (Insta-Cure #1)
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1 teaspoon
ground black pepper
Directions
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Rinse the belly and thoroughly pat it dry until the surface is tacky. Trim off any thin edges so that the piece is one long rectangle. (You can save these excess pieces of belly for making sausage or lard, or for general roasting.)
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In a large, rectangular baking dish or pan, mix the sugar with the molasses until thoroughly incorporated. Then mix in the 2 tablespoons of salt, curing salt, and pepper and rub it evenly into the meat (like a relaxing, porcine spa treatment), spreading it evenly around the sides as well as the top and the bottom. Tuck the meat carefully inside a sealable plastic bag (gallon sized will work, but oversized are better if you can find them) and lay it flat in the refrigerator for 7 days, massaging the liquids that will amass through the bag and flipping it daily.
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After 7 days, inspect your bacon. It should be firm to the touch all over, like touching a cooked steak—a sign that it has been cured. If the flesh still feels spongy and soft in spots, massage the meat again with an additional 2 tablespoons salt and check it again after 1 or 2 days.
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Once the bacon is fully cured, discard the solids, rinse the meat well, and pat it dry. The next step to giving bacon that familiar flavor is the addition of smoke.
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Fastest: Roasting and Liquid Smoke
Preheat the oven to 200°F. Place the belly, fat side up, on a rack over a roasting pan and roast for 2 to 21/2 hours, until the interior temperature of the meat reaches 150°F. Gently brush the liquid smoke over the entirety of the bacon, covering both sides evenly.
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Slowest: Smoking on the Grill
Smoke the meat, fat side up, on the cool side of a low-heat grill, using a 3-cup packet of hickory sawdust, for 3 to 5 hours, until it reaches an internal temperature of 150°F.
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Best of Both Worlds: Smoking and Roasting
This is my preferred methodology, because I love the flavor of the smoke but often lack the patience for a full grill session.
Start smoking your meat, and do so as long as you’re able—at least 2 hours is really ideal. Smoke it until you get sick of babysitting the grill and tending to the coals. Finish the meat on a rack over a roasting pan in a 200°F oven until it reaches 150°F inside at its thickest point. Fry a slice of the bacon and taste. If it needs more smoke flavor, brush a thin layer of liquid smoke on both sides of the slab.
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Whichever method you use, when your bacon is ready, slice it as thin (or as thick) as you like it and fry, over medium heat, until browned on both sides. Drain on paper towels and enjoy.
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How to Store It
Bacon can be stored in large slabs, in precut hunks for flavoring beans or other dishes, or in slices, in layers between pieces of parchment paper, and sealed tightly in a freezer storage bag. Refrigerate up to 10 days or keep frozen up to 3 months.
Karen Solomon is the author of cookbooks Jam It, Pickle It, Cure It and Can It, Bottle It, Smoke It (Ten Speed Press/Random House). She also writes magazine and newspaper articles, blogs at http://ksolomon.com, and is a frequent cooking video talent on Chow.com. She specializes in urban homesteading/DIY food crafting, recipe development, recipe testing, chef and artisan profiles, food reviews, and food trend pieces. Karen teaches classes on pickles, fermentation, curing meat, canning, smoking, fruit confections, and countless other kitchen projects in the San Francisco Bay Area and beyond.
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