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

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  • čas přidán 19. 10. 2018
  • 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: cooks.io/2pXSKbw
    Check out our supermarket bacon taste test: cooks.io/2QPy2Wu
    Make your own bacon from scratch: • America's Test Kitchen...
    Cooking bacon with a little water? You bet: • How to Cook Bacon So I...
    A mess-free method for oven-fried bacon: • How to Cook Bacon in t...
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    Check out our Is it Bad? series with Hannah Crowley: • Is It Bad? With Hannah...
    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.
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Komentáře • 652

  • @gregchambers6100
    @gregchambers6100 Před 2 lety +21

    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.

    • @BooBaddyBig
      @BooBaddyBig Před 3 měsíci

      If you're doing a large batch, yes, that's the way to go, but if you're cooking one or two pieces, using an oven is incredible overkill and very slow.

  • @TheGenflute
    @TheGenflute Před 5 lety +153

    20 points for the Robert Smith photo when saying "speaking of curing..."

  • @59seank
    @59seank Před 5 lety +726

    Dear Dan: Please tell whoever is producing your videos to eliminate or lower the volume of the music.
    If you have old ears like mine, it's hard to understand what you're saying.

    • @deskueber1441
      @deskueber1441 Před 5 lety +9

      It's fine

    • @dataquester
      @dataquester Před 5 lety +134

      @@deskueber1441 for the hearing impaired any background noise can be detrimental to a conversation.. just becuz its ok to u and me dont mean it is for everyone.....peace...

    • @imager8763
      @imager8763 Před 5 lety +14

      Agreed!

    • @mrmagenta
      @mrmagenta Před 5 lety +10

      Microphone could use some compression or different mic’ing, sounds a little hollow and reverberant

    • @Knulppage
      @Knulppage Před 5 lety +11

      I know that when using hearing aids, background noise destroys all ability to hear. Screaming kids = UH OH!

  • @corystansbury
    @corystansbury Před 5 lety +216

    I've been using the water methods for two weeks and it's changed my life. Skies are bluer, water is wetter, and the world is suddenly at peace ☮️.

    • @thisscreensucks
      @thisscreensucks Před 5 lety +11

      same, my dad taught it to me.
      works great for the eggs too, little bit of water at the end, then put the lid on and it helps the top of the egg cook faster so its done before the bottom gets those crispy edges(which i hate)

    • @fredivory4304
      @fredivory4304 Před 5 lety +2

      Cory Stansbury Can I get a couple pounds of that? Lol.

    • @rockshot100
      @rockshot100 Před 5 lety +7

      Great to hear that the water method has changed your life. Meanwhile are you aware of the US involved in 7 wars??? Killing civilians and children on my dime really has changed MY life. Peace.

    • @MJ-ib7iq
      @MJ-ib7iq Před 5 lety

      😂 😂

    • @Zibbybob
      @Zibbybob Před 5 lety +1

      All you need is love - John Lennon

  • @mrbear1302
    @mrbear1302 Před 5 lety +174

    Dan-thank you for teaching the public about where nitrites some from. When I tell people that they can come from things like celery I get a very strange look!

    • @TSLMachine
      @TSLMachine Před 5 lety +25

      I think I can safely compare that "uncured" marketing ploy bit with the nitrates and nitrites to how a lot of people are avoiding Chinese food because of MSG, not knowing that it naturally occurs in a lot of food that they already eat anyway.

    • @mrbear1302
      @mrbear1302 Před 5 lety +2

      TSLMachine.......good point!

    • @Adamscommabrett
      @Adamscommabrett Před 5 lety +14

      I always tell people the "uncured" bacon is like saying a beer is alcohol free*
      (*except for the alcohols that naturally occur during fermentation)

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 Před 5 lety +11

      Only the ones that say nitrite/nitrate free get it from celery. And nitrates in celery are absolutely completely harmless*.
      The problem with nitrites is they combine with proteins called amines to form compounds called nitrosamines. Nitrosamines have been well documented to cause cancer. So while you might have a few molecules of nitrosamines form when eating vegetables with nitrites and meat at the same time, it's really not enough to even think about. But when you soak meat with nitrites, you get a LOT more nitrosamines. Plants also contain antioxidants that help prevent nitrates from turning into nitrites, and guess what they don't also include when they use nitrates from plants. That's right, they don't include the antioxidants. Making it worse still.
      So the fact that nitrates are also in vegetables is meaningless.
      But, young kids and babies should not be fed vegetables with a lot of nitrates, as it can cause anemia due to their having a higher pH level in their intestines.

    • @Osprey1994
      @Osprey1994 Před 5 lety +4

      Honestly it's stupid to worry about stuff like that... Everything seems to have cancer warnings these days even stuff you never would have thought should. Bacon is delicious and like many things should be enjoyed without worrying if it's going to have carcinogens.

  • @jeanramirez349
    @jeanramirez349 Před 2 lety +23

    I love Dan's episodes. I love them. Just wanted to say how much I love them.

    • @cltransler
      @cltransler Před 2 lety +1

      Stop being coy, Jean! Do you love them or not?!
      (I love them, too!)

  • @2AKNOT
    @2AKNOT Před 5 lety +14

    Wow, what an episode. It was like a Christmas present. We got history of bacon, anatomy of bacon, how to select bacon, how to cook bacon, how to make your own bacon. I feel like I need to watch this episode several times to absorb all of the good content. Thanks for the early Christmas guys.

  • @stevenleonmusic
    @stevenleonmusic Před 5 lety +54

    I thought I was crazy reading all these comments about the sound quality and BG music in your videos because it sounds fine to me on these stereo monitors. When I pulled the audio into Adobe Audition, however, I noticed that you basically have these mastered for broadcast TV with peaks at around -6 dB and the average loudness at like -27 LUFS. For CZcams it seems to go way better if your file is closer to around -13 LUFS on average (especially for this type of video where the sound is consistent all the way through, we do NOT want high dynamic range in this type of video, we want clarity and presence). Just using a loudness matcher to pull this up to -13 LUFS and peaks at -1 dB makes the whole thing louder and the vocal much more audible. I think people would stop complaining about your videos if you just boosted the overall loudness and compressed them a bit more. People are watching these videos on computers, laptops and phones more than anything else. Killing off some of that dynamic range with compression and boosting the volume will actually help you out in this case, simply due to the nature of the video (if it was a music video I would have a completely different view).

    • @CyberwizardProductions
      @CyberwizardProductions Před 5 lety +1

      That would be, because his videos are pretty much taken from a TV show, not created for youtube.

    • @stevenleonmusic
      @stevenleonmusic Před 5 lety +11

      @@CyberwizardProductions Which is great but you always have to remaster for the medium you're posting on. You can't use the same master for vinyl and CD just like you can't use the same master for CZcams and broadcast TV. It'd be nice if the digital formats were consistent, we'll probably get there some day.

    • @pariscloud2907
      @pariscloud2907 Před 4 lety +1

      @@stevenleonmusic I doubt we'll ever get a universal format or standard for digital stuff
      xkcd.com/927/

    • @warblingsongbird5530
      @warblingsongbird5530 Před 4 lety +4

      Steven Cooper, Ummmm, yeah, ok....totally understand...no, way over my head.

    • @kimhuff
      @kimhuff Před 2 lety

      This would be great information if I understood it. Lol

  • @queeffairy
    @queeffairy Před 5 lety +4

    People always complained about me taking forever to make bacon but I've always done the slow and low it always comes out perfectly.

  • @AGdroid
    @AGdroid Před 5 lety +102

    Dan, Love your "What's Eating Dan" episodes. One problem, please eliminate or at least severely lower the volume on the background music. As it is, it makes it almost impossible to hear what you're saying. Thanks, and keep up the great work!

    • @GntlTch
      @GntlTch Před 2 lety +4

      Absolutely!!! Background "noise" is the stupidest, most annoying aspect of CZcams videos. I cannot fathom why a publisher go to the trouble of speaking - presumably to convey information - and then completely destroys the communication with a too loud background sound track.
      The second most annoying trait is dropping your voice at the end of a sentence - usually on the most important word! Train yourself to speak at a level volume or run the audio though a dynamic equalizer.

    • @peggydejesusqq4595
      @peggydejesusqq4595 Před 2 lety +4

      I agree. Get rid of music or lower it and choose a better tune.

  • @kimhuff
    @kimhuff Před 2 lety +2

    I love watching this guy. Not only are his videos informative and recipes look tasty, but he is so cute and I just love to watch him talk. He does this thing with his mouth that puts a huge smile on my face.

  • @patriciajohnson1991
    @patriciajohnson1991 Před 5 lety +5

    Keep these videos coming. I love the humorous approach while teaching us all about food.

    • @stephanhewak
      @stephanhewak Před 6 měsíci

      I found the retro lab footage particularly compelling.

  • @markiangooley
    @markiangooley Před 4 lety +5

    I’ve known about the celery-juice trick for ages. Occasionally I’ll get infuriated when a label is full of smug language about the bacon or sausage or other cured meat being uncured, but usually I just ignore it as another lie that’s legal...

  • @rlb2444
    @rlb2444 Před rokem

    Always presented in a way that is understood clearly. Excellent.

  • @gregorym9591
    @gregorym9591 Před 5 lety +200

    Background noise is WAAAAYYYYY to loud.

  • @msj.randel1496
    @msj.randel1496 Před 4 lety +3

    I love Dan! Love seeing him cook on America's test kitchen!

  • @misinformationwithrandy
    @misinformationwithrandy Před 5 lety +2

    Cooking bacon in the oven, with two pieces making a "square" is my favorite way to cook it for burgers. 1) it gives you even distribution on the burger and 2) you get the right crispness.
    Great episode!

  • @steverundle8635
    @steverundle8635 Před 3 lety +1

    I always love your quirky informative vids!

  • @darylrosenblatt5313
    @darylrosenblatt5313 Před 5 lety +6

    I've cured my own bacon twice, once with a regular pork belly, which was wonderful. The second time was with an Iberico de Bellota belly imported from Spain. It's hands down the finest pork in the world (the A5 wagyu of pork) and as a bacon, it was incredible. I don't have a kettle girl, I have a large gas grille, so I smoked it with one of the four burners on low, and the belly on a rack as far away as possible. I bought for under $16 a LizzQ pellet smoker tube and it really does provide smoke for up to 4 or 5 hours. It does slice thick, but it vacuum seals well, and all the remaining bits that don't cut into slices makes the best lardons. I prefer to use the oven, but found 350 degrees to be better than 400.

  • @xTheOxx
    @xTheOxx Před 5 lety +2

    The visual pun at 3:46 is almost unforgivable. And yet I love it.

  • @babylonfive
    @babylonfive Před 5 lety

    Thanks Dan! Love your work. Please keep it up...

  • @ALegitimateYoutuber
    @ALegitimateYoutuber Před 5 lety +31

    I personially like doing bacon in the pan, because the texture is less uniform. Thus you get the crisp, but also some chew. which for me makes for a better overall eating experience.

    • @Edited6
      @Edited6 Před 5 lety +3

      I'm with you. A convenient trick for achieving this is to just avoid flipping them altogether, makes for a yin and yang like balance between the 2 sides.

    • @Osprey1994
      @Osprey1994 Před 5 lety +2

      My favorite way was on a grate suspended over coals.

    • @sharonolsen6579
      @sharonolsen6579 Před 4 lety

      @Valerie Hall very interesting .. !

  • @suzannemiller993
    @suzannemiller993 Před 5 lety +3

    I cook bacon in the microwave with parchment paper on the bottom and on top of the meat. 1 minute per slice more or less...Love it crisp!

  • @Paelorian
    @Paelorian Před 5 lety +6

    Bacon: so easy to make and hard to screw up, that Dan the perfectionist covers two different ways to prepare it in about half a minute. I love it.
    So if we don't need to fuss over technique, the question remaining is: which bacon to buy? I just read all the top online taste tests of American bacon brands. These are what I'm now looking for at the market:
    •Oscar Meyer Naturally Hardwood Smoked (not thick)
    •Hormel Black Label (not thick)
    •Farmland Thick Sliced
    •Plumrose Thick Sliced
    •Louis Rich Turkey Bacon
    My criterion is being a well-balanced bacon that is not overly salty or extreme in any way. To minimize the presence of nitrates and nitrites which turn to carcinogenic (cancer-promoting) nitrosamines when bacon is cooked at high heat (proven by a study in the Journal of Science to occur at 350°F), I disqualify any bacon that is not cured with sodium nitrite injection or immersion. I explain my reasoning below. I can't confirm these brands are delicious, as I haven't tried them yet, but they're what I'm looking out for after reading a dozen round-ups, with more reputable sources (like ATK/CI) given higher influence. Just do an internet search and check them yourself if you're curious. You'll see the brands I picked on those lists. Oscar Meyer especially gets picked a lot as a great "typical"-style bacon, usually in a very positive "crowd-pleaser" way although occasionally it's normality is taken as mediocrity by those with different tastes. Louis Rich is a bit of a wild card, but it's the only turkey bacon that I could find a taste test actually enthusiastically endorse. SF Gate, though not a trusted source, totally loved it when they did their taste test ten years ago. It's a brand produced by Oscar Meyer and I'm not sure if it's still in production. Every other turkey bacon in every other taste test was considered "meh" at best. I've eaten a lot of Trader Joe's turkey bacon, which is rather highly ranked in taste tests (for a turkey bacon), and I'm not surprised that there isn't a turkey bacon to be found at the supermarket that approaches the taste of pork bacon.
    I am not an expert, but I have spent the last few hours reading experts, and I will now explain why to my knowledge "uncured", "nitrate and nitrite free* (*except for...)" bacon is an deceitful and immoral scam as it contains at least as many and often more carcinogens when cooked (as Dan confirmed with his own test in the video). Nitrates and nitrites are added to bacon as during the curing process they turn into nitric oxide (and nitrous oxide), which is what actually produces the desired effects: although you can make old-fashioned bacon with nothing but smoke and salt (bacon which will not keep as long and must be handled like fresh meat unless dried or heavily salted), nitric oxide is a better preservative and we're used to the color and (especially) the taste. Nitrate turns into nitrite, but not completely, so nitrite is much better to cure with. Nitrates and nitrites are not unhealthy to consume (there's a lot of them in your healthy veggies), but when cooked at high heat (350°F+) can form carcinogenic (cancer-promoting) nitrosamines. So for the least amount of nitrosamines in your finished food, you want less nitrates and nitrites in your food when you cook it. This is definitely found in bacon cured with sodium nitrite ("Prague Powder #1" curing salt, by regulation 93.75% sodium and 6.25% nitrite) in combination with salts of ascorbic acid (vitamin C), such as sodium ascorbate or sodium erythorbate, and chemical phosphates. Look for those salts on the label, they're mandated by law to be added to injected/pumped bacon (550ppm of either) as they're proven to reduce nitrite and thus nitrosamines. Bacon that is injected with (typically) or immersed in (rare) sodium nitrate has the lowest legal maximum dose of sodium nitrate at 120ppm. Dry cured bacon has a higher legal limit of 200ppm. Directly adding sodium nitrite is superior because having it pure like that enables manufacturers to add the minimum amount necessary, which will fully cure and almost fully convert to nitric oxide which will not form nitrosamines when cooked. "Uncured" or "naturally" cured bacon that does not use isolated sodium nitrite or nitrate instead uses vegetable ingredients that contain nitrates and nitrates. And because it is variable in these ingredients, you get more nitrate in your food because more has been added to make sure it's fully cured. Possibly, it may be undercured, allowing the growth of dangerous pathogens. The precision of just adding sodium nitrite directly enables the producer to calculate just how much they need to add to cure, and no more, so that an often negligible amount is left in the food when it's cooked. Those "uncured" and "naturally cured" that advertise not having added sodium nitrate or nitrate are deceitfully taking advantage of a loophole that allows them to put as much nitrate or nitrite in the bacon as they want in the form of celery or other naturally occurring vegetable sources. It's identical when consumed by the body, and you actually will be consuming more because these ingredients are inherently less precise and controlled. They promise no nitrates and nitrates, but you get more in your bacon! The sodium nitrite bacon actually has very little nitrate left to turn into nitrosamines by the time you cook it, since it was already converted to nitric/nitrous oxide. It leaves the factory with usually 10-20% of the originally added nitrite remaining, and the amount of nitrite continues to decline during the product's shelf life and is often undetectable. To maintain the color of cured meat throughout the storage life of the product before it's expiration, only about 10-15ppm nitrite is needed as a residual amount to regenerate color pigment loss from oxidation and light exposure. But if the company just used celery juice or powder, because of how much less consistent it is in the amount of nitrites compared to synthesized pure sodium nitrite, and how it also includes nitrates as well as nitrites (which slowly but not completely turn to nitrites, and then oxidize) you may have a lot of nitrate and nitrite remaining to turn into harmful nitrosamines as your bacon cooks. It's unconscionable that companies are knowingly deceiving their customers in this way. If I sold bacon, I would put on the packaging a message like "minimal sodium nitrite curing salt proudly directly added with vitamin C and vitamin E, for bacon with zero nitrates and the minimum amount of nitrites possible in cured bacon" and explain clearly that having added a carefully measured minimum amount of sodium nitrate with sodium ascorbate or sodium erythorbate (some other additives like Vitamin E may help, too) means less potentially dangerous nitrite and zero nitrate in the bacon, for a minimum of carcinogenic nitrosamines when cooked at high heat. Less than with other methods. Though to be clear, if you cook at low heat, like below 300°, you won't see any nitrosamines no matter how much nitrate or nitrite is in the food. Scientists cooked 275°F bacon for a long time and didn't detect any nitrosamines. So if you really want to avoid all nitrosamines and use any bacon, it's possible. But since it's not very practical to get a nice sear at that temperature, we want no nitrate and a minimum of nitrite to allow us to cook at a nice searing temperature without significant nitrosamine formation. You get that with properly made bacon cured with synthesized sodium nitrite.
    *Bacon curing science sources:*
    USDA:
    www.fsis.usda.gov/wps/portal/fsis/topics/food-safety-education/get-answers/food-safety-fact-sheets/meat-preparation/bacon-and-food-safety/CT_Index
    Ruhlman:
    ruhlman.com/2011/05/the-no-nitrites-added-hoax/
    ruhlman.com/2011/02/meat-curing-safety-issues/
    Junkfood science:
    junkfoodscience.blogspot.com/2008/07/does-banning-hotdogs-and-bacon-make.html?m=1
    "Meat guy" on Serious Eats, who has direct professional experience (apparently as a food scientist), his highly informative detailed post is on page four of in comment section of this article:
    www.seriouseats.com/talk/2013/07/whats-your-favorite-hot-dog-topping.html#comments-400690
    "Sodium Nitrite in Processed Meat and Poultry Meats", American Meat Science Association (2011):
    www.meatscience.org/docs/default-source/publications-resources/white-papers/2011-11-amsa-nitrite-white-paper.pdf?sfvrsn=8

  • @Avacarho
    @Avacarho Před 3 lety +3

    On a foil lined rimmed baking sheet, I place bacon on a cooling rack placed, then place a second cooling rack on top of the bacon. This allows the bacon grease to drain and keeps the bacon flat for sandwiches. I’ve woven strips of bacon til they’re the size of the bread then baked it in the oven. Perfect for BLT sandwiches.

    • @kareninalabama
      @kareninalabama Před 5 měsíci

      My bacon always stays relatively flat when I cook it directly on a foil-lined rimmed baking sheet without the wire cooling racks.

  • @hearttoheart4me
    @hearttoheart4me Před 5 lety +4

    Growing up we raised pigs and my dad dry cured pork belly. It was delicious.
    I bought some dry cured bacon at a warehouse store. 2 pounds to be exact. Took it to a friends place and smoked it all. It had a lot of meat in it with just enough fat to flavor it. It was awesome.

  • @anorangewithacapybaraunder2370

    I caught my college flat mate smashing back my crispy bacon when I came back to get my laptop that I forgot to take lol.
    Prior to this he always claimed that he never eats pork.
    He’s Muslim, I still mock him about it every time hah

  • @seriouslyreally5413
    @seriouslyreally5413 Před 4 lety +2

    Place on a rack on a rimmed baking sheet in the oven. ( there will be a lot of fat rendered off) Monitor cooking time closely as it will cook faster. For thick sliced bacon you will have to flip the strips over once to crisp up both sides because of the thickness. The rack drains most of the fat at the same time the cooking crisps up the strips so you waste no time blotting on paper towels before eating bacon😍

  • @ciarajames5483
    @ciarajames5483 Před 2 lety +4

    this was a very informative and interesting video! i personally use the oven to cook bacon and it has been a life changer ;)

  • @adamgoodrich80
    @adamgoodrich80 Před 5 lety +44

    I have to know how you clean that half-sheet pan after cooking bacon in the oven without lining with foil.
    Seriously, like step-by-step. Preferably a whole video, filmed in real time.

    • @nassimrad9638
      @nassimrad9638 Před 5 lety +3

      Try white balsamic vinegar (or any vinegar essence), let it sit for an hour or so, best overnight and the next day you just rinse the residue off 👌 no scrubbing or harming your pan/pot

    • @solargoldfish
      @solargoldfish Před 4 lety +3

      Use a ceramic lined tray, a wire rack, or just keep keep the temperature low. I’ve never had issues cleaning the tray after making bacon in the oven. I started doing it when I was a teenager and my family always looked at me like it was fancy because it came from the oven. I’d also make omelettes in a muffin pan. Then you have time to make a smoothie or some fruit salad.

    • @Demisc32
      @Demisc32 Před 4 lety

      wood ash bro

    • @pmur079
      @pmur079 Před 4 lety +5

      Use parchment paper - -OR- -pre-warm the sheet pan, cook the bacon 325 pull off when done/ drain and save grease/wipe the sheet pan with a paper towel. If any stuck bits soak the pan for 5-10 minutes and done. Happy Day!

    • @alejodavies
      @alejodavies Před 4 lety +3

      Very hot water, dish soap, a lot of elbow grease and a good scrubber. Let it soak as much as possible first.
      The other methods are smart. But you can definitely do it old school.

  • @SteveMillerhuntingforfood

    My all time favorite way to prepare bacon is to use my pellet smoker and cook the bacon at about 220F for about 45min. Sprinkle with either brown sugar or brush with maple syrup several times during the rendering process.

  • @hellohangfire
    @hellohangfire Před 5 lety +5

    Dan, you are now a food nerd god. Thank you for the best episode yet. Yes, Bacon is overexposed. However, I will eat it until I die. Thanks for the tip on the water in the pan. Also, for inspiring me to make some Bacon from scratch. I’m going to do that!

  • @cyborgxslaphappy2732
    @cyborgxslaphappy2732 Před 5 lety

    Best video I’ve seen on bacon ever! Well done again DAN!

  • @jasperextercatte7795
    @jasperextercatte7795 Před 5 lety +1

    I always want a quik style, so what i do: i grab my tosti iron, i put the bacon in, leave the iron open. While i turn it on. Wait till the bacon starts to shrivil a little bit. And then add a slic of bread on top. Then i close the tosti iron, wait a little bit and boom! Delicious bread with bacon

  • @GlenAndFriendsCooking
    @GlenAndFriendsCooking Před 5 lety +27

    We make our own bacon all the time - pretty easy, not a lot of time, it mostly just sits in the fridge.

    •  Před 3 lety +1

      Why would you let it just sit in there, eat it!

    • @etuheu
      @etuheu Před 3 lety +3

      WHAO! we have a celebrity here guys

  • @markhaugland4620
    @markhaugland4620 Před rokem +1

    Great video, thank you. I often overcook bacon and suspect my "window of perfection" is short due to the high heat. I'll try your recipe, use low heat and add water.

  • @AlphaGeminorum1
    @AlphaGeminorum1 Před 4 lety +6

    Bacon is one of the food groups. That' why it's so important to human existence.

  • @robrobinson1343
    @robrobinson1343 Před 5 lety +1

    Scientifically educational. Thank you.

  • @lisaeastes3104
    @lisaeastes3104 Před rokem

    Wow I'm about to cook my bacon in oven thanks for sharing this. I love your videos ❤❤❤

  • @10ashagirl
    @10ashagirl Před 5 lety

    EXCELLENT And thank you for the detailed information

  • @johnnygarretson99
    @johnnygarretson99 Před 5 lety

    Thank you, great video as usual

  • @dixieman2864
    @dixieman2864 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you for sharing

  • @norvindennis7803
    @norvindennis7803 Před 5 lety +2

    You all must have cheap computer speakers. Dan sounds great on my laptop. Now I have to go eat some bacon. Thanks Dan. LOL

  • @nankidd3050
    @nankidd3050 Před 4 lety +1

    Dan love your teach love the info.

  • @clairechapin6901
    @clairechapin6901 Před 5 lety +2

    Thanks, Dan. I was born in Cuba. Been here 50 years. I have been teaching the knuckle method for years. Never knew how it worked but it's how my mom taught me. Perfect rice every time. Also, I have heard recently that if you add coconut oil to the pot of rice, before you boil the rice and then refrigerate for at least 12hours. You can reheat the rice and eliminate at least 1/ 2 the total starch content. Is this true? Sure would like it if it's true. Thanks for the science!

  • @dhhannie
    @dhhannie Před 2 lety

    You are such a creative young man. Thank you for teaching us so many interesting things in our world. Nitrites insight just lowered my grocery bill!

  • @georgeberry1959
    @georgeberry1959 Před 5 lety +93

    So straight up this is why Dan's (and America's Test Kitchen) videos are so much better than other chefs like Babish and Tasty.
    The garlic episode changed my cooking forever. Instead of spending 5 minutes on a recipe, sometimes 2 or 3, Dan focused on one ingredient and taught me WHY these things happen.
    To this day I'm still revelling in an Allicin Wonderland

    • @danielleanderson6371
      @danielleanderson6371 Před 5 lety +16

      I don't know if you can really compare the two. ATK has some great content, but I never watch their recipe videos, because people like Babish do better recipes. ATK will always be my go-to for things like techniques, food science, and equipment reviews, though. To me they scratch different itches.

    • @Nocturne22
      @Nocturne22 Před 5 lety +19

      Babish is not a food scientist or trained professional, he's an amateur cook making recipes according to what he does/likes.
      And Tasty is a plagiarizing mess that only cares about the spectacle and going viral.

    • @grfrog
      @grfrog Před 5 lety +3

      Good Eats>Test Kitchen>Serious Eats

    • @Smileypb01
      @Smileypb01 Před 5 lety +1

      Good Eats>Old school Test Kitchen>Food Wishes. Haven't checked out Good Eats Reloaded yet.

    • @GlenAndFriendsCooking
      @GlenAndFriendsCooking Před 5 lety +7

      Dans technique and ingredient videos are great - but I find the main ATK recipe videos a dismal mess of 'shortcuts and hacks' that take away from taste and texture of the finished dish in the name of (false) convenience. The Babish recipes are a great story, but for the most part he's trying to entertain, rather than teach. The Bon Appetite channel has killer technique as well as some great recipes. Serious Eats took a serious hit when they were sold and their programming changed. CZcams can be like the wild west of cooking info.

  • @semco72057
    @semco72057 Před 5 lety +3

    I love bacon and grew up eating it daily and ended up being healthy for decades. My father would get his bacon from the slaughter house near us when I was in Michigan and when here in Arkansas we ate the bacon my grandmother cooked it for us all the time for breakfast and to this day I love bacon, but do eat more sausage now for breakfast.

  • @Vocedimeche
    @Vocedimeche Před 2 lety

    Love this video! At 4:37 the sound dropped out. Was this a recommendation for dry smoking?

  • @jessefountain4181
    @jessefountain4181 Před 4 lety +1

    I’m a rabid bacon consumer and I learned A LOT from this video! Thanks for exposing the “uncured” bacon myth and the tip of introducing a bit of water at the beginning of the pan fry. As always Dan, you nailed it.

    • @GntlTch
      @GntlTch Před 2 lety

      The best way to cook bacon for small amounts is to microwave it on paper towels - switching once or twice to remove the fat. For large amounts bake it on wire racks in the oven. Both methods result in very crispy bacon with minimal fat. Frying or baking on a flat sheet leaves bacon swimming in fat, never really crispy.

  • @Director414
    @Director414 Před 4 lety

    amazing video. love it!!

  • @blahtherr
    @blahtherr Před 5 lety

    what an insightful video. great!

  • @RHEarl
    @RHEarl Před 5 lety +8

    I have a bacon necktie and a bacon T-Shirt. I have tried Bacon Toothpaste, Bacon Toothpicks, Bacon Jelly Beans, Bacon Soda-pop and probably other items. But the bacon I like best is nicely cooked, somewhat limp bacon. I don't want it to be burned or too crisp. I find that often the cheapest brands of bacon taste the best.

  • @livingod101
    @livingod101 Před 5 lety +1

    We actually have a Facebook group called "May I have bacon with that please" and every year on the month of May we post pics of bacon on/in everything that we order. And one year we had a bacon tour.

  • @ropro9817
    @ropro9817 Před 5 lety +6

    Haha, zero dislikes. Everyone loves bacon! And Dan! 😋

    • @TykoBrian7
      @TykoBrian7 Před 5 lety +3

      A pig just disliked it.

    • @ropro9817
      @ropro9817 Před 5 lety

      @@TykoBrian7 damn vegans

    • @wotan10950
      @wotan10950 Před 5 lety

      I do like Dan, but I’m kosher so no bacon.

  • @alansnipes3101
    @alansnipes3101 Před 4 lety

    I have come up with a great way to cook bacon for an individual. You microwave it. I put two paper towels on a plate add 3 strips of thick bacon, cover with another paper towel. I have a 1200 watt microwave oven which I then microwave the bacon for about five and a half minutes on 80% power. Then remove the plate and paper towels. If you cook it too long the paper towels can stick to the bacon so this may take a little trial and error with your microwave. If it is not yet done, you can add another 30 seconds of cooking time. This method removes a lot of the grease and your bacon is crisp. Another advantage is that the plate gets hot and keeps your bacon and eggs warm for a longer period of time.

  • @gena7359
    @gena7359 Před 5 lety +1

    I have been eyeing pork belly for awhile to make bacon to share as Christmas gifts! Great video. And everyone in our house agrees, bacon is best in the oven, especially to feed a crowd!

  • @paulco4145
    @paulco4145 Před 5 lety

    Dan, you are my hero! Love it!

  • @donwhitehead4587
    @donwhitehead4587 Před 5 lety

    Oh thank you, Great Bacon Educator👍🏻

  • @SteveMillerhuntingforfood

    I cook my thick-sliced bacon on a Treager Pellet grill at about 350 degrees. It takes about 25+ mins but it comes out perfect. The fat falls to a foil line pan and easily tossed into the trash.
    For a treat I will sprinkle the bacon with brown sugar, both sides.....Candied Bacon. A gift from heaven.

  • @Vishnu6
    @Vishnu6 Před 5 lety +1

    Hahaha the reference to the Cure was the best!

  • @kareninalabama
    @kareninalabama Před 5 měsíci

    Per Kenji (the *original* "Dan" of CI), the oven temperature you use will affect the texture of the bacon. He said "between 425°F bacon and 375°F bacon, there was a pretty significant difference in texture. The bacon cooked at a lower temperature was more tender" and had that melt-in-your-mouth quality, while bacon cooked for a shorter time at a higher temperature had more of a meaty, chewy texture. As he explained: "Tough connective tissue in both the fat and the lean sections of bacon tenderizes with extended cooking, so the longer you take to crisp the bacon, the more tender it's going to be." (Ironically, he ultimately goes with 425°F for his recipe since it produces bacon with the texture his wife likes best. Smart man!)
    As for me, I choose to start low, at 350 or 375°F, and start it in a cold oven. But I don't bother with a rack on the baking sheet, as I've found (and also noted by Kenji) that it's not worth the hassle of having to clean that wire rack. Additionally, bacon that's cooked directly on a baking sheet (foil-lined for easier cleanup) is no greasier than bacon elevated by a rack; it just requires a blotting with paper towels after cooking. And by using the rack, some parts of the bacon are a little prone to drying out, so they can turn tougher and chewier. Besides, by cooking the bacon directly on a rimmed baking sheet, the fat helps it to cook more evenly, while also protecting it from drying out or turning leathery.

  • @cmmalek
    @cmmalek Před 4 lety

    Glad you pointed out that “uncured bacon” is just a marketing ploy and contains the same nitrites as regular bacon. One detail that’s off is you say bacon contains nitrites or nitrates in the form of curing salt or celery powder, but that’s only nitrites. Nitrates are used in longer cured meats because over time they break down into nitrites. Nitrates aren’t used in making bacon since it’s a relatively short cure.

  • @xsjado1air
    @xsjado1air Před 5 lety

    this channel right here. awesome. subbed.

  • @dougmolt4990
    @dougmolt4990 Před 5 lety +20

    Great except for that background music. Tends to occasionally interfere with Dan's words.

  • @TheRguru1
    @TheRguru1 Před 5 lety +2

    Sometimes I soak my bacon in water for about 5 minutes before cooking. This reduces the saltiness a little, making it less harsh on the tongue, and in my own testing it gave me crispier bacon.

  • @hollym5873
    @hollym5873 Před 5 lety

    Great video. I love bacon. I usually bake a pound in the oven once I open the pack. I freeze the bacon in serving size portions to use during the week. Just pop in the microwave for about 30 seconds.

  • @bpp325
    @bpp325 Před 2 lety +1

    Cured/smoked over corn cob pellets last Fall...It was phenomenal and the best I ever tasted and well worth the effort.👍👍

  • @cancel1913
    @cancel1913 Před 5 lety +1

    Dan, duuuude you are pretty awesome! Like your style. Just saw your mushroom vid and now this one. I subscribed.

  • @traderjoe27
    @traderjoe27 Před 5 lety

    Hey Dan! What would be a good cut of beef to use for making bacon?

  • @steveyork8069
    @steveyork8069 Před 2 lety

    Someone once asked me,”If bacon makes everything taste better,what makes bacon taste better?”My reply more bacon!🥓🥓🥓🔥💯❤️👍

  • @GiovaniGatto
    @GiovaniGatto Před 5 lety

    that's this channel's best series

  • @douglasmolt2046
    @douglasmolt2046 Před 10 měsíci

    I use the microwave. Three sections of folded newspaper, a paper towel, three or four strips of bacon, another paper towel and three more folded sections of newspaper. Need a large microwave oven so full strips lay flat. 3 1/2-4 minutes and bacon comes out perfectly crisp and flat. Only drawback: no bacon fat to keep in fridge for later cooking - it's all soaked up in the papers.

  • @sweingold5686
    @sweingold5686 Před 2 lety

    I always learn something. I have bought all types of bacon. I like baking it in the oven. One thing you didn't mention is adding brown sugar before baking. Yum!

  • @microcolonel
    @microcolonel Před rokem +1

    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).

  • @volbia12
    @volbia12 Před 5 lety +8

    nothing ruins my breakfast like overcooked bacon. keep it slightly chewy please.

    • @Corzappy
      @Corzappy Před 5 lety

      FOR REAL! Like I don’t want your nasty ass sawdust bacon.

    • @TheJigsawBilly
      @TheJigsawBilly Před 4 lety +2

      1. No one in these CZcams comments will ever cook for you, ever
      2. "Overcooked" is a matter of taste when it comes to bacon, some people enjoy it chewy and others enjoy it crispy
      3. You shouldn't be upset when other people make food the way they like, because they're the ones eating it. Not you.

  • @yywongdds
    @yywongdds Před 4 lety

    when do you parboil the meats and when do you brown the meats before making meat dishes? what is the science behind it? Thanks

  • @alansnipes3101
    @alansnipes3101 Před 4 lety +1

    I have the best way to cook Bacon: Microwave it! I put 3 pieces of thick bacon on two paper towels on a microwavable plate and cover it with a single paper towel. My microwave is 1200 watts so I cook it at 80% power for about 5 minutes and 20 seconds. If you cook it too long it will stick to the paper towels. You can under cook it a little and always add 30 seconds to the cooking time. The benefit is you have gotten rid of a lot of fat and chemicals that are not good for you and the bacon is crisp. Also, your plate is hot and that will keep your eggs warm as well. I have never seen this done on a cooking show.

  • @PJ_the_tortie
    @PJ_the_tortie Před 5 lety +1

    I cook mine on a rack in a pellet grill. It takes awhile but it's really good!

  • @robertmiddendorf1519
    @robertmiddendorf1519 Před 2 lety

    I love this episode.

  • @MmmVomit
    @MmmVomit Před 5 lety +3

    I like to fry my bacon hot and fast, just until it stops sizzling. Gets some nice browning, makes some crispy bits, but leaves it pleasantly chewy.

  • @sailnav
    @sailnav Před 4 lety

    No mention of Microwaving bacon.
    Place slices between two sheets of paper towels on a plate. Cook at standard high power for 45 sec per slice. Adjust time for desired crispness.
    Benefit: 1.) each slice is cooked throughout, much like oven procedure; 2.) paper towels absorb all grease: no spatter.

  • @slam854
    @slam854 Před 6 měsíci

    I tried an Extreme! Stock pot with steamer basket layered paper towels, bacon, repeat. I steamed for 1hr giving a rendered fat, soft and flavorful with tender meat structure. Steaming is a win.

  • @kzgc8y3n
    @kzgc8y3n Před 3 lety

    Thanks

  • @truegrit2011
    @truegrit2011 Před 2 lety +1

    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. 😊

  • @williamfahey6066
    @williamfahey6066 Před 2 lety

    I cook Bacon in my Microwave.
    Put it on a Microwave Safe plate cover with two layers
    of paper towels, to absorb the splattering, and cook
    on high for ,on average, one minute for each slice.
    Adjust cooking time for your preference, a few more
    seconds for crispier a few less for less crispy.
    The cooking toward the end is very fast so do not leave
    it unattended. You can always ad more heat but you
    can not remove it.
    Jeff

  • @stephenhill6791
    @stephenhill6791 Před rokem

    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! ;)

  • @kittykat717
    @kittykat717 Před 5 lety

    Robert thank you so much for sending me the information I requested.

  • @Mariolamenha
    @Mariolamenha Před 5 lety

    Very cool video!

  • @Bergalicious38
    @Bergalicious38 Před 5 lety +2

    Thank you! I've always suspected meats were injected with water! People thought I was crazy! I thought it was to give more weight to the product for profit gain. No bacon patterned clothing here. We used to salt hog legs and hang them in the barn loft, grind our own sausage, etc. I'm surprised I, still, eat bacon. Love to see you enjoying the spoils at the end!

    • @hearttoheart4me
      @hearttoheart4me Před 5 lety +1

      Beef, pork, chicken, turkey and most other meats are injected with water to add weight for larger profit. Bacon is so expensive now because of the craze.

    • @Bergalicious38
      @Bergalicious38 Před 5 lety

      I know! Even gamers on Twich are putting Bacon in their monikers (gamer names)! It works, too! Bacon_Donut is very popular on Twitch.

  • @toricarrillo5165
    @toricarrillo5165 Před 5 lety +7

    Finally someone else who prefers thin cut bacon! Everyone I know thinks I’m crazy and tells me how much better thick cut it. I think it’s too much like eating jerky. 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @BBQAndButter
      @BBQAndButter Před 5 lety +1

      The really thin cut is perfect for BLT's.

  • @wufflemann
    @wufflemann Před 5 lety

    Thanks for the water tip!

  • @realgungeek93
    @realgungeek93 Před 4 lety

    Does someone know where the lab-clip at 3:06 comes from?
    Would like to watch the original video.

  • @billmannino8555
    @billmannino8555 Před 3 lety

    Generally speaking, for 3 perfectly cooked slices of bacon, i put the bacon on a plate covered with 1 piece of paper towel and then place another piece of paper towel on top of the bacon, completely covering the bacon. "Nuke" on high for 3 minutes and check results. If needs a bit more cooking, add 30 seconds of additional time and cook. Remove and pat dry with another piece of paper towel. Will be perfectly cooked, flat and free of excess bacon fat.

  • @brucefarrar7359
    @brucefarrar7359 Před 2 lety +1

    Love the content and I am with Andy - tone down or eliminate the background "music"

  • @onandover1
    @onandover1 Před 11 měsíci

    Learning about retronasal olfaction is something of a revelation, neat!

  • @deniseschelsky5653
    @deniseschelsky5653 Před 2 lety

    I cook it in the air fryer - super easy and delicious!

  • @collegealgebravideos9540

    My respect for you just increased when I learned that you like bacon properly cooked (in your words, "shatteringly crisp")

  • @msj.randel1496
    @msj.randel1496 Před 4 lety

    I definitely subscribed & mashed the bell as NOT to miss anything!

  • @WilliamDye-willdye
    @WilliamDye-willdye Před 5 lety +6

    Dan seems to be adding a lot less water to the pan in this bacon video than he did in his video from a few years ago. Is it just to save time? I tried the old cover-it-in-water method a while back, and the results were great, but took so much time that I might as well use the oven method.

    • @lizicadumitru9683
      @lizicadumitru9683 Před 5 lety +1

      If you can the oven method beats the stove top water method any day

    • @rosecolouredglasses
      @rosecolouredglasses Před 5 lety +3

      Yeah in the old atk vid the bacon was basically reduction boiled in a pan of water.