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We like our bacon — whether it’s sharing the plate with scrambled eggs, sprinkled on a salad, nestled in a sandwich, or adding crunch to a donut. In fact, pre-sliced, refrigerated bacon is a $4 billion-per-year-industry in the US. That’s a whole lot of sizzle.
I’m a lucky woman — I have a husband who enjoys cooking up a big batch of scrambled eggs and bacon on Sunday mornings.
I’ve always loved the tantalizing aroma that fills our apartment with the promise of soon-to-come-deliciousness, but I didn’t much look forward to the mess that followed: splattered grease all over the stovetop, a hot cast-iron skillet filled with grease and requiring its own specialized cleanup, our corgi happily licking the floor in front of the stove where inevitable grease splashes landed. Ugh.
That’s why I was stoked when I learned how easy it is to bake bacon in the oven. Not only does this cut down on the mess, it also turns out perfectly crisped bacon without those little pockets of raw fat that stovetop frying always leaves behind.
You still smell the wonderful, distinctive aroma of bacon on the way, but the enjoyment is heightened by the knowledge that you won’t need to break out the mop after cooking it, nurse a burned spot on your arm, or pre-treat grease marks on your shirt before tossing it into the wash.
Plus, it’s an easy process that doesn’t even require you to turn the bacon over while it cooks. I can almost guarantee it: Once you try baking bacon in the oven, rather than frying it in a skillet, you’ll never go back.
Here’s how to cook up a batch of bacon right. The technique is the same whether you’re cooking traditional pork bacon or slightly healthier turkey bacon.
That’s it! You don’t have to waste precious weekend-morning time cleaning the stovetop or scrubbing a cast iron pan, and you still get to eat some bacon!
Here’s a trivia fact for you to enjoy while you nibble on your bacon. Oscar Mayer was not only a real person, but a German immigrant who came to America in the late 1800s and worked in a meatpacking plant before becoming a sausage maker. He also patented the very first pre-sliced, packaged bacon that we know and love to this very day. Mmmm, bacon.