Matt wrote: The main downside on microwaving from my perspective is not having the leftover bacon fat. I suppose you could get at it with some type of grooved microwave bacon cooker or by perhaps wringing the paper towels? -- but that seems labor intensive and probably ends up wasting a fair bit of the fat. .
David Hammond wrote:I have one of those ridged bacon cooker that holds the rendered fat in a moat. I'm most interested in the flavor/texture of the bacon.
LAZ wrote:I had occasion to test a lot of bacon recipes last year. If you like crisp bacon, the microwave is definitely the way to go for small quantities.
Cathy2 wrote:When I was a kid, a friend's Dad like his bacon crisp and he like it flat. He would bake his bacon in the oven. My fuzzy memory recalls he put on weight on it to keep the bacon from curling. This was a Saturday morning meal in a household more inclined to cereal and milk.
JoelF wrote:The biggest pain of the grooved microwave baconators is that cleaning them is very difficult -- they'll get stained over time. Deal with that, and you can have great bacon AND rendered fat.
Vital Information wrote:I was a pretty confirmed microwave kinda guy, but lately I've run into two problems. First, and this is just me, but my micro tends to overheat on steamy things like bacon. Second, and more important, my wife complains about the lingering bacon smell in the radarrange (imagine that!).
bananasandwiches wrote:2) A trick for de-greasing and de-baconating the old micro: take a glass bowl, fill it with water and one sliced lemon. Nuke the water for about 2 to 3 mins, then wipe down the inside of the micro with a damp sponge and Bob, as they say, is your uncle. Something about the steamy citrus vapors really cuts through the pork grease.
figmolly wrote:I don't trust the microwave for much besides melting butter, I guess I'm just old fashioned. I vote for the oven method and I like my bacon fairly well done.
Katie wrote:But there's an oven way too? I like that idea even more. Learn something new every day.
eggplant wrote:I do almost what Michael does with the cooling rack and the baking sheet. Except that I pre-heat the oven and put the bacon in then
eatchicago wrote:eggplant wrote:I do almost what Michael does with the cooling rack and the baking sheet. Except that I pre-heat the oven and put the bacon in then
I've tried it both ways and I've found that there's zero benefit to letting the oven pre-heat first.
eggplant wrote:eatchicago wrote:eggplant wrote:I do almost what Michael does with the cooling rack and the baking sheet. Except that I pre-heat the oven and put the bacon in then
I've tried it both ways and I've found that there's zero benefit to letting the oven pre-heat first.
I will have to try your way. How long does it take for your oven to pre-heat to 400? I am guessing it takes different amounts of time for different ovens to pre-heat.