I'm behind schedule on this, but what's new, right?
About an hour ago, I used two slices of thick-cut bacon to determine whether they could be microwaved to appropriate crispiness. With standard-cut bacon, you normally need about a minute or so per slice to achieve desired crisposity; I rolled up two thick slices around a bamboo skewer and set the 'wave for 2:30. This proved inadequate: the bacon was done (and edible-- mmmm), but not nearly crispy enough. Later tonight, once I'm home from work, I'll try again, perhaps going for 3:30. I'm hoping that an extra minute of 'waving will be perfect and won't carbonize the pig. We'll see. If I succeed, the next step will be to let the bacon sit, then drench it in a maple/butter combination, then let it sit again before finally covering it in chocolate and perhaps adding some sort of topping.
Another thing I learned is that, while the bacon does shrink on the skewer and does retain its spiral shape (I had worried about sizzle-induced partial unspooling; my fears proved groundless), it ends up looking like a football-- a pigskin, if you will. This may actually be a good thing: from now on, I'll be slicing the cooked bacon in half (assuming crispy bacon can slice; I may need to slice earlier in the cooking process) in order to have truffles with the proper dimensions. Slicing will also serve to open the spirals by offering a cross-section view; the maple/butter mixture will have no trouble draining into that.
More later. Possibly with pictures.
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DONT waste your bacon. when you "'wave" it, do it to 2:30, then in 10 or 15 second increments after that.
ReplyDeletesorry but i hate the thought of burning perfectly good bacon
Pigskin, eh? Sounds perfect for bowl games and the Superbowl...
ReplyDeleteMicrowaving bacon? I don't think I've ever done that before...
ReplyDeleteC,
ReplyDeleteAn uncle of mine in Texas, Mom's little brother, first recommended this technique to me a couple years ago. Wrap the bacon in paper towels, wrap that mess in newspaper, then microwave at approx. 1 minute per slice. It's very no-fuss-no-muss: as long as you've cooked the bacon to proper crispness, there's very little cleanup involved; just toss out the wrapping. Bacon cooks very quickly and efficiently in a microwave.
Hahna,
ReplyDeleteI heeded your advice & proceeded cautiously. As it turns out, 3:30 is about right for my microwave.
John,
Indeed.
K,
ReplyDeleteFascinating. I never knew that.
I'm NOW contemplating MacGuyvering a batch of chocolate bacon fudge; however, I plan on using this recipe
ReplyDeletehttp://www.thekitchn.com/thekitchn/ingredients-meat/try-this-candied-salted-bacon-096893
to candy the bacon first, then crumble it into the prepared fudge (which I have yet to decide if I"m going to incorporate some of the rendered out bacon grease into it--yanno for medicinal purposes):