Grilled Bacon

by Kelly on April 11, 2012 · 8 comments

 

Grilled-Bacon-recipe

Have you ever had grilled bacon? If not, you are so missing out. I love bacon any way you prepare it, but once we started grilling it, I can’t make it any other way.

When you think about how to cook bacon, it may not have even occurred to you that you can try cooking bacon on the grill. In fact, we discovered it when we actually did this by accident one night. I didn’t want to mess up the kitchen, and we were already grilling burgers outside. What we found was that cooking bacon on the grill has multiple benefits!

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Tastes Better – Bacon on the grill has that nice, smoky grill taste. It really adds to the flavor.

Less Cleanup – By cooking bacon on the grill outside, I don’t have a messy pan to clean. (If you normally use the microwave, you’ll avoid the trash of several greasy paper towels.)

No Leftover Grease – Unlike cooking bacon in a pan, I don’t have to figure out what to do with the hot bacon grease before I clean up.

A Less Greasy Option – If bacon can be “healthier,” then at least grilling bacon keeps it from sitting in its own grease/fat in a pan. (There is no need to let it drain on paper towels either.)

No Curling – It’s much easier to put grilled bacon on sandwiches or over meats as a topper because your end result from cooking bacon on the grill is nice, straight pieces, with no curling.

Here are my step-by-step instructions for grilling bacon:

Grilled-Bacon-one-pound

Take the entire package of bacon and drop it in the center or side of the grill on medium heat.

Grilling-Bacon-on-grill

With a pair of tongs, slowly and carefully separate the bacon and lay each piece out individually on the grill surface.  Grill for about 6-7 minutes per side. *COOKS NOTE: If you prefer crispier bacon, cook on medium-high heat for about 5-6 minutes per side.

Grilled Bacon

Grilled Bacon

Ingredients

  • 1 pound bacon

Instructions

  1. Take the entire package of bacon and drop it in the center or side of the grill on medium heat.
  2. With a pair of tongs, slowly and carefully separate the bacon and lay each piece out individually on the grill surface.
  3. Grill for about 6-7 minutes per side. *COOKS NOTE: If you prefer crispier bacon, cook on medium-high heat for about 5-6 minutes per side.
http://faithfulprovisions.com/2012/04/11/grilled-bacon/

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Recipe developed by Kelly Hancock ©2010 Faithful Provisions. For personal use only. May not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed for capital gain without prior permission from Kelly Hancock.

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{ 8 comments }

{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Kristin April 11, 2012 at 5:38 pm

Does the grease not sit in the bottom of the grill which would be a nightmare to clean?

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2 Conlimom July 6, 2012 at 8:31 pm

My bacon ignited from the dripping grease and incinerated. When I checked it after a few short minutes, most of it had turned to ash – the rest was on fire. How do you keep the dripping grease from catching fire?

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3 Kelly July 7, 2012 at 8:39 am

Wow! I have been grilling bacon for a while, and never had that happen — I am so sorry! It sounds like to me you might need to clean your grill. Whether you cook bacon or not, you would want to keep the drip pan and grates clean for safety reasons.

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4 mike July 11, 2012 at 9:04 am

Conlimom Sounds as though your skillet is far too hot

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5 Chris May 9, 2013 at 8:04 pm

Yep, $4 of bacon up in ash as the grease dripped down and started a bonfire. Did some research and on to package number two.
Bacon grease will catch on fire like gas to a flame. There are two methods that I’ve found that work. Method One: The aluminum foil method. Make sure you take your foil and turn up the edges to catch the bacon grease so as not to cause flame bursts, lay out your bacon on the foil and cook it much as you would in a pan. Yes, the bacon cooks in it’s own grease so this is not the healthy method, but on the bright side you can grill up that burger or leftover ham in the grease and yum yum yum!
Method Two (the one I personally use), I have a two burner grill, so I turn off one side and cook on that side. The heat from the opposite burner cooks the bacon and the grease drops, so as not to cook it in it’s own grease, and the flare ups from the grease (if they happen) occur on the side that your not cooking on, in other words your bacon is safe from turning to ash.
Hope this helps, and good luck!

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