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Cooking bacon isn’t difficult, but it’s messy, and there are still ways to ruin it. However, even burnt or floppy bacon is better than no bacon at all.
in order to great Bacon, I did a side-by-side test of the cooking methods to see which one produces the crispiest, most enticing strips with the least amount of hassle, also known as cleanup.
In this experiment, I cooked bacon three ways: in frying panin oven And in Air fryer. I’ve also cooked some strips in the microwave, but let’s get one thing out of the way: While the microwave can indeed make edible bacon, it produces the least satisfying result, by far.
So, on to the main contenders.
I grew up on fried bacon, but my testing revealed there was a better way.
This is how I grew up cooking bacon and it’s just as good. There’s not a lot of skill needed to fry bacon in a pan, although almost every batch I’ve made sends a healthy drizzle over the stove. In more unfortunate cases, this infernal grease lands directly on my skin or clothes, presenting two different but equally dangerous problems.
Fried bacon absorbs a large amount of grease, which is why many resort to paper towels to drain it after cooking. Frying these strips of pork belly also tends to curl them into little balls of bacon. While this has no effect on the taste, it can provide a suboptimal presentation.
I can feel the bombs falling just looking at this picture.
Another disadvantage of cooking bacon in a skillet is its limited capacity. A 10-inch skillet can only hold 7 medium-sized slices of bacon at a time, although you can add more as they shrink during cooking.
Then there’s the matter of cleaning said pan after use. Most cookware is not recommended for putting in the dishwasher, so you’ll have to deal with this greasy surface yourself.
Oven-baked bacon is best for cooking large quantities.
While it does involve more prep, Oven bacon It has obvious advantages over frying. First, there’s a little concern about capacity, as a standard cookie sheet or baking tray can hold almost an entire package of bacon, making the oven ideal for cooking large quantities.
Using a baking tray and rack allows larger infections to drip to the bottom. This makes the results crisper and less greasy, but causes a headache when it’s time to clean up. Cookie sheets and baking trays don’t fit well in the sink, and there’s usually enough grease that you don’t want to run them through the dishwasher.
You can line a baking sheet with aluminum foil, but it takes a lot of foil, and most of the time, the bacon fat finds its way under or through it anyway.
Oven-cooked bacon takes longer than bacon cooked in a skillet — about 18 minutes — but if you plan to cook a whole package and don’t want to tend to the stove while cooking, your oven is your best bet.
With its quick cooking time and hassle-free execution, the air fryer is my new go-to for making bacon.
there next to nothing I won’t try making it in the air fryer, but amazingly this is my first attempt at making bacon. I was expecting fast cooking, since air fryers cook most foods 25% faster than a regular oven.
The air fryer has proven to be my favorite way to make bacon, with one big caveat (more on that later). for me My favorite glass pot air fryer Those chops cook in about 7 minutes at 375°F — faster than in the oven and skillet. Since air fryers have a crisp rack, grease naturally drips into the bowl below, so there was no need to line the lasagna with a paper towel.
The crisping tray drains excess fat while the bacon is cooking.
The bacon came out perfectly crispy and kept its shape better than when fried in a pan.
Chaos was minimal. Since the air fryer cooking chamber fits easily into my sink, I was able to wash it in seconds with a sponge and soapy water. The glass bowl air fryer chamber is also dishwasher safe, so another option would have been to wipe off the grease and stick it all into the fryer dishwasher.
Air fryer bacon is really crispy.
I use modest 4 liter air fryerso I can only install six chips at a time. This is a lot for me and my partner, but if I were making bacon for a group, I would have to cook in batches or invest in Larger model.
Not having to monitor a hot, splattered pan or negotiate a greasy baking sheet being pulled from the oven is worth turning it on again to feed a group. There’s also no need to preheat, unlike an oven, and the sheer speed and cleanliness gave the air fryer an edge over other methods I’ve tried.