The Best Homemade Bacon Recipe Ever | Paleo Scaleo (2024)

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Once you make this homemade bacon recipe, you'll never look back. With a flavor like no bacon you've ever had before, you'll be amazed at what bacon SHOULD taste like. It's also sugar free, nitrate free, and Whole30 compliant.

I'm going to be straight with you from the start: making homemade bacon is not a quick process. It's going to require a few steps, and a bit of waiting in between. But believe me when I tell you: it is SO worth it.

(If you're short on time and need a Whole30 or paleo bacon option, Whole Kitchen Sink has a list of all storebought approved ones here.)

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Why should you make your own bacon?

The Best Homemade Bacon Recipe Ever | Paleo Scaleo (2)

I get it. There's plenty of variety of bacon at the store, and you can't see a reason to make your own. Why go through this whole process when you can just go to the store and get some in a package?

Beware the ingredient list

It can be easy to just grab products off the shelves and never look at what's in them. Unfortunately for us, the companies that make these products load them up with sugar, salt, chemicals and preservatives.

Bacon is one of the biggest culprits of this. By making our own, we're going to steer clear of all of these, and know exactly what is in our bacon.

ALL the flavor

What you'll find, when you make your own bacon, is that bacon isn't actually just supposed to taste like salt.

The flavor in homemade bacon is incredible, and it's like no bacon you've ever had before. Promise.

Sugar free bacon

When we first started making our bacon, we set out to do it because we were on Whole30. We were looking for Whole30 compliant bacon, and at the time, no companies were making it.

Nowadays, you can find bacon in the store with a Whole30 approved stamp on it from brands such as Pedersons and Applegate. But a few years ago, these didn't exist.

We experimented with a lot of different combinations for our bacon cure. A dry rub couldn't include sugar, even coconut sugar, on Whole30, so that ended up being way too salty.

We started thinking about liquids, and turned to apple juice and apple cider. Those ended up being too sweet, and the volume of salt needed was way too high.

Our ending secret ingredient? Applesauce.

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How to cure homemade bacon

To create the cure for your homemade bacon, you're going to grind up your spices, combine them with your salt, and then stir them into your applesauce.

The end product is a really salty, spicy applesauce that we don't recommend eating on its own.

Using this as a cure, you'll put each slab of pork belly that you want to turn into bacon into it's own enclosed container with the applesauce mixture. We like to use large ziplocks, because we can mush it around and make sure we get the whole slab nice and coated.

You can also use a baking dish, lay it flat, and cover the slab with the cure, flipping it over during the curing process (I would recommend daily).

What you're looking for is maximum exposure of the outside of the pork belly slab to the curing mixture, however you can make that best happen in your fridge!

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How long to cure homemade bacon

Oh, the waiting. So much waiting.

You'll need to give your pork belly around 4 days in the cure. It will need to be kept in the fridge for this whole time, so make sure you have the space for that before getting started!

Anything less than 4 days simply doesn't result in the best flavor. If you need to go a day or two longer, you can, but it's not necessary. You don't gain a whole lot in terms of flavor by pushing to day 5 and 6.

How to cook homemade bacon

Remember, at this point, we've only just cured our raw meat. We still need to cook it.

What you want to go for is low and slow. We're looking to get the internal temperature of the pork to at least 165° - this is the safe place to kill of anything that might be harmful to you.

To do this, we're going to bake it in the oven at a low temperature, for a long time: 225° for 3 hours.

Take your pork belly slabs out of the bag, rinse any excess cure off of them, and pat them dry with a paper towel or clean dish cloth. (Then put that towel in the wash, because you just put it on raw meat!)

Place them on a baking sheet with a wire rack inside it, like this:

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The wire rack will allow the heat to get on all sides of the meat, as well as allow a place for the fat to drip down as it cooks.

Place your pan with the pork belly on it into the preheated oven.

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Allow it to cook for three hours without opening the oven. (Doing so will release heat, which will mean you just need to cook it for longer.)

After three hours, open the oven and use a meat thermometer to test the internal temperature of the pork belly. You're looking for it to get to an internal temp of 165°. If it's not there yet, put it back in and check it again in 15 minutes.

Repeat this process until you've reached that 165°.

Once it's done, remove it from the oven and allow it to cool a bit. It should look something like this:

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Now, if you have a grill or smoker, you can use that as well - you'll want to follow this post's instructions on how to smoke pork belly.

We looooove our Traeger grill and use it for so much of our cooking. If you're looking for a healthy alternative and a way to keep your kitchen clean, you can check out Traeger pellet grills here.

If you need more instructions or information on what a Traeger Grill is and how it works, you can find that here.

How to cut homemade bacon

Cutting the slab when it's hot is not recommended. Give it a little bit of time to cool, then refrigerate it for a few hours, or overnight if you can. You want it to be firm when you cut it.

If you can, popping it in the freezer for about 15-20 minutes before slicing will help tremendously. This will firm up the meat enough to help it keep its structure when slicing.

We have the Chef's Choice 609 Meat Slicer, which we use to cut our bacon slabs. The slices pictured below were sliced off the slab using this particular slicer:

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If you don't have a meat slicer, that's ok! A very sharp chef's knife will also work. A nice one is definitely an investment - we have the Shun Chef's Knife, which we purchased 10 years ago and is still our best kitchen knife.

Whatever you use to slice, just make sure that it's the sharpest tool you have available to you. Any knife or slicer that is dull will tear up the meat and will not allow you to slice very thinly.

How to fry homemade bacon

There are two ways to fry up your bacon. The first is the traditional way - slices in a pan. Keep in mind that this will get greasy, and there will be splatter!

The other option is my preferred way - by baking your bacon slices in the oven on a baking sheet. It keeps the grease mess to a minimum, and makes clean up easy. We like to pour the excess grease from the pan into a mason jar and save it in the fridge to use as cooking grease later!

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Recipe

The Best Homemade Bacon Recipe Ever | Paleo Scaleo (10)

Homemade Bacon

Yield: 1.5 pounds

Prep Time: 20 minutes

Cook Time: 2 hours

Additional Time: 4 days

Total Time: 4 days 2 hours 20 minutes

Once you make this homemade bacon recipe, you'll never look back. With a flavor like no bacon you've ever had before, you'll be amazed at what bacon SHOULD taste like. It's also sugar free, nitrate free, and Whole30 compliant. 

Ingredients

  • 2.5 lb pork belly slab
  • 24 oz unsweetened applesauce
  • ¼ cup salt
  • 1 teaspoon black pepper
  • 1 teaspoon allspice
  • 1 teaspoon cayenne pepper
  • 1 teaspoon juniper berries

Instructions

  1. Combine all dry ingredients except the salt in a spice grinder and grind.
  2. Combine ground spices with applesauce. Add salt and stir until well mixed.
  3. Place pork belly in a glass pan or plastic bag, then add curing mixture and coat thoroughly.
  4. Place pan or bags in the refrigerator for 4 days, flipping daily to ensure even curing.
  5. When ready to smoke, remove from fridge. Rinse, pat dry, and then let stand at room temperature for 1 hour.
  6. While resting, preheat your oven to 225°.
  7. Place pork belly on a rack on sheet pan and cook for 2 hours.
  8. After 2 hours, begin checking internal temperature every 15 minutes. Remove when internal temperature exceeds 165.
  9. Refrigerate slab overnight, then slice and fry in a skillet on the stove or bake in the oven on a baking sheet.

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Nutrition Information:

Yield: 15Serving Size: 2 slices
Amount Per Serving:Calories: 241Total Fat: 16gSaturated Fat: 6gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 10gCholesterol: 64mgSodium: 1958mgCarbohydrates: 5gNet Carbohydrates: 0gFiber: 1gSugar: 4gSugar Alcohols: 0gProtein: 18g

Number of servings (and nutrition information) will be dependent on the thickness of slices cut.

I may earn a small commission off purchases made through affiliate links in this post from Amazon and other sellers. This helps me continue to run the blog and keep providing you fresh content. Thank you for your support!

The Best Homemade Bacon Recipe Ever | Paleo Scaleo (2024)

FAQs

What cut of meat is best for homemade bacon? ›

The cut used to make American bacon is one of the big reasons it is so popular. American bacon uses pork belly. It has a fairly even distribution of fat and meat. Fat is an important factor in the flavor of a lot of meats.

Is sugar necessary to cure bacon? ›

In a normal curing process, a packet of nitrite is added to the brine, which is then injected into the meat. Sugar is often in this mix to “add” flavor; however, some say it can also aid in acting as an additional preservative. Sugar is also used to counter the salt, which tends to dry out the meat.

Is it better to cook bacon in the oven or on the stove? ›

Oven bacon gets just as crispy, if not crispier, and there's very little mess to clean up after. Making a batch of bacon in the oven also means you can do other things while it's cooking.

Why is my homemade bacon tough? ›

Probably because you're not overcooking it. Bacon has two stages of doneness: chewy and brittle. Many people, including me, prefer it chewy - but if you keep cooking it for a few more minutes, it will get hard, develop a slightly scorched taste, and break into sharp little pieces when you take a bite of it.

What is the tastiest cut of bacon? ›

Three types exist — slab, regular, and center cut. Meat lovers should opt for the latter since it's the lowest in fat, containing up to 30% less than a normal slice. Derived from a part of the pork belly near the bone, it imparts more pork flavor without losing that irresistible bacon quality.

Can I use brown sugar to cure bacon? ›

In a one (1) gallon sealable freezer bag, combine your Brown Sugar, Maple Syrup, Kosher Salt, Black Pepper, Cinnamon and Curing Salt. Mix well. Place your pork belly inside the sealable bag with all of the curing ingredients.

How do butchers cure bacon? ›

Most bacon today is cured through wet curing. Curing ingredients like salt, sugar, seasonings, sodium nitrate and other chemicals are mixed to create a brine that the bacon is soaked in or injected with. This injection method is called pumping and is the quickest way to cure bacon.

What salt is best for curing bacon? ›

The salt used to cure fat (and meats) can be regular sodium chloride in the form of kosher or sea salt, or it can be a curing salt that has nitrates mixed in. The nitrates in curing salts add flavor, preserve the meat's rosy color, prevent the fat from developing acidity, and inhibit undesirable bacteria from growing.

How do restaurants make perfect bacon? ›

They cook it the best way possible, on a sheet pan in the oven. The bonus is while it takes longer to make this way, you can make more at once, the pieces are more or less flat and they come out crispy. Or they throw it in the deep fryer once it's done.

What seasoning makes bacon taste better? ›

Even though it doesn't necessarily come with a mild flavor, bacon is a total blank canvas. With the help of some extra ingredients and spices for your bacon, you can take its original savory, salty, and smoky flavor and enhance it with things like chili powder and coffee, Sriracha, maple syrup, brown sugar, or honey.

What not to do when cooking bacon? ›

Starting with a Hot Pan

I won't keep you waiting: always start with a cold pan. Whether you like your bacon shatteringly crisp or chewy, the goal is strips that are evenly cooked, without burnt bits of meat or rubbery pockets of fat.

How is traditional bacon made? ›

The most traditional way of making bacon is through dry curing, which involves rubbing down the pork meat with seasoning and salts, which enhances the flavor and its intensity.

How did they cure bacon in the old days? ›

The curing agent they used was salt only. The author describes it as follows, “a fine grade of sack salt or table salt applied to hams, shoulders, and bacons. All the salt was applied at one time by about one-half of the farmers, 10 pounds (4.5kg) of dry salt per 100 pounds (45kg) of meat being used.

How was bacon made in the 1800s? ›

To make dry-cured bacon the old- fashioned way, the curing ingredients, salt, sugar and sodium nitrate (saltpeter) were rubbed into the meat, which is left to cure for a couple of weeks before smoking with hickory or oak, apple wood or corn cobs, depending on the packer and what natural fuel was available.

How do Americans get their bacon crispy? ›

Side bacon has much more fat on it. Uncooked or undercooked fat is not well-appreciated by Americans. As a result, they tend to cook it longer, to render much of the fat out. This leaves the bacon crispy.

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