Home-Cured Bacon Recipe (2024)

Recipe from Eugenia Bone

Adapted by Cathy Barrow

Home-Cured Bacon Recipe (1)

Total Time
2 hours, plus 7 to 8 days' refrigeration
Rating
4(156)
Notes
Read community notes

Pink salt, also known as curing salt No. 1, is a nitrate, a combination of sodium chloride — table salt — and nitrite, a preserving agent used to deter the growth of bacteria in cured meats. Bacon is cured in the refrigerator, then slow roasted, and finally cooked again before serving. It is not being consumed as a raw, cured meat, so the use of a nitrate is a personal decision. A small amount of pink salt in your cure provides that familiar pink color and bacon-y flavor, or what we have come to know as bacon-y. It is absolutely possible to cure bacon without nitrates; but be aware that the end product will be more the color of cooked pork and that the flavor will be akin to that of a pork roast. With or without the pink salt, homemade bacon is worth the effort. —Cathy Barrow

Featured in: This Little Piggy Stayed Home

  • or to save this recipe.

  • Subscriber benefit: give recipes to anyone

    As a subscriber, you have

    10 gift recipes to give each month. Anyone can view them - even nonsubscribers.

    Learn more.

    Subscribe

  • Print Options

    Include recipe photo

Advertisem*nt

Ingredients

Yield:About 2 pounds

  • pounds pork belly, squared off, rind removed
  • tablespoons kosher salt
  • ½teaspoon pink salt, optional
  • ¼cup maple syrup, or honey, brown sugar, white sugar or molasses
  • 2tablespoons cold strong black coffee, bourbon or apple cider
  • 2garlic cloves, smashed
  • 1tablespoon black peppercorns, crushed
  • 2teaspoons fresh thyme
  • 1teaspoon fennel seed, toasted
  • 1teaspoon coriander seed, toasted

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (18 servings)

341 calories; 33 grams fat; 12 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 16 grams monounsaturated fat; 4 grams polyunsaturated fat; 4 grams carbohydrates; 0 grams dietary fiber; 3 grams sugars; 6 grams protein; 163 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

Powered by

Home-Cured Bacon Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Place the pork belly in a large Ziploc bag. Add the salt (and pink salt if using) and the cure additions. Rub the cure into the pork belly, turning the bag over and over and pressing the cure into the flesh. Close the bag, squeezing out all the air and refrigerate for seven days. Each day, flip the bag over. Some liquid will begin to gather in the bag.

  2. After seven days, wash the cure off the meat, rinsing thoroughly. Pat the bacon dry with paper towels and set it on a rack over a baking sheet. Allow the bacon to air-dry in the refrigerator for 6 to 24 hours.

  3. Step

    3

    Preheat the oven to 225 degrees. Roast the pork belly in the oven to an internal temperature of 150 degrees for about 90 minutes. Chill the bacon well, then slice thick or thin, to preference. Any bacon that doesn't easily slice may be cut into chunks, for starting a pot of beans or soup. Wrapped in parchment paper, then wrapped in plastic wrap or foil and placed in a Ziploc bag, the bacon will keep for three weeks in the refrigerator and three months in the freezer.

Ratings

4

out of 5

156

user ratings

Your rating

or to rate this recipe.

Have you cooked this?

or to mark this recipe as cooked.

Private Notes

Leave a Private Note on this recipe and see it here.

Cooking Notes

Foo

The "Pink salt" listed in this recipe is Prague powder #1 (which contains 6.25% potasium nitrite) , NOT Himalayan pink salt.

Margaux Laskey, Staff Editor

We called Morton's and they said that Morton's Tender Quick is not the same thing as "pink salt", so please read your labels carefully.

LKF

The drying phase in the refrigerator is typically utilized to create a pedicle-- an absorbent surface to which smoke flavor can then adhere. If not smoking the bacon, the drying phase may not be as important.

Rather than roast in the oven, smoke the bacon using a fragrant wood such as oak, hickory or maple for a few hours. This can be done in a smoker or even a covered bar b que.

Using a rotary slicer (if you have one or can borrow one) on chilled bacon is much easier than slicing by hand

LKF

Pink salt (aka Prague powder) is available inexpensively on Amazon. A big bag is few dollars. The amount you will use to cure a large pork belly is miniscule.

Be careful to label the bag properly as it is not a good thing to eat accidentally.

DSM

Morton's Tender Quick is a very available brand name for "pink salt".

AJ

My thoughts exactly! They also sell much smaller bags, with free shipping, to save pantry space and a few $$.

Bnom

I regularly cure bacon — always good until I tried this recipe. I love bourbon but hated it in this cure. It gave the meat a sour taste. The bourbon flavor is strong and not appealing for most uses (terrible as a breakfast cacon). I used mine up in bacon onion jam (okay) and candied bacon (barely okay). Cannot recommend this recipe.

LEL

Sodium nitrite (NaNO2) and sodium nitrate (NaNO3) are NOT the same chemicals. Pink salt is NOT a nitrate!

Mike Giuseffi

Instead of roasting in an oven I cooked the cured belly in a stove top smoker. It was divine, however the second time I made this I omitted the coriander seeds. I found that they made the bacon taste more like pastrami.

Gorney44

Kept it simple. Didn’t use anything other than salt and syrup. Don’t have access to smoker at the moment but overall very easy and very delicious. Will try variations with pepper, etc. in future batches.

CMP_SRF

<1tsp cure for 4.5lbs belly. Mix sep rub per gallon ziploc!Add bay leaf; honey w Molasses best final taste, little sweet but kids love. skip the coffee, bourbon, etc as ends up in sour taste in end product. Smoke at 225 after 24 hr fridge for 1.5 to 3 hrs depending on smoke wants.Final cook in 325 oven to avoid burning light sugars.Turkey club on sourdough loaf or use in ranch beans. Less sugar if using for collards, etc

Mike Giuseffi

Instead of roasting in an oven I cooked the cured belly in a stove top smoker. It was divine, however the second time I made this I omitted the coriander seeds. I found that they made the bacon taste more like pastrami.

Corey Gilson

Fantastic recipe. We’ve been making all of our bacon since we saw this. I cooked it with the oven at 200 degrees in a convection oven, and the results were tastier than at 225-though I’m not exactly a good safety pro!

Rob

I've made this twice so far and will make it again this weekend. I've used molasses and bourbon both times and smoke on the cool side of my grill, set to the lowest temp. I'm still working on the best way to cook the bacon. I loosely follow baconmethod.com instructions but at 400 the molasses will be heavily caramelized (not a terrible thing), and it will burn if I leave it in for 20 minutes. ~13 seems about right and I'll try 350 or 375 next.

Bill

I'm surprised that the recipe said "pink salt" is optional. Pink Salt #1 is a curing salt and if you do not have in the brine, you are not curing the meat......

Michael

You can cure with only salt. However as stated the bacon will not have the pinkish color and will not taste like the bacon you've come to know, it will taste more like roast pork.

Bnom

I regularly cure bacon — always good until I tried this recipe. I love bourbon but hated it in this cure. It gave the meat a sour taste. The bourbon flavor is strong and not appealing for most uses (terrible as a breakfast cacon). I used mine up in bacon onion jam (okay) and candied bacon (barely okay). Cannot recommend this recipe.

ek perrow

I have wet and dry cured without pink salt #1. The bacon without while tasty was not what I was used to visually. After researching on the FDA web site I went with the minimum of pink salt. The results were much more visually pleasing. If you know and trust your source of pork belly and you practice safe storage and handling then you could consider not using Pink salt #1. Usually I cure the pork 14-21 days but I will try 7 as in this recipe and see what it tastes like. Happy charcuterie.

Nat Proctor

Might a turn in a sous vide bath take the place of the coozing as written?

Tannia

"Roast the pork belly in the oven to an internal temperature of 150 degrees for about 90 minutes."
I think this is supposed to say, "Roast the pork belly in the oven for about 90 minutes, or until it reaches an internal temperature of 90 minutes."
I doubt you want the meat to remain in the oven for 90 minutes after reaching that internal temperature.

Del

Made this recipe and it turned out well. For me the meat was a little salty. How would you recommend bumping up the sweet and savory aspects? I was hoping to use thicker cuts in sliders. A maple glaze would be nice as well. Thanks!

ek perrow

I have used turbo sugar, brown sugar, black strap molasses and bourbon in my wet cures. They each provide unique aspects to the final bacon product. I also wet cure for about 21days for 9lbs of pork belly/side.

flinhart

Made two batches - one with Morton's Tender Quick and one batch without Tender Quick. Then dried and - SMOKED (6 hours) the pork belly. Wonderful. Could not taste the difference between the two batches.

LEL

Sodium nitrite (NaNO2) and sodium nitrate (NaNO3) are NOT the same chemicals. Pink salt is NOT a nitrate!

Jack Frost

pink salt is not optional if you want bacon. Also very DANGEROUS without it

Jack Frost

pink salt or cure #1 is never optional, especially if smoked. two reasons its just plain Dangerous, and it isn't bacon without the cure, just salt pork. Also cooking does not kill botulism. Check with county health dept. The temperature required to kill botulism is much to high, something like 240 degrees if I remember correctly.

Morton tender quick contains both nitrite and nitrates. It can also be used to cure bacon but the recipe is differen't.

Will

I think the Health Department was referring to the spores of the C. botulinum requiring 240 degrees to be killed, active bacteria will be killed at the lower temperature. After being cured, with plain salt, the concentration of salt is too high for bacteria to grow. Salt pork keeps very well and safely too, no nitrite needed.

Private notes are only visible to you.

Home-Cured Bacon Recipe (2024)

FAQs

How do you know if your bacon is cured enough? ›

Instructions
  1. Close the bags or cover the pork and let it rest in the refrigerator for 5-7 days, turning and flipping it every day to redistribute the liquid that seeps from it.
  2. Check the belly to see if it's done curing. Press on it in several spots to see if it is firm. ...
  3. Cook the cured belly.

What is the ratio of curing salt to bacon? ›

Add more if you like a saltier taste, and slightly less for a milder flavour, but generally you'll want a salt/cure to meat ratio of between 5-10%.

How long does it take to cure homemade bacon? ›

As for how long to cure your bacon in the fridge for, it will depend on the size of your meat. We suggest a approximately 1 day per 500g of meat up to 8 days, with a minimum of 4 days. Curing your bacon for longer than the recommended time will result in a saltier end product.

How do you make cured bacon taste better? ›

Additional ingredients – Along with the salt, you can add ingredients that will impart flavor to your cured meat. For bacon, Brandon does a 50/50 mixture of salt and sugar. Alternatively, you could add in herbs, seasonings, etc.

How do you calculate cure for bacon? ›

A gram scale is typically used to weigh the meat. This weight is then entered into a “cure calculator” that will determine the proper amounts of salt, sugar, and cure #1 according to preset percentages (these percentages can be adjusted for taste). Typically, salt is set at 2% of the meat's weight and sugar at 1%.

How do you know when meat is fully cured? ›

The meat should lose 35-40% of its weight by the end of the process, and the only way to tell when the meat is finished curing is to weigh it. Follow this formula to find what the final weight should be: beginning weight X 0.65= final weight goal.

What happens if I use too much curing salt? ›

If too much is added there is a risk of illness, even death, to the consumer.

Is too much curing salt bad? ›

Curing salt is toxic to humans if consumed in excess and should not be treated in the same way as regular table salt and sprinkled over your food as a seasoning.

Can you over cure bacon? ›

some say he's dead... some say he never will be. When bacon is dry cured by properly weighing the cure, salt, and sugar according to the weight of the belly itself, it cannot get nitrite burn (over cured).

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.

How do you cure bacon the old fashioned way? ›

Instructions
  1. Start by curing the belly: In a small bowl, combine the pepper, sugar, paprika, salt & curing salt. ...
  2. After 7 days, remove from the bag and rinse under water. ...
  3. Smoke the now cured belly using the apple or cherry wood for three hours at 200f, or until internal temperature reaches 150f.

Can you cure bacon without curing salt? ›

It is absolutely possible to cure bacon without nitrates; but be aware that the end product will be more the color of cooked pork and that the flavor will be akin to that of a pork roast. With or without the pink salt, homemade bacon is worth the effort.

Why does restaurant bacon taste so good? ›

The secret is pre-cooking your bacon

Regardless of the perfect meat-to-fat ratio and peak freshness, the real secret to diner-worthy bacon is the cooking method. According to Epicurious, par-cooking it in the oven is the preferred method of many restaurant owners.

Do you need sugar 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.

Do you have to smoke bacon to cure it? ›

For an extra boost of flavor and preservation, after seasoning, most bacon is placed into a smoker. If a smoker is not used, the meat is instead put into a conventional oven or left to air dry in cold temperatures for weeks or sometimes months!

How long should you cure bacon? ›

Place the bag in the refrigerator and allow it to cure. Allow the pork belly to cure for approximately 7 days. A general rule is to cure your bacon 7 days for every inch of thickness. Make sure you flip your pork belly over in the cure and massage once a day.

Can you cure bacon too long? ›

I've cured quite a few. The worst that happens with too long is it gets a bit too salty. I also never use nitrite (if that's the right one).

Is it okay if bacon is a little chewy? ›

While some protein options, like steak, may be safe to eat if they're not cooked to well-done, bacon isn't one of them.

Is 5 days long enough to cure bacon? ›

After 14-21 days the bacon is fully cured. I never rinse bacon after curing but I like to pat bacon slabs dry with paper towels and remove some excess seasonings with the back of a knife. Next, slice the bacon, cook, and enjoy.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Cheryll Lueilwitz

Last Updated:

Views: 6213

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (54 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Cheryll Lueilwitz

Birthday: 1997-12-23

Address: 4653 O'Kon Hill, Lake Juanstad, AR 65469

Phone: +494124489301

Job: Marketing Representative

Hobby: Reading, Ice skating, Foraging, BASE jumping, Hiking, Skateboarding, Kayaking

Introduction: My name is Cheryll Lueilwitz, I am a sparkling, clean, super, lucky, joyous, outstanding, lucky person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.