You know what’s a hard task: Improving bacon.
If you cook it correctly, it’s already pretty darn good. Most of the time I’m in the If It Ain’t Broke, Don’t Fix it camp, but this very simple bacon technique is just too good not to talk about.
Candied bacon has been a thing for a while but adding a spicy element to it is right up my alley.
But I wanted to try and bake the sriracha right on the bacon. So that’s what I did.
I left a plate of these strips in the kitchen and Betsy came up to me while I was working on something and said, “What is that bacon? What is going on?!”
Sriracha Candied Bacon is addictive stuff and if you’re going to try to improve bacon, this is a good way to do it.
Sriracha Candied Bacon
Equipment
Ingredients
- 8 strips bacon
- ¼ cup brown sugar
- 1 tablespoon sriracha chili sauce
Instructions
- Line a baking sheet with foil for easier cleanup. In a small bowl stir together brown sugar and sriracha until it forms a paste.
- Spread out bacon strips on baking sheet and coat each strip with some of the brown sugar paste.
- Place baking sheet in a cold oven and turn on to 350 degrees F. (Starting the bacon cold will help fat render out slowly).
- Bake the bacon for about 20 minutes, maybe rotating the pan once halfway through, but never flipping the actual strips.
- The finished bacon will be really crispy and almost look burned around the edges. Remove bacon strips and let cool on a few paper towels.
- Bacon will crisp up as it cools.
Nutrition
Did you make this recipe?
Sriracha Candied Bacon
The setup for this bacon marvel is pretty straightforward. You just need these things!
On the bacon, don’t get thick cut bacon. It takes too long to crisp up and the brown sugar will burn by the time it’s ready. So just get normal thinner slices for this recipe.
Then just stir together the brown sugar and sriracha. It’ll look like ketchup but it’s definitely NOT ketchup.
By the way, this quick little sauce is a great base for a good condiment. Add a little soy sauce to it and it’d be great for a fried rice sauce or something.
If you’re going to make this recipe, please line your baking sheet with foil. It will make the cleanup so much easier. If you don’t use foil then the cleanup will completely suck and will ruin your bacon eating experience.
After you wrap the baking sheet in foil, lay out the bacon strips (no overlap), and sort of paint on some of the sriracha paste onto each strip.
Place this baking sheet in a COLD oven and then turn it on to 350 degrees F. Starting the bacon in a cold oven will help the fat slowly render out of the bacon.
After 15-20 minutes of baking, the bacon will be a dark brown, caramel color and might even look a bit burned around the edges.
It’s just the sugar caramelizing though. It’s not really burned. (Although it can burn if you don’t watch it!)
As the bacon bakes, don’t flip the actual bacon strips since the sugar coating is on the top. If the bacon seems like it is cooking unevenly, feel free to rotate the pan in the oven or move it up or down in the oven.
After it bakes, remove the strips and let them cool on a few paper towels. As the strips cool,the sugar will harden and make the bacon beautifully crispy.
And you know I love that sriracha business. Each strip has just enough spice to keep your tastebuds interested.
Indulgent? Maybe! But probably the best bacon I’ve made at home.
Chris
We love “pig candy” cooked on the smoker at a high temp (about 350f) so it’s more like smoke-roasting than smoking, but the smoke makes it just a tiny bit better. Haven’t tried sriracha with it but you can bet that I’ll be doing it. Today we’re smoking three sections of home cured bacon with our neighbor. Yum.
Sarah
OMG this looks so yummy!!!
Nina D
Huh.
Hmmmmm….
Ooooh!
Oh…….baby…..
(I’m talking to the bacon, not you. Tell your wife to stand down.)
:)
Nick
I think my wife would also maybe choose this bacon over me… ;)
Billie
I am making this tomorrow!! I love candied bacon and now you’ve added my favorite red stuff!!! I am drooling!
Gordon M. Johanson
Nick– tried this morning, in our gas oven, did not crisp up in 20′– no burnt edges
soooo, will try for 30′ –like the flavor-
gordon
Nick
Hey Gordon, yea… depending on bacon thickness you might need a bit longer to get it really crispy. Keep in mind it will also crisp up a bit as it cools due to the candy coating. Hope it works out for you on try two!
Gordon M. Johanson
good point, it was thicker–
will play with it–
tks Nick
bethy
try 375 instead of 350, also starting in cold oven. it works for me!
Gordon M. Johanson
Hey Nick,
TRY # 2
TRIED 30′ THIS TIME IN OUR GAS OVEN—-
BINGO
ITS WAS GREAT–MANY TKS
GORDON
Shirley
I don’t recommend putting the cooked bacon on paper towels. The paper towels have a tendency to stick to the bacon. Instead I put them on a plate to cool!
Colleen
Delicious. Going to try then wrapped around a scallop today.
Cindy Sherrill
Cool, company for breakfast and I was wondering what to fix that would be different. Thanks Nick
Cara
Has anyone tried making this a few days ahead? Wondering if it something I can do before the Thanksgiving guests start arriving. Thinking the is a great add for our Bloody Mary bar.
Papi
Sick bacon candy my hitta. Can’t wait to make wit my Juice