Guilty Pleasure
October 8, 2010
Bacon remains a staple in non-commercial kitchens, in ever more
creative ways. Bacon is a popular, if guilty, delight for many, and chefs continue to find creative ways to inject the smoky rich flavor of salt-cured pork belly into their menus.
Lisa Kurth, executive chef and general manager for Bon Appétit at TBWA/CHIAT/DAY in Los Angeles, recognizes the demand for bacon on today’s menus.
“We make our own barbecue sauce with bacon,” Kurth says. “We make a bacon-wrapped shrimp dish where we butterfly the shrimp and add cream cheese and jalapeño, then wrap it with turkey bacon. We also make a basket weave with bacon strips on a bake pan. We roll up sausage and add barbecue sauce. For another dish, we roll up shredded barbecued chicken with collard greens or mashed sweet potatoes, like a Southern style. We call it a bacon rollover. It comes out like a loaf and you cut it in slices. We also add crispy bacon bits to our ranch dressing to make crispy bacon ranch dressing.”
Sugary sweet meat: “We think that bacon is the candy of the meat world,” says Dave McHugh, executive chef at San Diego State University in California. “There’s bacon ice cream, bacon chocolate chip cookies. We make a bacon maple cinnamon glaze that goes on biscuits.”
“Customers think it’s weird, but after they taste it they love it,” he says. “We also take a Marcona almond, which is similar to a maca-
damia nut, and stuff it into a majewel date wrapped in blanched bacon. We cook it slow over low heat to almost rehydrate the date.”
Shawn Dolan, executive chef at the University of North Carolina Hospitals in Chapel Hill, says his department uses bacon liberally, even though “we need to keep an eye on calories, fat and salt.”