Homemade Smoked Bacon
On June 17, 2021 (Updated November 05, 2024)
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Making your own homemade Smoked Bacon is a bit of a process, but it’s 100% worth the effort. I’m here to walk you step-by-step through making your own smoked bacon from scratch that is way better than anything you’ll get at the store.
Smoked Bacon
I don’t think I’ve ever cooked anything that made me as excited as this homemade smoked bacon. I mean, it’s bacon. Which is awesome enough. But the fact that I bought a giant slab of pork belly and turned it into beautifully seasoned and smoked homemade bacon made me near giddy. I can’t even wait to share the process with you and watch the proud homemade bacon glow wash over you.
I’m not going to pretend that I am the first person to attempt to make bacon, I did a lot of reading on proper cure times, ratios of curing salt to bacon thickness, etc. I did, however, create these two awesome cure recipes from all of the knowledge I gleaned from those who have made bacon before me. I hope you give them a try!
Homemade Smoked Bacon
Making homemade bacon is a several day process, but it is totally worth it. I’m going to detail my steps for you here so you can follow along and venture into beautiful, homemade smoked bacon territory.
First, you need to pick up a piece of pork belly. Thickness will vary, but lately Costco has been stocking beautiful, already skinned slabs of pork belly. If you are buying from a butcher, see if you can get them to remove the skin from the belly for you. It can be a bit of a nasty job to remove this skin yourself, and it also increases your cure time since it is typically not removed until after the time spent in the cure.
If you have a large piece of meat, I recommend dividing the pork belly into smaller portions so it is easier to handle in the cure. I usually portion mine off so they can easily fit in a gallon sized zip top bag.
How to Cure Bacon
Next, it is time to make the cure. There are two cures in the recipe card below. The peppered cure is a little more sophisticated with some added spice. It is amazing on BLTs and cheeseburgers. The recipe notes contain the ingredients for the maple cure. It is the perfect mixture of sweet and salty and it just screams breakfast.
When you’re ready to make your bacon, place the pork belly in a plastic bag with the cure and seal the bag tightly. You can also vacuum seal the bag to remove all the air if you have this available. 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. If you hit the 7 day mark, you can test your bacon by slicing through the middle to be sure the pork belly is pink all of the way through with no gray left at all. If it isn’t pink through, put it back in the cure for another day and test again. The texture should also feel like a well done steak when it is done curing.
How to Smoke Bacon
After the cure, the pork belly needs to be rinsed and returned to the fridge to develop a sticky skin called a pellicle. I like to place my pork belly on a wire cooling rack on top of a cookie sheet before returning to the fridge. You need to leave your bacon in the fridge for 12-24 hours; I usually leave mine overnight. This air drying time in the fridge will help the smoke really cling to the meat by creating that tacky exterior.
Now it’s smoke time! I like to use apple wood to smoke my bacon, but maple and hickory are also awesome choices. Fire up your favorite pellet grill and keep the temperature as low as possible (I was smoking around 165 degrees F).
Place the cured pork belly on the grill grates of the smoker, close the lid, and smoke for about 6 hours or until the internal temperature is up to 155 degrees F. Invest in a GOOD quality thermometer! It will make all the difference in the finished product if you have an accurate temperature reading. I always recommend ThermoWorks thermometers because they are insanely accurate and very durable.
Once the pork is smoked, you are ready to slice and fry it up! Finally after all of that waiting, it is time to eat that glorious, salty sweet piece of meat heaven. It is hard to resist slicing pieces off right away, so definitely cut off a few pieces and fry them up. If you’ve got the patience, chill the bacon completely before slicing. It’ll make the job much easier when the meat is cold. You can use a meat slicer if you’ve got one, but I just used a really sharp knife and went to work! If you feel intimidated, come try a piece of my homemade bacon. It’ll pluck up your courage. Venture out of your comfort zone and try something new. You got this!
How to Smoke Bacon on a Grill
If you don’t own a smoker and don’t want to buy one, you can actually make a smoker out of your propane grill. Follow through steps below or watch my video for a full tutorial for smoking on a gas grill.
- Make a smoke pouch. You can buy hardwood chips at almost any grocery store, usually in the outdoor cooking aisle. Fold up a large square of aluminum foil into a pouch around the hardwood chips. Use a knife to punch a bunch of holes in the top of the pouch.
- Fire up the grill. Turn on one of your grill’s burners to High and place the pouch over the burner. Once your wood starts to smoke, turn the temperature down to medium.
- Cook the pork. Place the cured pork belly on the un-lit side of the grill and close the lid. Allow the wood chips to smoke and smolder until the internal temperature of the bacon reaches 155 degrees F. You may need to add a new pouch of wood chips if your first burns out before you get your bacon up to temperature.
How Long to Smoke Bacon
With the temperature of your smoker holding steady around 165 degrees F, it will take around 6 hours for the meat to fully smoke.
The goal here is to get your pork to an internal temperature of 155 degrees F. You want to keep the temperatures low during this smoke so you cook the pork through and add all the smoky flavor without rendering any of the fat in the belly.
Recipes for Homemade Smoked Bacon
Ready to put this bacon to good use? Check out some of our popular recipes here on Hey Grill Hey!
- Bacon Wrapped Brats with Beer Cheese Sauce
- BBQ Meatloaf with a Bacon Weave
- Bacon Wrapped Chicken Breast
Smoked Bacon Recipe
Homemade Smoked Bacon
Video
Ingredients
- 1 5-pound slab pork belly skin removed
- 1 Tablespoon fresh cracked black pepper
Peppered Bacon Cure
- 1 ¼ teaspoons Prague Powder #1
- 5 Tablespoons coarse Kosher salt
- 5 Tablespoons brown sugar
- 3 Tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon maple syrup
- 3 Tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon cracked black pepper
- 1 ½ teaspoons crushed red pepper flakes
Instructions
- Prepare the cure. Combine all ingredients for the bacon cure in a bowl. It will be a paste-like consistency. This is exactly what you want.
- Cure the pork belly. Place your slab of pork belly in a large plastic bag (either a large vacuum seal bag or a gallon zip top bag works great for this). Using your hands, transfer some of the cure to the bag with the pork belly and spread it on all sides. Make sure to thoroughly coat all sides of the bacon and use all of the cure. Seal the bag tightly, removing as much air as possible. Place the sealed pork belly package in the refrigerator and cure for the next 7 days. Flip and massage the pork belly once per day.
- Develop a pellicle. After the 7th day in the cure, remove the bacon from the bag. Gently rinse the pork belly to remove any thick slimy build-up on the exterior of the pork. Place it on a wire rack above a baking sheet. Pat the pork belly dry with paper towels. Season the top with the tablespoon of fresh cracked black pepper. Place the peppered bacon in the fridge (while still on the rack) and leave uncovered for at least 12 or up to 24 hours. This step helps develop a tacky coating called a pellicle on the exterior of the bacon.
- Smoke the bacon. Preheat your smoker to 160-170 degrees F using your favorite hardwood. Apple, maple, and hickory are all popular for smoked bacon. Place the pork belly directly on the grill grates, close the lid, and smoke for approximately 6 hours, or until the internal temperature of the pork belly reads 155 degrees F.
- Slice and cook. Let the bacon chill completely in the refrigerator before slicing. A cold slab of bacon is much easier to slice into even pieces. Slice your bacon as thick or as thin as you like (one beauty of making it from scratch) and fry up in a cast iron skillet. Enjoy!
Notes
5 pounds pork belly, skin removed
1 1/4 teaspoon Prague Powder #1
5 Tablespoons coarse Kosher salt
5 Tablespoons maple syrup
5 Tablespoons brown sugar
5 teaspoons cracked black pepper
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
**This post was originally published in August 2015. We recently updated it with more information and helpful tips. The recipe remains the same.
I followed this recipe for my first ever attempt at bacon and results could not have been better. I cooked my first slices to Peter Luger thickness (probably quarter to half an inch) and cooked slowly before finishing off at high heat. Got a mouthful of sweet, smoke and pepper with each bite. Likely best bacon ever.
I pretty much followed this to the letter, adjusting for a slightly smaller pork belly, but had no problem at all slathering the rub/brine/marinade over all sides. It extruded a lot of liquid over the first 24 hours, but the vacuum sealer kept all the seasonings in place. I was thorough in rinsing the belly after a week, but didn’t overdo it. There was definitely residual seasoning after the rinse. One Tablespoon of pepper on the top was perfect.
The real miracle (to me) was how effective the Kamado Joe was. Easy to keep the temperature between 175 and 190 for 4.5 hours and lots of clean smoke. Took it out at 152 degrees.
Can’t wait to do it again. Fun and delicious.
The real
Enjoying the first one. Putting another 5 pound slab in the Recteq at 9:00 AM today.
I’ve been making your pepper maple recipe for years and love it. One problem I run into is the sugar burning when frying the bacon. I’m curious if you have any ways to avoid this problem? Or any sugars that are better for not burning?
Thank you
I used this recipe today to cure 45 lbs of bacon from a hog I butchered on Monday. I also used this recipe on last year’s hog.
This is the best recipe I’ve ever used!!
Using tender quick do you omit the kosher salt.?
The recipe was updated to use Prague Powder #1 in place of Tenderquick. You’ll still use salt.
Hello,
The recipe calls for 1.25 teaspoons of Prague Powder #1 and 5 Tablespoons of Kosher Salt and the notes say to use 1 Tablespoon per pound if using Tenderquick. So you’re saying you’d use 5T of Tenderquick and 5T of Salt on a 5lb slab if you go that route?
Yes, you’re only substituting out the Prague Powder when using Tenderquick.
Made this good.but take the syrup and slather it then spread the dry .much easier
This is the best bacon money can’t buy, aways fun making your own treats
Tasty combination. I’ve done it as a dry cure as well as a wet cure (same ingredients, but dissolve in about a quart of water then immerse the pork belly in the brine for 4-6 days, turning over every other day – then start with step 3).Also works well with a whole pork loin – untrimmed for English style bacon and trimmed for a Canadian style bacon.
The mix is like concrete BEFORE I CAN GET IT IN THE BAG!! Way too tough to spread around and massage! I’ve tried it 4 times now. The bacon is good but WAY TOO TOUGH TO WORK WITH THE “PASTE”! No matter how much syrup is added, it becomes CONCRETE!! Switching recipes!
Are you using real maple syrup?
Nothing like wasting a hunk of meat! Salty and it scorched when my husband cooked it. I am leaving it to the pros to make my bacon from now on, this recipe sucks!
you didn’t follow the directions. i did. and it’s great
I’ve made about 200lbs of this bacon and it’s perfect. You didn’t follow the recipe and your husband can’t cook lol
You didn’t follow the recipe if it sucked lol. Your comment speaks of your character!
Great recipe, we’ve had lots of luck with this authors other meat recipes too.