Skip to main content

Brown-Sugar-Glazed Bacon

4.7

(23)

A plate of bacon cooked with brown sugar.
Photo by Joseph De Leo, Food Styling by Rebecca Jurkevich

This candied bacon recipe first appeared in 2010, when Eminem blasted from the radio, Avatar blazed across movie screens, tech-savvy people posted heavily filtered food photos to a brand-new app called Instagram—and bacon was trending. Sure, bacon showed up in sandwiches and on burgers, but also on doughnuts, cupcakes, and sundaes. It was the rise of the Bacon Baroque era.

This candied bacon, though, rejects bacon maximalism in every sense except for flavor. It has just two ingredients (bacon and brown sugar, just as the name says), one step, and many glowing reviews. Because it’s made in the oven, you won’t have to clean bacon spatter from the stovetop. And in truth, this recipe is not a throwback, it’s a classic, and it still makes a killer appetizer or brunch dish.

A few ways to make this brown sugar bacon recipe really sing: Use the best bacon available (thick-cut bacon, FTW), watch it carefully toward the end of the cook time (sugar burns quickly!), and don’t try to drain it on paper towels (the paper will stick). Keep it on the sheet-pan rack to cool—that time is essential to avoid sizzling the inside of your mouth. Serve hot, with eggs—or chop it up and sprinkle on a cupcake, if you feel like going back in time.

Get more of our best brunch recipes

Recipe information

  • Total Time

    25 minutes

  • Yield

    8 servings

Ingredients

1 lb. applewood-smoked bacon slices
⅓ cup (packed) light brown sugar

Preparation

  1. Place a rack in upper third of oven; preheat to 400°. Line a rimmed baking sheet with foil and set a wire rack inside. Arrange 1 lb. applewood-smoked bacon slices in a single layer on rack and sprinkle ⅓ cup (packed) light brown sugar evenly over. Bake until bacon is crisp and glazed, 15–18 minutes.

See Related Recipes and Cooking Tips

Read More
Protein-heavy, easy to portion, and ideal for making ahead, this breakfast casserole made with boxed corn muffin mix will see you through busy mornings.
Elegant and simple to prep ahead, this classic brunch dish gets its savory backbone from sautéed leeks.
This oversized crème brûlée is far easier to make than individual ones. The crackly top is created from sugar caramelized with a blowtorch, not a broiler.
Plain scalloped potatoes are good but loaded like a baked potato–with scallions, sour cream, cheddar, and bacon–they’re exponentially better.
The epitome of low effort, high reward.
Soft scrambled eggs are taken up a notch with brown butter, scallions, and crispy shallots. Serve with toast or rice for a quick meal ideal any time of day.
Braising canned chickpeas in chicken stock and olive oil makes them unbelievably tender and buttery. This is worth the effort of peeling 40 cloves of garlic.
Everyone’s favorite pigs in a blanket goes Chicago-style, complete with celery salt, poppy seeds, and a cheeky cornichon.