In yesterday's post, I mentioned buying bacon ends and pieces last month. I bought 6 lbs for under $2 per pound. Ends and pieces are just that, the ends and pieces when a large slab is cut for those nice, neat stacks of bacon. The portion of the hog, where bacon comes from, isn't perfectly rectangular, right? So, for packaging and presentation, the ends are trimmed off each side. The ends and pieces are packaged in a large lump of a pound or two, or up to 10 or 15 pounds, bought wholesale. Cash & Carry sells it as a "regular" item in 3-lb pouches (they occasionally get in large cases, as well).
Bacon ends and pieces are the same as regular bacon, just not so prettily lined up in the package (instead in a smooshed lump), and of non-uniform size pieces. BUT, they are HALF the usual price per pound of that regular bacon. What I have found is that a package of ends and pieces has several nice, full-size strips, a few too-long strips, several half strips, and lots of just pieces.
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some "perfect" strips to use as a breakfast side |
When I open a package, I sort the pieces according to how I'll use them. I first spread out 3 or 4 large sheets of plastic wrap onto the counter, and leave 2 or 3 square pieces of plastic off to the side (for wrapping up bundles, without having to wash hands in order to cut more wrap). I then begin pulling the bacon out of the package, and sort, as I go.
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some half-strips to use at breakfast |
I sort the pieces into piles: the perfect, save-for-special-morning pieces, the nice-but-too-long pieces, the half-size strips, the almost all fat pieces, and the very meaty smaller pieces. In a 3-lb package, about half of the pieces are in condition good-enough for breakfast strips (the perfect, the too-long, and the half-size strips). About 1/4 of the package is very fatty, and the last 1/4 is very meaty.
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a pile of meaty bits, to chop and cook for quiche or topping baked potatoes |
Once all the pieces are sorted, I wrap in plastic wrap and keep in the freezer until I'm ready to use them/cook with them.
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a pile of fat to render and make "cracklings" |
In this recent batch, I have enough bacon for 3 family meals of about 2 strips each, 2 meal-size packages of meat-bits, to further chop and cook for adding to quiche, or topping salads or baked potatoes, and 1 bundle of fatty bit (about 3/4 of a pound, maybe), that I'll chop into small chunks and render the fat from for cooking, and save the "cracklings" from rendering (those tasty, crunchy bits once cooked) to use to top soups, or for adding to cooked greens. The rendered fat adds wonderful flavor to soups, sauteed vegetables, cornbread, baked beans, and cooked leafy greens. (For how to render fat, here's a post I wrote on rendering ham fat. It's the same process.)
As in buying regular bacon, inspect the package to see if the pieces look meaty. If not, skip to the next pack.
I've seen ends and pieces at Trader Joe's, and understand that some other markets around the US also carry them (Winn-Dixie was one name, I remember).
Cash & Carry sells them because this is what restaurants use for "seasoning bacon" and for making bacon bits. They reserve the long-strip bacon for breakfast sides.
But I am using many of the ends and pieces as our breakfast side. It doesn't bother us that the pieces aren't all of the same length or look like mates to each other. For those short strips in the package, there are times when a shorter strip of bacon is actually preferred, like on BLTs. What do you do when you go to assemble a BLT? You break each strip of bacon in half! And when I use bacon as a chopped and crumbled topping for items like baked potatoes or spinach salad, the size of each piece of bacon doesn't matter.
So, in all, buying bacon ends and pieces is a win for us. The only, (and this is small), drawback, is the 20 minutes it takes to sort the 3-lb package. 20 minutes of my time yields a savings of at least $1 per pound. On a 3-lb package, that 20 minutes saved us at least $3.