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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Eons ago, I went with some friends to Ireland, where we stayed mostly
in B&Bs (the cheapest lodging option, unlike in the US where you pay Holiday Inn prices to stay in the equivalent of Grandma's spare room). The breakfasts were uniformly excellent, the best meal of the day. But the bacon was outside our experience. Although shaped in strips, they were not streaky, but a broad swath of lean pork, adjacent to a thin strip of fat, and then another strip of lean. We started and ended our trip in Dublin. The last day we breakfasted at a Bewleys, which cooked this bacon in a deep fat fryer. Is this the default style of bacon in Great Britain as well? Where on the hog does this bacon come from? And why the deep frying? |
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On Mon, 15 Dec 2014 20:03:00 -0000, Janet > wrote:
>In article >, says... >> >> Eons ago, I went with some friends to Ireland, where we stayed mostly >> in B&Bs (the cheapest lodging option, unlike in the US where you pay >> Holiday Inn prices to stay in the equivalent of Grandma's spare room). >> >> The breakfasts were uniformly excellent, the best meal of the day. But >> the bacon was outside our experience. Although shaped in strips, they >> were not streaky, but a broad swath of lean pork, adjacent to a thin >> strip of fat, and then another strip of lean. >> >> We started and ended our trip in Dublin. The last day we breakfasted >> at a Bewleys, which cooked this bacon in a deep fat fryer. >> >> Is this the default style of bacon in Great Britain as well? > > The cut of bacon is. Deep fat frying it definitely isn't :-( > > I almost always grill it (no extra fat required) > >> Where on the hog does this bacon come from? > > The cut is called back bacon and is cut through from the loin to the >belly. > > This explains it with pictures. > > http://www.englishbreakfastsociety.com/back-bacon.html > > What you call American bacon, is cut only from the pork belly. In the >UK it's called streaky bacon. Streaky is cheaper than back bacon; >considerably downmarket (you wouldn't, or shouldn't, get served streaky >bacon in a UK hotel or BB). That's an unexpected attitude. I prefer streaky bacon myself. |
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On Mon, 15 Dec 2014 20:03:00 -0000, Janet > wrote:
> In article >, > says... > > > > Is this the default style of bacon in Great Britain as well? > > The cut of bacon is. Deep fat frying it definitely isn't :-( > > I almost always grill it (no extra fat required) > > > Where on the hog does this bacon come from? > > The cut is called back bacon and is cut through from the loin to the > belly. > > This explains it with pictures. > > http://www.englishbreakfastsociety.com/back-bacon.html > > What you call American bacon, is cut only from the pork belly. In the > UK it's called streaky bacon. Streaky is cheaper than back bacon; > considerably downmarket (you wouldn't, or shouldn't, get served streaky > bacon in a UK hotel or BB). > My husband would be in 7th heaven if he could find British style bacon with American style flavor here (at a reasonable price of course). -- A kitchen without a cook is just a room |
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