Slab-Bacon Tacos With Burned-Scallion Crema

Slab-Bacon Tacos With Burned-Scallion Crema
Peden & Munk for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop Stylist: Amy Wilson.
Total Time
45 minutes
Rating
5(286)
Comments
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This is candied bacon, essentially, on corn tortillas with a creamy, smoke-flecked sauce that tastes of scallion and lime. I like it with pineapple salsa as well, and a salad of cilantro, mint and soft lettuce. You could make it with your standard sliced bacon from the market, but it’s far superior with the thick-cut variety or, best of all, with a chunk of uncut bacon that you can slice as thick as you like.

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Ingredients

Yield:6 to 8 servings

    For the Bacon

    • 2tablespoons chile powder
    • 1tablespoon ground cumin
    • 1tablespoon brown sugar
    • 2teaspoons freshly ground black pepper
    • 2pounds slab bacon, cut into ¼-inch slices

    For the Crema

    • 1bunch green scallions, trimmed and cut into large pieces
    • 1jalapeño
    • 1 to 2limes
    • 1cup sour cream
    • ½cup mayonnaise
    • 1teaspoon kosher salt, or to taste

    For Serving

    • Corn tortillas
    • Lime wedges
    • Pineapple salsa (see recipe)
Ingredient Substitution Guide
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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Heat oven to 450 degrees. Mix the chile powder, ground cumin, brown sugar and black pepper together in a large bowl, and then add the bacon slices, tossing to coat them with the spice mixture.

  2. Step 2

    Arrange the coated bacon slices on a sheet pan, ideally one fitted with a wire rack. Roast in the oven until they are caramelized and starting to crisp at the edges, approximately 10 to 15 minutes. Remove pan from oven, chop the bacon into large dice and keep warm. Reserve the bacon fat for another use.

  3. Step 3

    While the bacon cooks, make the crema. Put the scallions and jalapeño in a large dry sauté pan and cook over high heat, tossing occasionally, until the scallions and jalapeño have blackened at the edges, approximately 10 to 12 minutes.

  4. Step 4

    Put the scallions and jalapeño in the bowl of a food processor, and blitz them with the juice of 1 lime, then add the sour cream and mayonnaise, and blitz the mixture until it is smooth and flecked with blackened bits. Season to taste with the salt and, if you’d like the mixture thinner, the juice of the second lime. Scrape into a bowl, and reserve.

  5. Step 5

    To serve, warm the tortillas in the dry pan, one or two at a time, and reserve them in a tortilla warmer or clean dish towel. Fill them with the diced bacon and a slash of the crema, along with quartered limes and, if you like, salsa, cilantro, mint and hot sauce.

Ratings

5 out of 5
286 user ratings
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Comments

Really tasty! If you can’t get slab bacon for a reasonable price, the Ends and Pieces bacon from Trader Joe’s worked really well.

Make sure to line the bacon pan with foil! You may want to flip the bacon slices halfway through.

This Burned-Scallion Crema is outstanding! The tacos are fine, but the Crema is magnificent! Use it on many things!

Good dinner, though spicier than my family usually likes. Next time I will use half of a jalapeño in the crema. It was even better as leftovers the next morning when I scrambled the bacon into eggs and served with the other toppings!

Delicious! The crema is great. The pineapple salsa is great. The only issue I had was that the bacon cooked really fast at 450F and slightly burned. I think the addition of the sugar makes it more prone to burning. Next time I will reduce the temperature to 375-400F and watch it like a hawk. I like how Sam resolved the age-old guac/crema argument of sour cream vs. mayo by using both.

Just cooked and ate this. "Chili pepper" is such a vague term. I used chipotle. A jalapeño these days can be anywhere from an inch and a half to 4 inches.. I have a HIGH threshold for heat. Everything was good but be careful with your definitions of "chili pepper."

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