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Peterson: Bringing home the bacon, or a facsimile of it

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All the while, I smelled of bacon, a scent that penetrates like few foods.

And when I started smelling it four months ago, it made me hungry for bacon, but not to the point that I would go out and buy a slab. It’s not like we had bacon air fresheners, or pig potpourri or fatback candles, which would be possible given the amount of fat that bacon has.

I mentioned this to my wife, and a few weeks later, we had bacon in our refrigerator. My wife is very thoughtful, but I really wasn’t hinting around. It was just an odd thing to smell. Maybe it was a weird haunting.

Bacon has changed since my days at Country Kitchen. Today, the animal does not have to be a hog. Apparently, turkeys have been so fattened that they have developed bellies from which butchers slice bacon, although I have not noticed it on the traditional baking turkeys, which I have had more frequently than bacon in the past five years.

But turkey is used as a semihealthy substitute for foods that aren’t so good for you, such as bacon from a hog, which has a high fat content and plenty of sodium. Turkey bacon has less fat, and they apparently don’t soak it in a salt brine to cure it, because it has fairly little sodium. Or at least a serving does, which is one piece of bacon. One piece? Not three?

It’s not like they are trying to pull a fast one, putting “turkey” in fine print. No, it’s proudly labeled “Turkey Bacon” in large type, and if you read the nutrition label, it says in capital letters, “CONTAINS NO PORK.” And if you read the label, you might be safe to assume that turkeys don’t have bellies because the ingredients include “mechanically separated turkey,” as well as plain “turkey,” a distinction I’m not sure I want to know the meaning of, but it seems like the butcher is cut out of process.

With bacon in the refrigerator, even turkey bacon, I couldn’t help but try, and I know from long-ago experience – no, not at Country Kitchen – you can microwave bacon, which cuts down on the grease splatters and flash fires, although the directions are pretty clear about microwaving: “Not recommended for best results.”


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