Don’t Waste Bacon Grease: These Are 9 Ways to Use It.

Whether you regularly cook bacon for weekend breakfast spreads or you love to make BLTs, the leftover grease should never end up in the trash. That shimmering pool of oil is teeming with delicious pork fat that can be used in any number of cooking, cocktail and cookware care projects around the house. 

Next time you pull strips from the frying pan or baking sheet, drain that beautiful bacon grease into a stylish, temperature-safe container like this one. Not only will you avoid dried, caked up grease to deal with after eating, but you’ll have the key ingredient for bacon-washed bourbon or pork-laced cornbread, burgers, meatballs or meatloaf.

Bacon grease is packed with salty, slightly smoky flavor that you can use to add an umami burst to a number of dishes and recipes. A little goes a long way and you’ll only need a small amount of bacon fat to make your next stir fry or skillet of scrambled ouă sing.

Bacon in an air fryer

You’ll hang on to some of that leftover bacon grease if you know what’s good for ya. 

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Here’s how to use leftover bacon grease in the kitchen.

First, store it properly

solid bacon fat in bacon bin

Most nonmetal containers will melt or crack when hot bacon grease is poured in but this silicon bacon bin is resistant up to 500 degrees F.

Bacon Bin

First things first: You’ll want to store your bacon grease properly for future use. While it shouldn’t spoil, we still recommend keeping it in the fridge as it may have pieces of pork running throughout. 

Keep it in a metal can and cover it because the pungent bacon smell can permeate other foods in the fridge. If you’re going to store it in a glass or plastic container, wait for the grease to cool completely before you transfer it. This $18 silicone bacon bin has a built-in strainer to sift out the bacon bits.

9 ways to use leftover bacon grease

Fold it into your next burger

hamburger patties in a skillet on a grill

A little bacon fat mixed into ground beef goes a long way.

KirbyIng/Getty Images

If you want a seriously punched-up burger, fold a teaspoon of bacon fat into the ground beef or turkey before it hits the grates. You won’t need much to turn a basic burger into a pseudo bacon cheeseburger. Be aware that the burger will spit and sizzle more than a burger without pork fat but it will be worth the danger for all that extra flavor.

Season a cast-iron skillet

cast iron pan seasoning

Use a bit of bacon grease mixed with your go-to seasoning wax to pack your cast-iron skillets with flavor.

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Seasoning your cast-iron pan is key for keeping the surface of the skillet antiaderent. Doing this regularly, along with washing cast-iron cookware properly, will also build a base flavor that the pan imparts to certain foods such as steaks, burgers, chicken and hash browns. To season with bacon grease, add a small amount of the fat to your favorite cast-iron seasoning wax — I like Knapp — and proceed as you normally would

Add smokey pork flavor to a stir-fry

stir fry in skillet

Add a teaspoon of bacon fat to your next stir fry and thank me later.

Kilito Chan/Getty

The next time you’re whipping up a quick stir-fry for dinner, toss in a teaspoon of bacon grease to punch up the flavor. Don’t go overboard or you’ll end up with an overly greasy dish and a bacon flavor dominating all. 

Add depth to a batch of cornbread or cookies

easy skillet cornbread recipe chowhound

Cornbread will benefit from a small hit of that leftover bacon grease.

David Watsky/CNET

Bacon and cornbread are another magical combo. Because cornbread can easily dry out, adding a teaspoon of bacon fat to the mixture along with butter, will ensure the bread is moist with a hint of delicious bacon flavor. 

You can also add some bacon grease to a batch of chocolate chip or peanut butter cookies. Bacon works with a lot of other flavors, like maple, chocolate or vanilla, so don’t be shy about trying it with your favorite cookie recipe. 

Make bacon-washed bourbon

free spirits nonalcoholic bourbon

Add bacon fat to bourbon, shake and freeze. Then separate the solidified fat from the booze and you’ll have something special.

Free Spirits

I don’t know who originated the concept of adding bacon fat to bourbon but I’d like to buy them a drink. Fat-washing booze is simple: just add an ounce or two of liquified bacon fat to a bottle of bourbon. Shake and let it hang out in the fridge or freezer for a few days. Strain the solidified fat out of the bourbon with a mesh strainer and you’re left with seriously smoky brown booze to drink neat or use in cocktails. 

Use a smidge to make scrambled eggs

Scrambled Eggs James Bond

Bacon and eggs? Who would have thought?

CNET/Brian Cooley

Bacon and eggs make as good a duo as any other in the breakfast universe. Add a small bit of bacon grease to your pan with butter before dropping in the beaten eggs and stirring slowly. 

Mix it with another cooking oil to sear steaks or chicken 

three pieces of meat

Add some bacon fat to your cooking oil the next time you fry a piece of meat.

Getty

You won’t want to use bacon grease alone to saute foods but you should consider adding a little to your cooking oil of choice, such as olive, flaxseed or avocado oil.

Make bacon air fryer Brussels sprouts

brussel sprouts

Toss a pound of Brussels sprouts with some bacon grease and olive oil and pop them in the air fryer. 

Brian Bennett/CNET

Brussels sprouts are dense and make a good candidate to be air-fried. Toss them with a little bacon grease and then into the air fryer for 20 minutes. They’ll taste so good, you’ll forget you’re eating a vegetable at all.

Make a bacon fat salad dressing

harvest salad in bowl

Add some bacon fat to your next salad dressing. A little goes a long way.

David Watsky/CNET

Most salad dressing calls for some oil component so why not use delicious bacon grease? You won’t want to use bacon fat as the sole fat component but mix a small dab in with olive oil in your favorite vinaigrette recipe and you won’t be sorry.

What you can’t do with leftover bacon grease

Pour it down the drain

drain

Don’t put bacon grease down the drain. It’s about the fastest way to clog it up.

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If you pour even one batch of bacon grease down the kitchen sink, you’ll likely be on the phone with a plumber before the week’s over. Grease solidifies when cool and can ruin your plumbing.

Compost it

mill kitchen bin with food scraps inside

Bacon grease can’t be turned into viable compost. 

Mill

Bacon grease and other super oily foods can’t be composted. Keep them out of your home compost pile or electronic countertop composter.

Pour it into the garbage while it’s still hot

ctrash back hack.jpg

Hot grease will burn right through a garbage bag.

Taylor Martin/CNET

Do this and you’ll burn a hole in the bottom of the garbage bag. It won’t be a pretty scene when you try to take the trash out next time. If you’re going to trash it, pour it into a metal can and let it cool before discarding it.

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