The Secret to Crispy Baked Potatoes: Roasting with Bacon Fat

This recipe for crispy baked potatoes is my new go-to favorite. The truth is (don’t tell anyone) that I have never enjoyed baked potatoes. The skins were always a bit leathery, the insides were dry and tasteless and no amount of toppings really ever saved the day.

Then, I discovered these crispy baked potatoes, thanks to my partner. He assumed everyone made potatoes this way. Um, no. Most of us stab the potato, maybe wrap it in foil and throw it in the oven. Voila. Apparently this method is common practice in many restaurants! This man has more years in commercial kitchens than I’ve been a professional chef myself, so I believed him and tried it. This recipe has been a game changer and my favorite part of these is the delicious crispy skin!

A Budget-Friendly Superstar: The Humble Potato

Before we get into the details of the how, let’s discuss the initial why of consuming not just baked potatoes but potatoes in general.

In an era of rising grocery costs, the potato is a genuine hero for your wallet. This week, potatoes were 75% off at my store, so naturally we will be consuming potatoes in every way possible for the foreseeable future. It’s one of the most affordable, versatile, and satisfying ingredients you can buy. A single bag of potatoes can form the base for multiple meals throughout the week (heck, I even put it in my bread!), making this recipe not just delicious, but also incredibly economical.

Transforming this low-cost staple into a restaurant-quality side dish with a few simple ingredients (bacon fat (or oil) and salt) is the ultimate kitchen win. It’s proof that eating well doesn’t have to be expensive. This dish is a fantastic way to fill up a family without stressing your food budget!

Your First Task: Scrub the Potatoes Thoroughly

This might seem obvious, but it’s the most commonly skipped step with the grittiest consequences! Potatoes are root vegetables grown directly in the soil. A quick rinse isn’t enough to remove all the dirt, which can leave a gritty texture on the skin even after baking.

I don’t know why no one ever explained this to me or why it didn’t really register until recently, so if it seems like I’m describing basic common sense, its not intended as an insult to anyone’s intelligence! Sometimes, in order to know we need to know something, we need to know that we need to know it. Ok, now my brain hurts. Sorry about that. But you get it, right?

How to do it right: 

  • Use a vegetable brush or your favorite scrubby sponge if those brushes give you the heebie-jeebies like they do for me.
  • Clean the potatoes under cold running water and really scrub every part of the potato’s surface.
  • Pay extra attention to the eyes and any crevices. You want the skin to be completely clean to the touch.
  • Once they’re scrubbed, pat them completely dry with a kitchen towel. A dry surface is crucial for the fat and salt to adhere properly and for the skin to crisp up instead of steam.

The Key to Crispy Baked Potatoes: Coating with (Bacon) Fat

The next most important step for a perfectly delicious skin for crispy baked potatoes isn’t the oven temperature or the type of potato—it’s coating the skin with fat before baking. While you can use olive oil or avocado oil, using rendered bacon fat is my secret weapon. It not only creates an irresistibly crispy shell but also infuses the entire potato with a subtle bacon flavor that works especially well if you top them with bacon too! This method transforms the humble baked potato into a standout side dish.

If you need a vegan substitute, here is an excellent post by Natasha! I’ve tried several of her solutions and recipes in the past and they are spot on.

greased potatoes for crispy baked potatoes on a sheet pan

Pro Tip: This recipe is perfect for a day when you’ve just finished a batch of Bakin’ Bacon, because you can put that bacon grease to excellent use right away!

Don’t Skip the Salt: Its Not Just For Flavor

After coating your potatoes in the fat of your choice, the next non-negotiable step for a perfectly crispy skin is a generous sprinkle of kosher salt. This does more than just season the potato!

The coarse salt crystals draw a little moisture to the surface of the skin. As the potato bakes, this moisture evaporates, leaving behind an even drier, crispier exterior. Essentially, the salt helps to intensify the crisping process started by the fat. The result is a shatteringly crisp, flavorful shell that’s a far cry from the tough, leathery skin you get from baking a plain potato.

Why Kosher Salt? Its large, flaky crystals are ideal because they adhere well to the oily surface and provide the perfect texture. Table salt is too fine and can just dissolve and become overly salty in spots. See? We’re using’ our noggin’ with this one!

greased and salted potatoes for crispy baked potatoes on a sheet tray

A Fun and Easy Recipe to Make with Kids

Baked potatoes are a fantastic gateway to cooking for children of all ages. The process is straightforward, hands-on, and yields a delicious reward they’ll be proud of. I can’t speak for my own child, because he detests any potato that is not a French fry, but I can certainly vouch for the numerous children I cared for as a nanny before I became a mother.

  • Simple Tasks: Little hands can help with scrubbing the potatoes (a fun, messy job!), brushing them with the bacon fat, and especially sprinkling on the big flakes of kosher salt.
  • Customizable Results: This is the biggest win for families. Once the potatoes are baked, everyone can build their own perfect potato. Set up a ‘topping bar’ with cheese, sour cream, chives or green onions and the crispy bacon. This empowers even the pickiest eater to create a dinner they’ll love, reducing mealtime battles! (I have absolutely discovered that the more involved my child is with preparing the food, the more likely he is to try it!)
  • Sturdy and Forgiving: Unlike delicate foods, potatoes are sturdy. Kids can load them up without fear of them falling apart, making for a stress-free meal.
  • Beige but Textured: For those of us who have children with sensory sensitivities, these potatoes can be a gateway to new textures on the outside while maintaining the familiar base flavor, color and texture of the potato inside.
  • Base to Build On: Once again, in referencing neuro-divergent kiddos, this is a great base. It may take time (like in my case) to get used to the baked potato concept, but it also encourages children to explore with toppings while being in control of the final outcome. Developing curiosity without pressure, even if tasting doesn’t happen until much later, is key!

What to Serve With Crispy Baked Potatoes

Tonight was an example of building the meal around a prolific vegetable, which is a refreshing change for me. Fortunately I had some frozen, marinated ribeye steaks from June when we carved up the ribeye roast. For a night that I was completely brain dead and we thought frozen pizza was on the menu, I think we did pretty darn well.

I paired the Crispy Baked Potatoes with some Ribeye Steaks, sautéed up some cauliflower that was dying in the fridge; caramelized an onion, dumped in a package of chopped spinach for something green and called it a night!

With a few fresh green onion ‘leaves’ snipped from the plant on the porch, these potatoes almost seem healthy!

crispy loaded bacon baked potatoes on white plate

Bacon Baked Potatoes

Yield: 4 servings
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 2 hours
Total Time: 2 hours 10 minutes

Ingredients

  • 4 potatoes
  • 4 t. Kosher salt
  • 4 t. Bacon Grease

Instructions

    1. Scrub potatoes clean.
    2. Delicately brush each potato with 1t. bacon grease or dump them in a giant bowl and bathe them in it. Your call.
    3. Sprinkle each with 1 t. kosher salt (or you can use the giant bowl method here too).
    4. Bake at 375* for 1-2 hours, depending on how soft you like your potatoes.
    5. Serve with butter or all the trimmings!

Notes

  • Olive oil works just fine as a substitute for the bacon grease, but coating them in some form of fat before baking is the key.
  • I tend to use Idaho potatoes for this recipe, but you can use whatever you like. I would suggest using a potato you can enjoy eating the skin of because the crispy skins are the selling point of this recipe.

If you loved these crispy baked potatoes, you might like to try these!

Fancy Breakfast Sandwiches

Cook in iron skillet over medium high heat:

4 Strips Bacon (cut smaller as shown, if you like)

OR

4 Sausage Patties

(Alternately, batch bake up a sheet or two here.)

This is where it gets fancy. Watch out!

You can use any sort of egg ring, metal cookie cutter or something round, about the same size as whatever bread you are using and heat resistant.

Oh yeah, choose your bread.

In pan, heat on medium:

1 T. Bacon Grease / Butter / Olive Oil

Swirl the ring in the pan to make sure the insides and bottom surfaces are greased lightly.

Break into ring:

1 Egg

This is the part where I realized that unless you have 4 or more of these rings, this is really a recipe for a single sandwich. So, here’s another option for ya if you have more than 1 person to feed.

fried eggs on pan

Fit as many eggs as you can in the pan.

Break the yolks to ensure even cooking and to speed up the process.

You can also just scramble the eggs before hand because you are going to cut them into pieces in a minute.

Cover pan and cook on medium low.

Steam is your friend. It speeds up the cooking and gives a much better texture. Also even if your pan was too hot for some reason, the steam will help cook everything before things get crispy.

As soon as eggs in rings can hold their shape, remove the ring.

If not using rings, use a spatula to cut eggs into portion sizes.

Melt in pan:

1 T. Butter

Place bread, english muffins or biscuits face down in butter to toast.

Flip.

If desired, melt on egg:

1 Slice Cheese

Add meat of choice.

Or don’t. It’s a free country.

So far, at least. Kind of.

Voila!

I know, they sounded fancier than they look.

They TASTE fancy, though. Or at least better than drive-thru version.

At the very least, you can pretend you had fast food without wondering what is in your sandwich.

Bakin’ Bacon: Perfect Mess-Free Bacon

There are few kitchen smells better than bacon frying in the morning. But if you’re still cooking it in a splattering skillet, you’re working too hard and missing out. This oven method is not just a way to cook bacon; it’s a technique that delivers perfect mess-free bacon strips every single time and rewards you with a jar of pure liquid gold—strained bacon fat—to use in other recipes.

If you’re anything like me, you tired long ago of standing at the stove, cooking off bacon in the skillet…especially if, like me, you had 3 ravenous brothers.

Luckily for all of us, there is a better way, which I learned from making breakfast for 200 hungry people in a commercial facility.

I bet you can’t guess the solution.

fresh perfect mess-free bacon strips curled on top of paper towels to drain

Why This Oven Method Wins

  • Perfectly Cooked, Every Time: No more curled, unevenly cooked strips. The oven’s consistent heat renders the fat slowly and evenly.
  • Hands-Off & Easy Cleanup: No standing over a sputtering pan. Just slide the tray in the oven. Lining the pan with foil makes cleanup a breeze.
  • Safety First: No more getting popped with hot grease.
  • A Two-for-One Reward: You get incredible bacon and a jar of precious bacon fat to elevate your cooking for weeks.

What You’ll Need for Perfect Mess-Free Bacon

  • Thick-Cut Bacon: One pound is a good starting point. The thickness is key for a meaty, crispy result.
  • Rimmed Baking Sheet: Essential for containing the rendered fat.
  • Aluminum Foil or Parchment Paper: For the easiest cleanup of your life.
  • Wire Rack (Optional): Using one allows heat to circulate completely around the bacon for extra crispiness.
green digital display of oven temperature

Step 1: Preheat the Oven

Good old 350* works best for me. Feel free to try different temperatures and see what happens! My oven operates best if I stick to the basics most of the time.

preparing sheet pan with parchment paper

Step 2: Prepare the Pan

My usual method is to simply line the pan with parchment or foil. If you happen to have an uncoated cooling rack, I recommend using it instead. Not only does the bacon cook more quickly (air circulation!) it saves having to drain the bacon at the end.

raw thick-cut bacon strips layed out on a parchment lined baking sheet.

Step 3: Arrange the Bacon

One thing that you don’t have to worry about is over crowding the bacon. Because of the high fat content, you can even overlap the pieces 1/8 – 1/4″ and they will just naturally separate during cooking. I like to lay mine nice and cozy but not crowding anyone.

raw bacon on a parchment lined baking sheet placed on the middle rack of a preheated oven.

Step 4: Bake to Perfection

I would say the one drawback is the time it takes for the bacon to cook in the oven, but truthfully it often takes just as long on the stove top, especially if you’re having to batch it…plus you are standing there…and its taking up valuable burner space.

Pop your pan of bacon on the middle rack. Now you can forget it for half an hour (or more).

But seriously, how long do I bake it for?!

I have found that 30-40 minutes gives a nice chewy result while 40-50 minutes is best for crispy perfection.

freshly cooked perfect mess-free bacon strips on a parchment lined pan

Step 5: Drain & Strain

If you happen to have used a metal (uncoated) baking rack, then you may not have to do any draining. Otherwise, it is important to remove the bacon to paper-towels on a plate or even to a cooling rack with another pan underneath. As soon as the bacon grease begins to cool, it solidifies, so we don’t want our bacon swimming around in that as it cools down!

Sometimes if I’m in a rush, I will simply carefully tilt the sheet pan enough that the bacon grease drains out of one corner of the pan into a small glass bowl. This way if I don’t have anywhere else to cool the bacon, the majority of the grease has been removed from the pan.

Tips for Perfect Bacon

  • Storage: Let the bacon fat cool completely before sealing the jar. It can be stored in the refrigerator for months. Use it for frying eggs, roasting potatoes, or making gravy.
  • Watch Closely: Bacon can go from perfectly crispy to burnt very quickly in the last few minutes.
  • For Chewier Bacon: Bake for a shorter time (20-30 minutes).
  • For Extra Crispy Bacon: Bake a little longer, up to 40 minutes for thick-cut.

How to Use Your Liquid Gold

This is where the real magic happens. That jar of strained bacon fat is a flavor bomb waiting to be used.

  • Cooking Fat: Use it to fry your morning eggs for an incredible flavor boost.
  • Roasting: Toss root vegetables like potatoes or Brussels sprouts in melted bacon fat before roasting. (This is the secret behind my famous Crispy Baked Potatoes!)
  • Flavoring: Add a spoonful to soups, stews, or gravy for a deep, savory, smoky undertone.

Companion Recipes

The best part of this is that now you are not being attacked by sizzling bacon and there is now enough room on the stove top to start on other key components for breakfast. Check out some of my favorite pairings below!