New Orleans Bacon Pralines

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Rated 4 stars out of 5
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  • Read 17 Reviews
Total Time:
1 hr 55 min
Prep
20 min
Inactive
45 min
Cook
50 min
Yield:
18 to 24 pieces
Level:
Intermediate
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Ingredients

  • 1 pound thick-cut bacon
  • 3 tablespoons plus 2 cups light brown sugar
  • 3 tablespoons plus 2 tablespoons butter, cut into 1/2-inch cubes
  • 1 1/4 cups pecans, roughly chopped
  • 1/2 cup heavy cream
  • 1/4 teaspoon table salt

Directions

Special equipment: candy thermometer

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. Line 1 rimmed sheet pan with heavy foil and another with parchment paper.

Place a baking rack over the foil-lined sheet pan and arrange the bacon slices across the rack next to each other, but not overlapping. Bake until crispy, 15 to 18 minutes. When cool enough to handle, finely chop and set aside.

Reduce the oven temp to 350 degrees F.

In a small saucepan over moderate heat, melt 3 tablespoons butter and 3 tablespoons brown sugar, about 1 minute. Add the pecans and combine until the pecans are coated. Pour out onto another unlined sheet pan and bake until golden brown, about 10 minutes. Let cool.

Place the remaining 2 cups brown sugar into a 3-quart heavy saucepan, being careful to not get sugar on the sides of the pan. Add the cream, the remaining 2 tablespoons butter and salt and cook over very low heat (do not let simmer), stirring frequently with a rubber spatula, until the sugar is dissolved, 10 to 15 minutes. Wash down any sugar crystals on the side of the pan with a pastry brush dipped in cold water. Clamp on a candy thermometer to the saucepan and boil the syrup over moderately-high heat until it registers 236 degrees F.

Remove the pan from the heat, leaving the thermometer in place, and let cool until the syrup registers 220 degrees F, 1 to 2 minutes. Using a rubber spatula, stir in the bacon and pecans. Working quickly, drop 1 tablespoon of pralines onto the prepared parchment-lined sheet pan. If the mixture starts to harden, place back on the stove over moderately-low heat and let it melt. Let the pralines sit until they harden, about 45 minutes.

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Newest Ratings and Reviews

Read all 17 reviews

  • on October 05, 2011

    Flag

    I also saw the show and althought the recipe did vary it was still pretty simple to follow. For me, I am alsways a little heavy handed on measuring and this time I should have been more carefull. Example: I added a little more bacon and pecans thus making it harden way to fast. Had to keep it on the heat while spooning out. And they didn't spread as well as I would have liked. GREAT recipe but measure the add ins on the lighter side if you are looking for a flatter praline. This is a keeper for sure!

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  • on October 04, 2011

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    I watched the show just today and thought I would get the actual recipe on food network website. Half of the directions were not shown on the tv show! Claire said on the show to just forget about it in the pan once you stir the butter, brown sugar and cream together. Wrong! The website says to use a candy thermometer, sugar coat the nuts, etc. All of this was left out of the tv show. This is so wrong! Make it on tv like the website recipe says!

    people found this review Helpful.
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  • on October 04, 2011

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    I made bacon pecan pralines for a bake sale. They were the first thing to go! This is an easy recipe. I just cooked maple smoked bacon on my griddle and drained it and used chopped fresh pecans to add to the caramel mixture. Spooned out, let set up and packaged in clear plastic bags with a little ribbon tie and label. People were buying them just to try and then coming back for several more to take home. They are so YUMMY! This is a winner!

    people found this review Helpful.
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