Bacon Corn Hash

Bacon Corn Hash is a delicious way to start off your morning!  Topped with a fried egg, it’s got everything you want for breakfast!  Bacon, potatoes, corn and eggs.  It’s also, without the eggs, a wonderful side dish.  So, get cooking!

This recipe has 5 ingredients and yet produces a flavor-packed dish.  Begin by crisping up bacon pieces in a skillet.  Once nice and crisp, transfer the bacon to paper towel to drain and add the potato chunks to the bacon fat that’s left in the skillet.

Sauté the potatoes until nice and crisp.  This takes about 20 minutes.  If there’s a lot of bacon fat left in the skillet after the potatoes are crisp, you can push the potatoes aside and drain some of it out (save it to fry the eggs in it, if desired).

Add the corn to the skillet and sauté for about 4-5 minutes, ensuring that the corn stays fairly crisp. 

Add the bacon back into the skillet and stir until the bacon is warm, about one minute.  Remove the skillet from the cooktop and sprinkle the scallions over.  Toss them into the hash so that they soften.

If this is breakfast, fry up an egg in any reserved bacon fat you might have or butter, and place it atop the hash.  Serve it and enjoy!

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Bacon Corn Hash

Makes: 4 servings

Prep Time: 10 minutes

Cook Time: 40 minutes

Total Time: 50 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1/2 pound thick-cut bacon, cut into small dice
  • 1 pound red potatoes, scrubbed clean and diced into 1/4- to 1/2-inch cubes (about 3 to 3 1/4 cups)
  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 4 medium-large ears corn, kernels cut from the cob (2 1/2 to 3 cups)
  • 1 bundle scallions, thinly sliced
  • 4 eggs

Instructions

Toss bacon into a large skillet over medium heat, no need to heat the pan first. Let rest for a few minutes until it starts sizzling, then move the bits around so that they begin to brown evenly. Again, wait a couple minutes before shuffling the pieces around; you’re looking for them to get evenly golden and crisp. This should take about 10 minutes. Remove the bacon bits with a slotted spoon, leaving the drippings in the pan and transferring the bacon to paper towels to drain.

Heat the pan to medium/medium-high, making sure the bacon fat is nicely sizzling, add the potatoes all at once in a single layer. Sprinkle them with 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt and several grinds of black pepper. Let them cook for a few minutes in one place and get a bit golden underneath before turning them over and moving them around. Repeat this process until the potatoes are browned on all sides; this takes about 20 minutes.

At this point, if there’s a lot of fat in the pan, you can push aside the potatoes and pour or spoon off all but a small amount of the fat. If you save the fat, you can use it to fry an egg in a bit.

Bump up the heat a little and add the corn to the skillet. Sauté the potatoes and corn together until the corn gets a bit brown but stays fairly crisp, about 4 to 5 minutes. Add the drained bacon, and stir the mixture together until it’s evenly warm, about 1 more minute. Remove the skillet from the burner and sprinkle the scallions (reserving a couple spoonfuls if you’d like to use them as fried egg garnish) over the hash. In two minutes, they should be warm and mellowed. Season with more salt or pepper to taste, if needed.

To add a fried egg to the top of the hash, heat a small skillet over medium-high heat and swirl in one to two teaspoons bacon fat or butter. Crack one egg into the skillet and reduce heat to medium. I like to cover the skillet with a small lid at this point, as it seems to help the egg cook faster and more evenly. In one minute, you should have a perfect sunny-side-up egg. Season with salt and pepper, serve on top of a pile of bacon corn hash.

Recipe by Smitten Kitchen

Ingredients

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