Crunchy water chestnuts, wrapped in salty bacon, and smothered with honey bbq sauce. These baked to perfection appetizers will please and impress your guests. With only 4 ingredients, even the greenest of chefs can make this Bacon Wrapped Water Chestnuts Recipe.
Often Called Rumaki
Bacon wrapped water chestnuts are often called rumaki. Traditionally they were made with water chestnuts along with pieces of chicken or liver and wrapped in bacon, and then served with a teriyaki sauce. This is my take on that once popular appetizer from the 50s and 60s. This is simplified and just as fancy!
Let's Start With The Grocery List
To make this gourmet little snack - you only need 4 ingredients! You heard me right! 4 ingredients!
bacon
whole water chestnuts
barbecue sauce
honey
Pro Tip: Whole, Canned, Water chestnuts can be found in the asian food aisle of your grocery store.
How Do You Make Bacon Wrapped Water Chestnuts?
Cut your piece of bacon in half, and wrap it around a whole, canned, water chestnut.
Secure the bacon with a toothpick.
Place in a cast iron skillet or casserole dish.
Repeat until all piece of bacon and water chest nuts are wrapped.
Combine honey and barbecue sauce in a small bowl.
Whisk to combine.
Pour over prepared bacon wrapped water chestnuts.
How long do you cook? Bake at 400 for about 40 minutes, or until bacon is crisp. Serve right away.
Pro Tip: Make ahead and refrigerate. You can reheat these babies in about 7 minutes in a 400 degree oven.
The Perfect Appetizer
These guys are perfect for a party. Super Bowl, bunco, New Years - you name it! Your guests will love this gluten free indulgence!
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Bacon Wrapped Water Chestnuts
It will make your house smell pretty much like heaven, and your guests will feel like they are in heaven when they eat them!
Cut your bacon in half. Wrap each water chestnut with bacon and secure it with a toothpick. Place in a 9x13 cake pan that has been sprayed with non-stick spray.
Combine barbeque sauce and honey and whisk to combine. Drizzle over water chestnuts.
Bake at 400 degrees for 45 minutes to 1 hour, or until bacon begins to crisp.
It's just mayo with a little mustard in it. Super yummy. But not necessary for this dish. We love it with sweet potato medallions.
Reply
Erin Vsays
kids ate these up way too fast - i'll have to make more next time!
Reply
Kadeesays
It depends on your oven and your bacon. I have made them in 45 minutes and up to an hour. If I have a thicker cut of bacon I bake for an hour. A thinner cut - 45 minutes.
Reply
FoodAddictsays
These Bacon Wraps looks so delicious, ill give this recipe a try. But i am quite sure the ones i make wont be as good as these ;)
Wrap each half slice of bacon around one chicken liver half and a slice of water chestnut. Secure by skewering with small skewers or toothpicks. Carefully place Rumaki on baking sheet about 1 inch apart. Preheat oven to 400 degrees and bake for 30 minutes turning with tongs once.
Rumaki's ingredients and method of preparation vary, but usually it consists of water chestnuts and pieces of chicken liver wrapped in bacon and marinated in soy sauce and either ginger or brown sugar, then fried or baked.
Canned water chestnuts should be rinsed under cool, running water. To remove the "tinny" taste, soak the rinsed water chestnuts in fresh water with 1 teaspoon of baking soda for 10 minutes before slicing or chopping for various recipes.
Bake for 15-20 minutes until they turn golden brown and crispy. Grilling: If you're firing up the grill, toss the water chestnuts in a bit of oil and place them in a grilling basket. Grill over medium heat for approximately 10 minutes, flipping them once halfway through cooking.
We recommend baking bacon at 400 degrees F. For most recipes, you'd wait for the oven to preheat before you start baking. When baking bacon, however, we suggest sliding the sheet pan into the cold oven so the bacon sits inside as the oven comes to temperature.
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Place bacon slices, one next to the other, on the prepared baking sheet. Bake in the preheated oven for 15 to 20 minutes.
Rumaki is a pūpū (hors d'œuvre) of faux-Hawaiian origin. Its ingredients and method of preparation vary, but usually it consists of water chestnuts and pieces of chicken liver wrapped in bacon and marinated in soy sauce and either ginger or brown sugar.
It first appears on the menus of tiki restaurants in San Francisco and Los Angeles in the 1940s. Trader Vic's founder Victor Bergeron claimed it had Chinese origins, by way of Hawaii, but in actuality it was likely his own creation inspired by angels on horseback, an English pub snack of bacon-wrapped oysters.
The corms are unique because they remain crisp even after being cooked or canned, due to their ferulic acid content. Water chestnuts are popular in Chinese cooking.
They have a crisp, white flesh that can be enjoyed raw or cooked and are a common addition to Asian dishes such as stir-fries, chop suey, curries and salads. However, water chestnuts (Eleocharis dulcis) should not be confused with water caltrops (Trapa natans), which are also often called water chestnuts.
Cook it. The great appeal of the water chestnut is its magical ability to stay crisp no matter how long it is cooked. So, sliced, grated, or cubed, it is a totally reliable addition for texture to almost anything, ideally of an Asian bent.
If water chestnuts are fresh and unpeeled, they can last from 7 to 10 days in an enclosed paper bag in the refrigerator. Water chestnuts may also be frozen, either peeled or unpeeled. Place them in an airtight container or freezer bag. Adding a little lemon juice will keep peeled water chestnuts from discoloring.
Before using canned water chestnuts, rinse them under warm running water to remove any "tinny" taste. It is best to add water chestnuts, whether fresh or canned, toward the end of cooking to retain the crunchy texture.
The short answer to this is 15-20 minutes at 400°F! The beauty of chestnuts is you don't need to prepare them or toss them in anything before baking. Just look for the shells to pop open and expand, that means the chestnuts are soft and ready for eating!
Today at home, the oven is still my favorite way to cook bacon if I need more than a couple of slices. I top one or two rimmed baking sheet pans with sheets of parchment and a row of bacon slices, then bake them at 400°F for 15 minutes.
It should be browned, crisp, and tantalizingly juicy. On the stove or in the oven, most bacon fully cooks within 10-18 minutes. One thing to consider is that thick-cut bacon might take longer to fry than thin bacon. And turkey bacon cooks much faster.
An 18-by-13-inch baking sheet will hold eight to 10 slices. Line it with aluminum foil and then parchment paper for quick cleanup. Arrange slices 1/2 inch apart. Bake at 400°F for 14 to 15 minutes for chewy bacon or 16 to 18 minutes for crispy bacon.
Introduction: My name is Rev. Leonie Wyman, I am a colorful, tasty, splendid, fair, witty, gorgeous, splendid person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.
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