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Bacon Burnt Ends: Three Textures, One Easy Recipe

By Chris Johns •  Updated: April 19, 2026 •  8 min read

Glossy caramelized bacon burnt ends piled on a rustic wooden cutting board with toothpicks

Bacon burnt ends are cubed slab bacon smoked at 250-275°F for 2-3 hours, then glazed with a sweet-savory sauce until sticky and caramelized. You need a smoker (or any grill set up for indirect heat), slab bacon, BBQ rub, brown sugar, butter, and your favorite barbecue sauce. They’re done when each cube is tender with a glossy, lacquered bark that pulls apart with zero resistance.

What Are Bacon Burnt Ends?

Traditional burnt ends come from the point of a beef brisket. Bacon burnt ends borrow the same concept but swap in slab bacon for a fraction of the effort. You cube the bacon, smoke it low and slow, toss the cubes in a glaze, and finish them until each piece is a sticky little morsel of sweet, smoky, salty perfection. The technique was popularized by Heim BBQ in Fort Worth, Texas, and quickly became a backyard staple because the recipe is almost impossible to mess up. Unlike brisket burnt ends, which demand hours of trimming, seasoning, and temperature management, bacon burnt ends take roughly half the time and require no butchery skills whatsoever.

Choosing the Right Bacon

Start with slab bacon, not pre-sliced strips. Slab bacon is a whole piece of cured, smoked pork belly that you cube yourself. It holds its shape during smoking and gives you uniform cubes with the perfect meat-to-fat ratio. Look for slabs with good marbling. Too much fat and the cubes will shrink to nothing. Too lean and they’ll dry out before the fat renders. Wright Brand and many local butcher shops sell quality slab bacon. If you can only find thick-cut slices, stack three or four slices together and cut crosswise into cubes, but expect some pieces to separate during cooking.

🔥 Pitmaster Tip: Avoid standard thin-cut bacon entirely. The slices fall apart when cubed and turn into crispy shards instead of tender, saucy burnt ends.

How Cube Size Affects Texture

The size you cut your bacon determines the final texture. Smaller cubes render faster and develop more bark per bite. Larger cubes stay juicier and hold sauce better. Here’s how to dial in the finish you want.

Bacon burnt ends texture matrix
Texture Style Cube Size Smoke Time Braise/Finish Result
Chewy-Glazed 1″ cubes 1 hr 20-30 min uncovered glaze Firm bite, caramelized shell
Sticky-Tender 1.5″ cubes 1.5 hr 1 hr foil-covered Melt-in-mouth, saucy
Crisp-Edged 1″ cubes 2 hr 15 min high heat finish Crispy bark, smoky crunch

For your first batch, go with 1.5-inch cubes and the sticky-tender method. It’s the most forgiving and delivers the classic bacon burnt ends experience that disappears from party trays in minutes.

Avoiding the Two Common Failures

Bacon burnt ends fail in exactly two ways, and both are easy to prevent. Rubbery fat happens when the smoke time is too short or your temperature drops below 225°F. Bacon fat needs sustained heat to render from waxy and chewy into silky and tender. Keep your smoker at 250-275°F and give the cubes at least 90 minutes of smoke before glazing. If you cut into a piece and the fat still looks white and translucent, it needs more time. Candy-like oversweetness is the other pitfall. Brown sugar, maple syrup, and sweet BBQ sauce can pile up fast. Use a 2:1 ratio of barbecue sauce to brown sugar in your glaze, and skip the maple syrup if your sauce already leans sweet. The smoke and salt from the bacon should balance the sweetness, not get buried by it.

💡 Pro Tip: Taste your glaze before adding it to the pan. If it’s cloyingly sweet on its own, the finished burnt ends will be even sweeter once the bacon fat concentrates the flavors.

How to Make Bacon Burnt Ends

This bacon burnt ends recipe works on any smoker, pellet grill, or charcoal grill set up for indirect heat. Cherry, apple, or hickory wood all pair well with bacon. The full step-by-step is in the recipe card below, but here’s the quick overview. Cut your slab bacon into uniform cubes. Toss them in a dry rub and arrange on a greased wire rack. Smoke at 250°F for 1-2 hours (depending on your target texture from the table above), flipping halfway through. Transfer the cubes to an aluminum pan, add butter, brown sugar, and BBQ sauce, then cover with foil and return to the smoker. The braise melts everything together into a sticky glaze that coats each cube.

Cubed bacon pieces in aluminum pan with BBQ sauce glaze and melting butter on a smoker

Remove the foil for the last 15-30 minutes to let the glaze tighten up and develop a lacquered finish. The burnt ends are done when a toothpick slides through with no resistance and the exterior is glossy and slightly tacky. Serve them straight off the smoker with toothpicks as an appetizer, pile them into tacos, or scatter them over loaded nachos. They also make an incredible topping for mac and cheese.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I Use Slab Bacon or Thick-Cut Slices?

Slab bacon is the clear winner. It’s a single piece of cured pork belly you cube yourself, so the pieces hold together during smoking and glazing. Thick-cut slices can work in a pinch if you stack and cut them crosswise, but individual slices tend to separate and won’t form proper cubes. Most butcher counters and brands like Wright carry slab bacon.

How Long Do Bacon Burnt Ends Take?

Plan for 2-3 hours total. The smoke phase runs 1-2 hours depending on cube size and your target texture. The glaze and braise phase adds another 30-60 minutes. Smaller cubes finish faster. Use the texture matrix table above to pick your timing based on whether you want chewy-glazed, sticky-tender, or crisp-edged results.

Can I Make Bacon Burnt Ends Ahead of Time?

Yes. Smoke and glaze them fully, then store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. Reheat in a foil-covered pan at 350°F for about 15 minutes. Spray the foil with nonstick cooking spray so you don’t lose any glaze to sticking. They won’t be quite as crispy as fresh, but the flavor holds up well.

What Sauce Works Best for Bacon Burnt Ends?

A sweet, thick Kansas City-style BBQ sauce is the classic choice. It clings to the cubes and caramelizes beautifully. For a twist, try a maple-bourbon glaze or a spicy chipotle sauce. If you’re watching sugar intake, a sugar-free BBQ sauce works too, though you may want to add a tablespoon of honey to help it caramelize.

Glossy caramelized bacon burnt ends piled on a rustic wooden cutting board with toothpicks

Bacon Burnt Ends

Cubed slab bacon smoked low and slow, then tossed in a sticky brown sugar and BBQ sauce glaze. These bacon burnt ends deliver chewy, smoky, caramelized bites that vanish from party trays in minutes.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 2 hours 30 minutes
Total Time 2 hours 45 minutes
Course Appetizer, Snack
Cuisine American, BBQ
Servings 8 servings
Calories 320 kcal

Equipment

  • Smoker pellet grill, offset, or charcoal grill with indirect setup
  • Wire cooling rack for smoking phase
  • Disposable aluminum pan half-size for glazing phase
  • Aluminum foil for covering during braise
  • Sharp knife for cubing the slab bacon

Ingredients
  

Bacon

  • 3 pounds slab bacon unsliced, good marbling

Dry Rub

  • 2 tablespoons BBQ rub your favorite pork rub
  • 1 tablespoon black pepper coarsely ground

Glaze

  • 1/2 cup BBQ sauce Kansas City-style recommended
  • 1/4 cup brown sugar light or dark
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter sliced into pats
  • 1 tablespoon honey optional, for extra caramelization

Instructions
 

  • Preheat your smoker to 250°F. Add cherry, apple, or hickory wood for smoke.
  • Cut the slab bacon into 1.5-inch cubes, keeping them as uniform as possible for even cooking.
  • Toss the bacon cubes with BBQ rub and black pepper in a large bowl until evenly coated.
  • Lightly grease a wire cooling rack with cooking spray. Arrange the bacon cubes on the rack, spacing them about half an inch apart.
  • Place the rack on the smoker and smoke for 1 hour. Flip each cube, then continue smoking for another 30 minutes to 1 hour until the bark is set and the fat has started to render.
  • Transfer the smoked bacon cubes to a disposable aluminum pan. Add the sliced butter on top, sprinkle with brown sugar, drizzle with BBQ sauce, and add honey if using.
  • Cover the pan tightly with aluminum foil. Return to the smoker and cook for 45-60 minutes until the cubes are tender and the glaze is bubbling.
  • Remove the foil and cook uncovered for 15-20 minutes to let the glaze tighten and develop a sticky, lacquered finish.
  • Remove from the smoker, let rest for 5 minutes, and serve with toothpicks as an appetizer or over your favorite sides.

Notes

Wood choice: Cherry and apple give a mellow, sweet smoke. Hickory delivers a stronger, more traditional BBQ flavor. Avoid mesquite, which can overpower the bacon.
Doneness test: Insert a toothpick into the largest cube. It should slide in and out with zero resistance. The exterior should look glossy and slightly tacky.
Grease management: Bacon releases a lot of fat during cooking. If your pan fills up during the braise, carefully pour off excess grease before removing the foil for the final glaze step.
Keywords bacon burnt ends, bacon burnt ends recipe, BBQ bacon, burnt ends, how to make bacon burnt ends, smoked bacon, smoked bacon burnt ends
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Chris Johns

Chris is the founder of BBQ Report® and has been an avid barbecue fan for over 20 years. His mission is to make grilling and smoking the best food possible easy for everyone. And each year, he continues to help more people with grilling, smoking, and barbecue recipe recommendations.