Slideshow: Baconopolis 2011
A tour through Tom Douglas’s annual bacon bonanza at The Palace Ballroom.
This bacon and blue cheese wedge salad was expertly prepared by Katie Okumura and Erin Warness and featured bacon from local purveyor Zoe’s Meats. Each dish cost patrons one ticket from a bundle they received at the door, and Okumura recalled a gentleman “pretending” to drop his ticket into the jar. She noticed, laughed, and gave him a salad anyway.
View Slideshow » Illustration:Diana Tran from Tom Douglas Catering prepared Elvis sandwiches. Peanut butter, caramelized bananas, and bourbon bacon were layered onto toast, which was then brushed with bacon fat and grilled. “Everyone said it was the worst combination ever,” Tran said, “but when we ate it, we were blown away.”
View Slideshow » Illustration: View Slideshow » Illustration:Damien Gonzalez from Tom Douglas catering prepared this Bacon Fat Confit, chicken liver wrapped in bacon and cooked with maple syrup. The bacon was sourced from Bavarian Meats in Pike Place Market.
View Slideshow » Illustration:“Bacon. It’s so good, I got it tattooed on my arm,” Gonzalez said. The tattoo, of which only the midsection is visible here, wraps around Gonzalez’s arm and depicts a pig with all of the important meaty parts labeled. There’s also a glass of wine and some cheese.
View Slideshow » Illustration:Bacon brought over from Nodine’s Smokehouse in Torrington, CT accompanied steamed clams and garlic bread.
View Slideshow » Illustration:For this delectable appetizer, pork sausage was wrapped in bacon then cooked and sliced before serving. The bacon hailed from Hill Meat Company in Pendleton, OR.
View Slideshow » Illustration:Ah, the grits. Bacon and cheesy grits, to be precise. What they lacked in aesthetic appeal was more than made up for in taste. Baconopolis goers Jason Jonson, Justin Paulson, and Nick Charles all separately proclaimed that it was their hands-down favorite. “I walked up and [the server] said, ‘Want some grits?’” Paulson said. “It’s not a matter of want anymore. I need ’em.”
View Slideshow » Illustration:Popular during the Great Depression, succotash enjoyed a porky resurgence at Baconopolis. It was made with bell peppers, zucchini, red onions, fresh corn, hominy, and small slices of bacon.
View Slideshow » Illustration:For dessert: bacon doughnuts, though Tom Douglas chef Jessica Moore explained that the doughnuts were more savory than sweet. She said the bacon is cooked and rendered, then wrapped in dough. The dough is then fried, tossed in a cinnamon-sugar-cayenne mix, and topped with bittersweet chocolate ganache.
View Slideshow » Illustration:Delicious ganache.
View Slideshow » Illustration:The Gentlemen Buckhunters (who also play at Tom Douglas’ Brave Horse Tavern) let loose with upbeat bluegrass tunes that set the pace for the evening, keeping people moving and consuming.
I, along with a sizable portion of the world’s eating population, am a bacon lover. Frankly, it’s not always the best relationship. Sometimes we spend a little too much time together, and need a break. Other times, I want something more —more than just pan-fried, straight-up bacon, or bacon resting between layers of lettuce, tomato, and bread. For these cravings, these yearnings, the answer has been there for years. The answer is Baconopolis.
Hosted by Tom Douglas Restaurants, the fourth annual Baconopolis took place Thursday, June 30 at the Palace Ballroom on the corner of Lenora and Fifth Avenue. Around 250 people filled the event space, and there were small tables for standing, milling around, and of course drinking—the signature cocktail was an apple-cinnamon old fashioned. (Bacon-infused drinks were attempted, but ultimately rejected due to issues with the bacon fat). Most of the porky bites were prepared by Tom Douglas’ own catering staff, though some corporate staff volunteered just for the fun of it.
Since Baconopolis draws a lot of repeat customers, the goal at each year’s event is to keep things new and exciting with inventive menus and atmosphere changes (a DJ one year, a live bluegrass band the next). “The people that come are obviously really enthusiastic, and that’s why we continue to do it,” says Katie Okumura, marketing manager at Tom Douglas. She wouldn’t divulge any plans for next year’s Baconopolis, other than confirming that there will be one.
And as far as this whole “bacon fad” thing dying out, well, Okumura isn’t worried. “I mean, it’s pork. I don’t think it’s ever going to go out of style.”



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