The Best BLT Sandwich

The secret to the best bacon, lettuce, and tomato? Use the best tomatoes. Put away the fancy bread. And most importantly: Don't mess with it.

Two halves of a BLT stacked on top of each other

Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez

Why It Works

  • Slow-cooking the bacon renders its fat, while helping it to cook evenly and crisply.
  • Toasting the bread in bacon fat adds an extra layer of flavor.
  • Seasoning the tomatoes directly with salt and pepper enhances their flavor.
  • Shredded iceberg lettuce provides structure, sweetness, and crunch.

The grilled cheese may give it a buttery run for its money, but the BLT has more grace. It doesn't come out of its corner firing on all cylinders, like a Cuban or a muffuletta, but a BLT has stamina—each bite improves on the last. A Reuben may sucker-punch you with its one-two jab of salt and fat, but what the BLT lacks in pure power, it makes up for in subtlety and balance. The BLT is the true king of the sandwich ring, and it's my favorite sandwich of all time.

Two halves of a BLT stacked on top of each other

Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez

I didn't grow up loving BLTs. In fact, I don't think I even tasted my first BLT until freshman year of college, when, on a particularly lean-pocketed evening, I ordered one from LaVerde's, the campus deli, only because it was the cheapest sandwich on the menu. I watched as they split open a cold submarine roll; slathered on a layer of gelatinous, yellow-skinned mayo; and stuffed in some pale pink tomatoes, cut on the meat slicer, along with a nest of bagged, pre-shredded iceberg lettuce and a handful of thin yet leathery bacon.

I took a bite, immediately picked out the mealy tomato pieces, and made a mental note to order this sandwich tomato-free in the future. I spent the next four years eating mediocre (but cheap!) BL sandwiches, wondering what all the fuss was about.

A BLT is a tomato sandwich, seasoned with bacon.

It wasn't until I tasted my first great tomato, at the vine-ripe old age of 22, that I finally understood the true nature of the BLT (and, by extension, why I'd never enjoyed tomatoes on my sandwiches or in my salads). Here we go: A BLT is not a well-dressed bacon sandwich. A BLT is a tomato sandwich, seasoned with bacon. From this basic premise, all else follows.

Indeed, a better name for the BLT might well be the Tomato Club, for it is the perfect tomato, not the bacon, that is the rarest, the most ephemeral, the most singularly delicious ingredient. A BLT is not a democracy. It is not a committee meeting. It is a dictatorship, and the tomato is King, Queen, and Supreme Leader. In the BLT universe, the Prime Directive is that all other ingredients shall be at Her Majesty's service, their only role to prop her up and enhance her best qualities.

Just like making a great Caprese salad, making a great BLT is pretty straightforward: Get yourself some perfect tomatoes, slice them, season them, and stick them in between two slices of good, toasted bread with some bacon, lettuce, and mayo. But, as with a Caprese salad, there are far more ways to mess up a BLT than there are ways to perfect it. Using mealy, off-season tomatoes is the primary unforgivable sin, but when it comes to BLT crimes, that's just the tip of the iceberg lettuce.

BLT Rule #1: Use Excellent Tomatoes

Tomatoes on a cutting board.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

There are no two ways about it: BLTs are a seasonal treat. They are the sandwich to look forward to as the longest days of summer slowly shorten and the August and September tomatoes make their way to the farmers' market (or, better yet, to your backyard). Of all the fruits and vegetables in the world, the tomato is the one that shows the greatest seasonal shift.

Off-season tomatoes are grown in warmer climates, picked when underripe, then treated with ethylene gas (a gas that is naturally produced by plants to trigger ripening in fruits) to produce their red color before they hit supermarket shelves. The result is tomatoes that are as bland as they are ruby-red.

Truly great tomatoes must be fully ripened on the vine, where they'll continue to develop flavor and sweetness. Look for plump tomatoes, with the heft and give of a water balloon. If you have a choice, look for substantial and meaty heirloom varieties with balanced sweetness and acidity, like Cherokee Purple or Brandywine.

Avoid tomatoes that feel light for their size, which means they have more air pockets inside and are typically better for saucing or salads.

For a BLT, you want a tomato that drips juices down your forearm, like a rare prime rib, as you bite into the sandwich.

BLT Rule #2: Season the Tomatoes

Tomatos with salt and pepper

Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez

Run this little experiment at home: Get yourself the best tomato you can find, and cut off a slice. Split that slice in half and eat one half. Take note of how sweet, fragrant, juicy, and delicious it was. Now sprinkle that second half with a little coarse sea salt, and put it in your mouth. Notice how it's not just saltier, but also seems sweeter, more fragrant, and juicier?

Salt heightens your perceptions. It allows you to taste your food better. Salt helps draw more moisture out of that tomato slice and gets your submandibular gland working overtime, producing the saliva that delivers the tomato's flavors to your taste buds. Salt crystals add a light crunch, which in turn makes the tomato seem juicier. Salt suppresses our sense of bitterness, making that tomato taste sweeter. Salt takes that flavor dial and turns it up to 11.

When your tongue senses that salt, it sends out a signal that says, "Hey! Brain! There's something real special going on here, so spread the word!" Your brain, in turn, shouts out, "Hey! Nose! Wake up and smell the Solanum lycopersicum!" To which your nose responds: "Thanks for letting me know, I'm going to pay extra-special attention to it now, but Brain, why can't you just say 'tomato' like everyone else? Do you always have to be such a smarty-pants?"

If you want to go the extra mile (and you do), some freshly cracked black pepper can also help accentuate flavor by contrasting the tomato's cool sweetness with its sharp bite. (And, for the love of good taste and all that is holy, leave that can of dusty, flavorless pre-ground stuff in the very back of the pantry, where you found it when you moved into the place, and where it should remain until you move out.)

BLT Rule #3: Use Not-Too-Much Good-Enough Bacon

Close up of bacon frying on a griddle

Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez

With the tomato sufficiently pampered, let's move on to the bacon, starting with picking it out.

Bottom-of-the-barrel supermarket bacon is injected with brine, because it's a quick and dirty way to set the pink color and deliver the salty, smoky flavor we crave, cutting a days-long curing process down to a matter of hours. The problem is, it also adds a ton of moisture, causing this so-called "pumped bacon" to curl, spit, and spatter as it cooks, which can lead to uneven browning and crisping. The flavor of injected bacon is often one-dimensional, though a few brands fared well in our blind taste test.

Personally, I avoid it, and an easy way to do so is to look for ascorbate or sodium erythorbate on the ingredients label—antioxidants required by law in injected meats to stem the formation of nitrosamines, which are believed to increase the risk of cancer.

On the next rung up the bacon ladder, you have bacon that's "immersion-cured," meaning it's been soaked in brine for several days rather than injected. You can find some truly excellent bacons made through this method, especially if they're subsequently naturally smoked, which can help dry out the meat while adding flavor. Nueske's and Wright make brined-then-smoked bacons, and I'm fond of both.

Bacon aficionados will swear by "dry-cured" bacons: pork bellies that have been rubbed with a curing mixture before smoking and are thus never exposed to extra moisture. These bacons tend to have a denser texture and a more pronounced saltiness, and exhibit relatively little shrinking and shriveling as they cook. Benton's and Tender Belly make great dry-cured bacons.

There's nothing that can ruin a perfect-looking BLT like a slice of bacon that pulls out of the sandwich.

I'm going to go out on a limb here and suggest that you save the dry-cured stuff for eating on its own. Because of the extended curing and smoking processes, it tends to have a flavor that I find overwhelming and distracting in a BLT. Most dry-cured bacons are extra thick-cut and extra meaty, which gives them a chewier texture that can crush tomatoes or make the sandwich difficult to bite through. There's nothing that can ruin a perfect-looking BLT like a slice of bacon that pulls out of the sandwich as you bite into it, dragging out tomato innards that fall and splatter on the table like guts in a slasher film.

Remember the Prime Directive? All other ingredients shall be in service of the tomato. I stick with a high-quality, not-too-meaty brined bacon for my BLTs. As for quantity, three slices is the magic number for me. It means I get to split each slice in half crosswise and stack the pieces on the sandwich in two layers of three half slices each, alternating their direction for maximum stability.

BLT Rule #4: Cook the Bacon Flat and Crisp

There are a few different ways you can cook your bacon for a BLT. If you're cooking for one, the microwave is an attractive option because the bacon will cook fast and evenly, but don't do it! There's no good way to collect rendered bacon fat using the microwave method, which throws a wrench into my plans for the bread (we'll get there momentarily).

In my book, I recommend cooking bacon with a little water in the skillet. This is a great method for bacon à la carte: It helps fat render before the bacon starts to crisp and keeps your slices juicier and more tender. But for a BLT, the bacon should be shatteringly crisp to contrast the soft juiciness of the tomato (and to prevent that dreaded bacon-pull).

A better approach is to cook it dry on the stovetop, sandwiched between a heavy griddle that heats evenly and a grill press or—better yet—a construction trowel, to keep it flat as it renders.

A heavy construction trowel pressing down on strips of bacon on a griddle.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Why would I use a construction trowel when Amazon sells a whole slew of bacon and burger presses for just about the same price, or even a little cheaper? It's really a matter of weight. Burger presses are heavy, which limits their usefulness. They automatically compress gently formed burger patties or soft bread. A light trowel, on the other hand, compresses only as much as you'd like it to, allowing you to adapt its use to a wider range of cooking scenarios. It's also great for installing that new tile floor in the laundry room.

I lay my bacon slices out on a cool griddle or pan, place the trowel or weight on top, then slowly cook them over medium-low heat, rendering out fat and browning each slice evenly.

I'm of the mind that BLTs taste best when eaten in solitude, but if you like your sandwiches with company, I'd suggest using the oven to cook the bacon, sandwiching the slices between two sheets of parchment paper that are placed between two rimmed baking sheets. Cooked this way, the bacon stays flat, cooks evenly without needing to be flipped, and keeps your oven spatter-free.

BLT Rule #5: Skip the Fancy Bread

I love sourdough. I love a crusty French boule. I love a classic San Francisco Dutch Crunch. I love ciabatta. I love bagels almost more than life itself. But get them away from my BLT, please.

Breads that are too hearty and chewy violate the Prime Directive, and not in the charming and roguish way that makes a good feature film, but in the clumsy, heavy-handed way that crushes the life out of the tomato and the joy out of the sandwich, even as they cut up the roof of your mouth.

A good-quality pre-sliced supermarket sandwich bread is a great vehicle for a BLT. At the standard supermarket, my favorite BLT bread has been Oroweat/Arnold Country Buttermilk, but if you have access to a Japanese bakery, I highly suggest you pick yourself up a loaf of shokupan, a Japanese-style, dairy-rich white sandwich loaf that makes the kind of toast that butter dreams of being spread on. Of the recipes I've seen online, this one, from Dreams of Dashi, produces the best homemade results.

BLT Rule #6: Toast the Bread...in Bacon Fat

I know some folks who insist on untoasted white bread for their BLTs. The rest of us use toast. Here's my idea: We're making toast, and we've got rendered bacon fat sitting in front of us. Why not put two and two together to make five here?

Just like with a grilled cheese, you want rich, even browning, which means toasting low and slow in the bacon fat. A good rule of thumb: If you can't karaoke your way through at least one song before the bread has browned, you're browning it too hot and fast.

BLT Rule #7: Use Your Favorite Mayonnaise

A bowl of homemade mayonnaise.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

We're past the most essential territory now and have started veering into the realm of personal taste, and mayonnaise is an arena in which expressing the wrong opinion is liable to get you in some serious trouble.

If you've never made homemade mayonnaise, I highly suggest you try it. Using our two-minute immersion-blender technique, it's a simple, inexpensive task.

If you're going to use store-bought (and I often do), then go with whatever brand inspires you most, whether you like the creaminess of Duke's, the classic flavor of Hellmann's, or even the tangy zip of Miracle Whip. The only really important part is to slather it on both slices of the toast, and be generous with it.

BLT Rule #8: Use the Right Lettuce

A decade ago, Serious Eats Founder and Overlord Ed Levine, in what might have been the most iconoclastic move in a life defined by iconoclasm, suggested that the L in a BLT is superfluous. We often have friendly disagreements over the objective truth in completely subjective matters, but rarely do we disagree as strongly as we do on this subject.

The L is not superfluous. It's not just pretty garnish or filler. It plays a vital role in the texture and flavor of the sandwich. The right lettuce adds a moist, refreshing crunch that is complementary to the fatty crispness of the bacon and the juicy softness of the tomato. I think of its flavor as the soundtrack to the film: It's not a main part of the action, but without it, everything else feels somehow empty. It provides the neutral backdrop for the other flavors to mingle.

With this in mind, I have a few suggestions for lettuce. First of all, take a look around and see if you can spot your inner chef peeking out from the corner, a handful of arugula or baby spinach in hand. Then, gently but firmly, tell them that they aren't invited to this particular party. This is neither the time nor the place for any greens described as "grassy" or "peppery" at the farmers' market.

A hand cutting iceberg lettuce on a cutting board

Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez

Instead, look for mildly sweet, extremely crunchy greens. The easiest and most classic option is iceberg, and I know I'm gonna get some guff for suggesting it, but shredded iceberg is nearly ideal for a BLT. People who call iceberg "flavorless" seriously need to get their taste buds checked.

Iceberg has a sweetness that is unparalleled by any other lettuce I can think of, and a firm-yet-giving, crunchy, almost cucumber-like texture that is unique in the world of leafy greens. Shred that lettuce, and it performs another vital role: It provides structural support to the sandwich, preventing slippery slabs of tomato from sliding around, while also offering a buffer zone in which juices can collect instead of sogging out the toast.

If you are a dyed-in-the-wool iceberg hater, I would suggest using only the crispest, sweetest interior leaves of a head of romaine, green leaf, or Bibb lettuce, stacking several of them together and pressing them down to build up a layer of crunch that can rival iceberg. I've been growing lettuce in my garden, which means I get my pick of the litter when it comes to the crispest baby greens.*

*Yes, I've officially graduated to full-on California produce snob.

BLT Rule #9: Layer Carefully

BLT sandwich from the side before being cut

Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez

Layering the BLT is the point at which I have the most internal conflict. A part of me says that the lettuce should go against the toast on both sides, with the tomato and bacon in the middle. After much painfully delicious experimenting, I've determined that this is the most structurally sound way to build a sandwich, and the way most likely to guarantee that you can finish it before it falls apart.

On the other hand, there's a voice inside my head that screams, There must be direct tomato-on-mayo contact! I've tried every workaround I can think of, from adding an extra layer of mayonnaise to the center of the sandwich (too much mayo!) to filleting whole tomatoes so that they can be placed directly against the toast without getting it overly soggy (what was I thinking?!?), with no perfect results. The only real solution here is to keep making and eating BLTs with different stacking orders until I make up my mind, even if that happens to be never.

No matter how you layer the sandwich in the end, the next rule is perhaps the most immutable, universal rule of food...

BLT Rule #10: Triangles Taste Better

A chef's knife slicing a finished BLT sandwich in half.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Triangles taste better. A slice of pizza or a slice of pie, a quesadilla cut into wedges, Japanese onigiri, and, of course, sandwiches.

I could offer all sorts of explanations—the tips of the triangles fit into our mouths better; the triangle represents the golden power of the Triforce (or the Holy Trinity, if you aren't Hylianly inclined)—but none are satisfactory. Triangles simply taste better. If I could get this message emblazoned on a T-shirt, I would.

BLT Rule #11: Don't Mess With It

Like I said 3,000 words ago, there are many more ways to mess up a BLT than there are ways to perfect it, but there's an easy way to avoid that possibility: Just leave it alone. I can't stop you from adding that sriracha mayo or that roasted-tomato jam. If you want to add a runny egg or throw a slab of cheddar cheese on there, who am I to say no? It sounds delicious, in fact, but it's not a BLT.

The Huffington Post once compiled a list of "35 BLT Recipes." Thirty-five! I'm sorry, but adding a crab cake to a BLT is not a "BLT variation." It's a crab cake sandwich with bacon, lettuce, and tomato. To paraphrase the infamous words of a Reddit user, respect the BLT, stop changing it into whatever you like, and love it for what it is. Or, stick melted cheese in your BLT and call it what it is: a grilled cheese with bacon, lettuce, and tomato.

If you feel the urge to shove extra things into your BLT, I won't scream, Stop! Wait! But know this: You are toying with something simple, pure, and beautiful, and there are scarce few simple, pure, and beautiful things on this earth as it is.

Given that I'm now a Californian, the only exception I'm legally required to make on this matter is the addition of avocado, smashed with a fork onto one of the toast slices. I have to admit, it's quite tasty, and perfectly justifiable once you realize that the avocado is nature's mayonnaise.

August 2016

Recipe Details

The Best BLT Sandwich

Prep 5 mins
Cook 15 mins
Active 20 mins
Total 20 mins
Serves 1 serving
Makes 1 sandwich

Ingredients

  •  3 strips thick-cut, naturally cured bacon (see note)

  • 2 slices high-quality sandwich bread, such as shokupan

  • 2 tablespoons (30ml) homemade or store-bought mayonnaise (see note)

  • 1 cup finely shredded iceberg lettuce (from about a quarter head; see note)

  • 2 to 4 thick slices ripe tomato (see note)

  • Coarse sea salt, such as fleur de sel or Maldon

  • Freshly ground black pepper

Directions

  1. Place a griddle or skillet over medium-low heat. Add bacon and place a bacon press, skillet, or masonry trowel on top of it to keep it flat as it cooks. Cook until lightly browned on first side, about 5 minutes, then flip, cover again, and continue cooking until bacon is browned on both sides and fat has rendered, about 3 minutes longer. Transfer bacon to a paper towel–lined plate and set aside.

    3 pieces of bacon sizzling on a girdle

    Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez

  2. Place bread on same skillet or griddle and toast in bacon fat over medium-low heat, swirling occasionally, until evenly browned on first side. Flip and brown second side.

    Bread being toasted on a girdle in bacon fat

    Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez

  3. Lay toasted bread on a work surface and spread mayonnaise on both top faces. Divide lettuce evenly between both pieces of bread. Layer tomato slices on 1 piece of bread and sprinkle generously with coarse salt and freshly ground pepper.

    Four Image Collage. All images feature two pieces of bread with mayo and show the progression of building the blt by adding lettuce to both sides, tomato on one side, and salting the tomato.

    Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez

  4. Break bacon slices in half and layer them onto the sandwich in 2 layers of 3 half slices each, alternating the orientation of bacon in each layer for more structural stability. Close sandwich and cut in half diagonally. Serve immediately.

    Four Image Collage. Top Left: Overhead view of two sides of a blt with salted tomato on one side and three strips of bacon on the otherside. Top Right: Three more slices of bacon added to the open sandwich. Bottom Left: Two hands pressing down on completed BLT. Bottom Right: Cross section of the sandwich

    Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez

Special Equipment

Griddle or large cast iron skillet, bacon press or masonry trowel

Notes

This recipe can easily be scaled up. To cook bacon for a larger crowd, preheat the oven to 400°F (200°C). Lay bacon strips on a rimmed baking sheet lined with parchment paper, top with a second sheet of parchment paper, and place a second tray on top to keep the bacon flat while baking. Transfer the sandwiched bacon slices to the oven, and bake until well rendered and crisp, 20 to 25 minutes. Reserve the bacon drippings, and brush onto slices of bread before toasting in the toaster or on a griddle.

I strongly recommend using an immersion-cured bacon, such as Nueske's or Wright bacon, for this sandwich. Many typical supermarket brands inject brine into the bacon for faster curing, which waterlogs it and causes it to spatter more and cook unevenly. To avoid this type of bacon, look for ascorbate or sodium erythorbate on the ingredients label—antioxidants required by law to stem the formation of nitrosamines in injected bacon.

Homemade mayonnaise is easy to make using our technique, but mayonnaise preference is personal, so use whatever your favorite mayonnaise is. I know better than to get between someone and their Duke's.

Finely shredded iceberg lettuce is my lettuce of choice, unless you can find super-fresh, young, crisp leaf or romaine lettuce at the farmers market.

Use only the best summer tomatoes. How many slices you pack onto your sandwich will depend on the size of the tomato, which can vary quite a bit by variety.

Nutrition Facts (per serving)
454 Calories
34g Fat
22g Carbs
17g Protein
×
Nutrition Facts
Servings: 1
Amount per serving
Calories 454
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 34g 44%
Saturated Fat 8g 38%
Cholesterol 47mg 16%
Sodium 952mg 41%
Total Carbohydrate 22g 8%
Dietary Fiber 7g 24%
Total Sugars 14g
Protein 17g
Vitamin C 69mg 346%
Calcium 68mg 5%
Iron 2mg 11%
Potassium 1444mg 31%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.
(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)