Southern 3-ingredient bacon crackers are the kind of easy party snack that disappears faster than anything else on the table. They hit that perfect sweet-salty-crispy combo with buttery crackers, smoky bacon, and brown sugar baked until glossy and caramelized. This is the sort of retro Southern appetizer that shows up at cookouts, holiday spreads, and game-day gatherings because it looks simple, tastes ridiculously good, and can be made in a big batch without much effort.
Serve these warm or at room temperature alongside other finger foods like pimento cheese, deviled eggs, a veggie tray, or little sandwiches. They also pair really well with sweet tea, lemonade, cold beer, or sparkling water with citrus, and they fit right in on a brunch board with fruit and cheese if you want something savory with a little sweetness.
Southern 3-Ingredient Bacon Crackers
Servings: 24 crackers
Ingredients
24 buttery rectangular crackers, such as Club crackers
Directions
1. Preheat the oven to 250°F and line a rimmed baking sheet or broiler pan with foil. If you have an oven-safe rack, place it over the pan to help the bacon crisp evenly.
2. Arrange the crackers on the prepared pan. Wrap each cracker with a half slice of bacon, keeping the seam side down so it stays in place while baking.
3. Sprinkle about 1 tablespoon of brown sugar over each bacon-wrapped cracker, pressing it lightly onto the top so it adheres.
4. Bake for 1 1/2 to 2 hours, or until the bacon is deeply browned and the brown sugar is melted and caramelized. Let the crackers cool for 5 to 10 minutes so the topping can set slightly before serving.
5. Transfer to a platter and serve warm or at room temperature.
Variations & Tips
Peppery Version: Add a light sprinkle of freshly cracked black pepper or a pinch of cayenne over the brown sugar before baking for a sweet-heat balance that cuts the richness nicely.
Make-Ahead Tip: You can assemble the crackers a few hours ahead, cover, and refrigerate until ready to bake. This is especially helpful when you're juggling other dishes before a party or cookout.
Use Thin Bacon: Thin-cut bacon works best here because it has enough time to crisp before the crackers overbake. If all you have is thick-cut bacon, partially cook it first so the final texture turns out right.
Rack vs. No Rack: A rack helps the heat circulate and keeps the bottoms from sitting in grease, but if you do not have one, the recipe still works on foil. Just check the underside near the end and move the crackers if any spots are browning too fast.
Small Batch Option: Cut the ingredient amounts in half for a smaller get-together, or double them and use two pans if you're feeding a crowd. These go fast, so making extra is usually the safer move.