Devils on Horseback: Jumbo Bacon Wrapped Dates - Alison's Wonderland Recipes (2024)

Happy October, Wonderlanders! Our new book of the month, in honor of Halloween, is The Phantom of the Opera by Gaston Leroux! I remember reading it in college and loving all the drama, intrigue, and interesting themes. Plus, the spooky nature of the Phantom makes this book a perfect choice for October.

One of my favorite themes in the book (and maybe the most common) is the concept of angels and demons. I’ve always thought of the Phantom and Raoul’s battle for Christine as symbolic of the battle between Heaven and Hell over the human soul. I’m not sure if this is the intended interpretation or not, but either way I wanted to include an homage to this theme in my menu. Which brings me to Devils on Horseback!

I heard the recipe name tossed around several years ago and looked it up out of curiosity. As it turns out, Devils on Horseback is a fancy name for a dish many of us know and love: BACON. WRAPPED. DATES.

* resists the urge to squeal *

I’m not exaggerating when I say I’m CRAZY about bacon wrapped dates The Mister and I once spent a whole party hanging out by the oven as we waited for tray after tray of bacon wrapped dates to come out, snagging as many as we could before the hostess (my sister) took them away to serve to other, less obsessed guests. So when I saw that I had an opportunity to make them for this menu, I was like UM YES THIS IS HAPPENING.

I asked my sister for the recipe she uses, which turned out to be super easy: wrap dates and bake. But then I kinda accidentally wound up making my own version. First, my grocery store was out of pitted dates, so I had to buy the ones with the pit still inside, which are bigger than the pitted variety, even after you take the pit out (don’t ask me why). So when I wrapped them, they were good, but the bacon/date ratio wasn’t quite right to me. Then I was like, “Hey, there’s no rule that says you can’t use TWO pieces of bacon, right?”

So I double-wrapped my jumbo dates, added 10-15 minutes to the cook time, and voilà! Datey, bacony goodness. I’m pretty sure you could lure the Phantom himself out of his shadowy life beneath the opera house with just a plate of these beauties.

Just make sure you save some for yourself before he eats them all. 😉

“I knew my Erik too well to feel at all comfortable jumping into his house. I knew what he had made of a certain palace at Mazenderan. From being the most honest building conceivable, he soon turned it into a house of the very devil, where you could not utter a word but it was overheard or repeated by an echo. With his trap-doors the monster was responsible for endless tragedies of all kinds”.

— The Phantom of the Opera

INGREDIENTS:

  • 12 strips of bacon (regular, not thick-cut)
  • 1 12-oz package of whole Medjool dates with pits (approximately 18 dates)…And that’s seriously it. You can secure them with toothpicks if you want, but they don’t really need. Maybe use toothpicks if you’re planning to transfer them to different plates multiple times (be sure to soak the toothpicks in water before using so they don’t burn in the oven).

Makes approximately 18 bacon wrapped dates

INSTRUCTIONS:

    1. Preheat oven 350°. Line a baking sheet with tinfoil and set aside. Cut a slit down the side of each date and ease out the pit with the end of your knife (don’t worry about ruining the date; this isn’t a delicate procedure).
    2. Slice your bacon into thirds. Wrap one piece around each date with the seam on top. Wrap another piece over the top of each date, with the seam on the bottom.
    3. Place your bacon wrapped dates in rows on the baking sheet and bake for 30-40 minutes or until the bacon is crisp. Allow to rest on top of the stove for 10 minutes.
    4. Serve warm to the mysterious inhabitant of the catacombs under the Paris Opera House!

Need more bacon? Of course you do. 😉

Bacon Roses from Romeo and Juliet

Honey Bacon Cornbread from Tom Sawyer

The Dauntless Burger from Divergent

Calcifer’s Sweet and Spicy Candied Bacon from Howl’s Moving Castle

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Devils on Horseback: Jumbo Bacon Wrapped Dates - Alison's Wonderland Recipes (2024)

FAQs

What are the fillings for angels on horseback and devils on horseback respectively? ›

Angels on horseback are bacon-wrapped oysters, while devils on horseback are bacon-wrapped dates or prunes, often the fruit is stuffed.

Why are devils on horseback called? ›

The origins of the name are mysterious, and perhaps derived from the dish's diabolical shades of black and red. Or as a play on angels on horseback, which is oysters wrapped in bacon, or anges a cheval, a French dish. Add stilton to the stuffing or use dates in place of prunes as variations on the theme.

What is the difference between angels on horseback and devils on horseback? ›

A Victorian hors d'œuvre that has died a death in recent decades; an angel on horseback is simply an oyster wrapped in bacon and grilled; a devil is a tea-soaked prune treated the same way.

What is the meaning of devils on horseback in English? ›

Devils on horseback are a hot appetizer or small savoury dish of dried fruit stuffed with such ingredients as cheese or nuts, wrapped in bacon, prosciutto or pancetta. The traditional form of the dish is made with a pitted date and bacon, but prunes are also used, usually steeped in brandy or some other liqueur.

What do you call sausage wrapped in bacon? ›

Pigs in blankets, kilted sausages or kilted soldiers is a dish served in the United Kingdom and Ireland consisting of small sausages (usually chipolatas) wrapped in bacon. They are a popular and traditional accompaniment to roast turkey in a Christmas dinner and are served as a side dish.

What is food wrapped in bacon called? ›

Bacon-wrapped foods are foods that are prepared by being covered in bacon. They may be baked, fried, or grilled. Popular bacon-wrapped dishes include angels on horseback, devils on horseback, and pigs in blankets. Bacon has long been used for barding roasts, especially game birds.

When were devils on horseback invented? ›

What were once markers of sophistication, devils on horseback have fallen out of favour. But the evocatively named dish of toothpick-skewered, bacon-wrapped prunes has a history stretching back to the 19th century.

What is angels on horseback made of? ›

Angels on horseback is a hot hors d'œuvre or savoury made of oysters wrapped with bacon. The dish, when served atop breads, can also be a canapé. Angels on horseback skewered and grilled. The dish is typically prepared by rolling shucked oysters in bacon and baking them in an oven.

Where did angels on horseback originate? ›

For example, the first documented recipe for angels on horseback was in a 19th-century cookbook by a French chef who dubbed the bacon-wrapped oyster, “les anges à cheval'” The “angel”, Mora and Stephens presume, references the oyster, and the snack was popularised in England and served as a savoury coda after dessert.

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