Bacon tuna melt is the kind of hot sandwich that tastes way fancier than the effort it takes: tender tuna in a creamy spread, gooey melted cheese, and crisp bacon, all tucked into golden, pan-toasted bread. Crunchy on the outside, warm and juicy in the middle — basically everything you want when you’re hungry now.
It’s simple to throw together, but it looks (and eats) like something you’d order at a good diner or café. Perfect for a filling snack or a quick lunch that doesn’t feel sad.
The tuna melt has American roots — it really took off in mid-20th-century diners, when someone had the bright idea to turn everyday tuna salad into a hot, cheesy sandwich. The formula hasn’t changed much: canned tuna mixed into a spread, bread, cheese, then a quick toast or grill until the outside goes golden. Depending on where you are, you’ll see celery, pickles, or mustard for that little tangy bite. This bacon version leans hard into comfort food: smoky bacon makes the tuna taste deeper, and that bit of fat helps the cheese melt more evenly. Best method? A heavy-bottomed frying pan or the oven grill/broiler. What you’re aiming for is contrast: crisp edges, a warm centre, and those cheese strings when you pull it apart.
In this recipe, you’ll learn
- Why you’ll love this recipe
- Tips before you start
- What to look for when choosing ingredients
- Secrets to the perfect bacon tuna melt
- How to serve a bacon tuna melt
- Nutritional perks
- Recipe variations
- Questions & answers
- Common mistakes

Bacon Tuna Melt
Ingredients
- 160 g canned tuna in spring water/brine drain well
- 3 tbsp mayonnaise if needed +1 tbsp
- 1 tsp Dijon mustard
- 2 tbsp pickled cucumber small dice
- 2 tbsp spring onion finely chopped
- 4 slices toast bread or sourdough 1–1.5 cm thick
- 80 g cheddar or Gouda grated or 4 slices
- 4 strips bacon thin
- 4 tsp butter for spreading on the outside of the bread
- 2 pinches black pepper to taste
Method
- Fry the bacon in a dry frying pan over medium heat, laying the strips in a single layer. Cook, flipping, for 6–8 minutes until evenly golden and crisp. Transfer to paper towel; leave about 1 tsp of the bacon fat in the pan.
- Make the tuna spread: drain the tuna really well, then mash with a fork into small flakes. Add mayonnaise, Dijon mustard, finely diced pickled cucumber, and spring onion. Mix for 1 minute until thick — no puddles of liquid.If the mixture feels too loose, add 1 tbsp grated cheese and mix again.
- Prep the bread: spread a thin layer of butter on the outside of 4 slices — about 1 tsp each, roughly a ~1 mm layer. Heat a clean frying pan over medium heat for 2 minutes so it’s hot but not smoking.
- Assemble the sandwiches: on two slices, add 1 slice (or a portion) of cheese first, then spread the tuna mixture in a 1–1.5 cm layer, keeping 1 cm clear around the edges. Add 2 strips of bacon per sandwich and top with the remaining bread, butter-side out. Press gently with your palm for 10 seconds.
- Toast the sandwiches over medium heat so the butter sizzles quietly, not aggressively. Cook the first side for 3–4 minutes until evenly golden, then carefully flip with a spatula and brown the second side for another 3 minutes. Look for deep golden patches without black edges.
- Finish melting the cheese: lower the heat, add 1 tbsp water to the side of the pan (not on the bread), and cover with a lid. Hold for 2 minutes until the cheese softens and starts to pull when pressed.If the bread is already golden but the cheese still won’t melt, the lid + steam will even things out.
Transfer to a board and let it sit for 1 minute — the filling settles and you’ll get a cleaner cut. Slice diagonally with a sharp knife in one confident motion so the layers don’t slide. Serve hot while the bacon is crisp and the cheese stretches.
Notes
Private Notes
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Why you’ll love this bacon tuna melt
I honestly didn’t think tuna and bacon would make this much sense together — until I warmed the sandwich over medium heat for 6 minutes. It hits that “proper hot lunch” feeling without any pots or fuss: one pan, barely any washing up. And it’s genuinely filling — the protein situation is no joke, so it keeps you going.
- Melty, stretchy cheese layer
- Crispy bacon on top
- Made in one frying pan
- Reheats surprisingly well
- That salty + tangy balance

Tips before making a bacon tuna melt
Going stovetop? Bread can brown too fast while the cheese is still stubbornly holding its shape inside — especially if the heat’s cranked up. Start at a moderate temperature, then cover the pan for 2 minutes so the heat actually reaches the middle. Tuna spread can also turn watery, and then your toast goes soggy; a quick drain (and not overdoing the sauce) fixes that. It’s tempting to pile the filling high, but a thick layer won’t heat through properly. Keep it around 1–1.5 cm and it all works out.
- Drain the tuna and lightly mash it with a fork
- Use sturdy bread, sliced 1–1.5 cm thick
- Grate the cheese — it melts more evenly
- Preheat the pan, but don’t let it get scorching
- A lid helps the cheese melt properly

What to look for when choosing ingredients for a bacon tuna melt
Bacon is doing a lot of heavy lifting here — thin strips fried until properly crisp add smokiness and that perfect crunch. For the spread, tuna in spring water/brine (not oil) is easiest: it stays thicker and doesn’t ooze out the sides while you warm the sandwich for 3 minutes.
Canned tuna
Go for tuna in spring water/brine; press out excess liquid with a spoon.
Bacon
Cook until crisp, but don’t let it get dark — that bitter edge shows up fast.
Cheddar or Gouda
Grated cheese melts quicker and covers the filling more evenly.
Mayonnaise
Add it gradually — you want a spread that holds its shape on a spoon.
Pickled cucumber
Small dice gives you tang without dumping extra water into the mix.
Secrets to the perfect bacon tuna melt
Patience, honestly. Let the sandwich warm through under a lid over medium heat and the cheese will melt without sacrificing the bread to the burn gods. The other key is a thin smear of butter on the outside — it gives you that even, golden crust in minutes.
- Medium heat, not maximum
- Lid on for the final 2 minutes
- Spread the filling 1–1.5 cm thick
- Keep the cheese closer to the bread
- Let it rest 1 minute after frying

How to serve a bacon tuna melt
Serve it straight away while the cheese still pulls and the bacon stays crisp. It’s especially good for lunch or a lazy late breakfast when you’re short on time.
- With cornichons and extra mustard on the side
- With a bowl of coleslaw
- With creamy tomato soup
- With crisps/chips and a wedge of lemon
- With hot sauce on the edge of the plate

Nutritional perks of a bacon tuna melt
Tuna brings solid protein, which helps you stay full longer after a sandwich like this. Cheese and bread add energy, and the little bits of pickle and spring onion keep the texture lively (and stop it from tasting flat).
- Protein from tuna and cheese
- Energy from bread
- Fats for flavour and satiety
- A bit of fibre from the veg

Bacon tuna melt variations
For a keto-ish version, pile the filling into romaine leaves and warm it under the grill/broiler for 2 minutes. Choose a higher-fat cheese and a sugar-free mayo.
- Spicy: add 1 tsp sriracha
- With celery: 2 stalks, small dice
- With apple: 2 tbsp sweet-tart diced apple
- No bacon: use sautéed mushrooms instead
- On rye: deeper flavour and a sturdier crumb

If you’re into hot tuna sandwiches and want more ideas for mixing things up, have a look at this round-up of tuna salads — it’s got everything from quick snacks to more filling, everyday meals.
Questions & answers
Як зробити tuna melt без духовки?
Смажте на сковороді з товстим дном на середньому вогні, по 3 хвилини з боку, а в кінці накрийте кришкою ще на 2 хвилини для плавлення сиру.
Чому краще натирати сир, а не класти скибками?
Тертий сир щільніше заповнює проміжки й плавиться рівномірно при нижчій температурі, тож хліб встигає стати золотистим, а не темним.
Що робити якщо намазка вийшла занадто рідкою?
Додайте 1–2 ст. л. тертого сиру або дрібно кришеної зеленої цибулі, перемішайте й охолодіть 10 minutes — маса ущільниться.
Скільки зберігається начинка з тунця?
У контейнері в холодильнику — до 24 hours. Перед збиранням сендвіча перемішайте й за потреби додайте 1 ч. л. майонезу.

Common mistakes when making a bacon tuna melt
Sometimes the sandwich turns out pale: the pan wasn’t hot enough, so the bread dries out instead of browning. Other times it’s the opposite — dark crust, cold centre — when the heat is too high and the cheese can’t melt in 5 minutes. Another classic is a wet filling: tuna not drained well, pickle cut too chunky. Don’t stress — everyone does it at least once. Keep moisture and heat in balance and you’re good.
Why does the bread burn but the cheese doesn’t melt?
The heat is too high. Drop to medium, cover with a lid for 2 minutes, and add 1 tbsp water to the side of the pan (not on the bread) to create steam.
Why does the filling leak out of the edges?
The layer is too thick or there’s too much mayo. Keep it 1–1.5 cm thick and leave a 1 cm border around the bread.
Why does the sandwich go soggy?
Tuna and pickles can bring too much moisture. Drain the tuna, pat the pickles dry, and toast the bread briefly in a dry pan for 1 minute per side.
Why does the bacon turn soft inside the sandwich?
It went in hot and then sat sealed inside for too long. Cook it crisp, let it cool for 2 minutes on a rack, and only then assemble.

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