Dr. Kenneth Noisewater wrote:
Drunk Squirrel wrote:
Dr. Kenneth Noisewater wrote:
Drunk Squirrel wrote:
There are a lot of problems with modern pork that I could go on and on about but probably summed up with efficiency of gain does not equal quality.
Go on and on.
I'm interested.
In the late 70's and early 80's the war on fat in meat commenced. Pork positioned themselves as the other white meat and bred all of the fat out of pork over time. At the same time pork production moved from small, outdoor production to centralized commercial breeding using line breeding and hybrids that can basically only survive in confinement situations. Hook space at processing plants became dominated by cooperate owned farms and the independent producer is now virtually extinct. When they bred the fat out and pushed pork as a chicken replacement people had a hard time cooking it. Lean meat is hard to cook, especially of you cook it to well done. It dries out and gets tough. Enter the injection of saline to pork.Buy your pork from an independent producer and you will see three things if they do it right. Actual marbling in the meat. An actual rind of fat on the carcass vs almost no fat on commercial animals. Fat=flavor.A completely different texture of the meat. By being outside the meat will have a firmness that doesn't exist in Tyson and Smithfield pork. If you can get Berkshire or Chesterwhite you have a good start. A breed like Red Wattle will be heavy fat but damn good. Even better if they take the hog to over 300 pounds.
Interesting. My brother and I try to split a hog each year more like 200 lbs. It is much better because you can see the fat and marbling - makes a huge difference in the sausages.
We get sausage patties that we cook like burgers and are fantastic. I didn't know that history.
I was preoccupied telling my Father I never want to be a farmer.
I was a wonderful son.
we are 2 years into raising our own hogs. our first year were berkshire hogs and this year they were berk/IPP Red wattle hogs.
The difference is pretty tremendous. Last year we took ours to 235 (hanging 165) and while it was fine, I felt we should of taken them further. this year we went to 300 (hanging 210) and while the flavor or whatever hasn't been different the size of everything has been more optimal.