Dayton Daily News

Why Americans are increasing­ly eating more pork

- By Caitlin Dewey

The Iowa HUMESTON, IOWA — Select pig farm gives its visitors headphones, because the squeal of hogs is deafening. This is either a chorus for the damned or

— the sound of pork’s ascendancy.

Americans, long devoted to chicken and beef, are eating more pork now than they have in years. And brand-new farms such as this one, a $20 million facility one hour south of Des Moines, are opening to meet demand for everything from pork belly to pig ears.

In Iowa alone, meatpacker­s have recently broken ground on new slaughterh­ouses worth well over $500 million. By the end of 2018, the Agricultur­e Department predicts that U.S. pork production will equal — and occasional­ly exceed — that of beef, though neither red meat yet rivals chicken.

Some of that demand will come from growing foreign markets. But Americans have developed a new taste for pork, particular­ly bacon, as well. According to the market research firm Euromonito­r, sales of pork are up 20 percent in the United States since 2011.

“More people are eating out, and pork is in a good position in the food service sector,” said Dennis Smith, a commoditie­s broker and analyst at Archer Financial Services. “Just look at all the bacon they’re putting on burgers.”

As Smith and others who watch the hog industry explain it, a confluence of factors appears to lie behind pork’s growing popularity. Bacon is indeed one of them: Last winter, demand grew so high that the country’s pork-belly supply hit a 50-year low — sparking (unfounded) fears of a bacon shortage.

The growing influence of Asian cuisines, particular­ly Korean and Vietnamese, have also made some cuts of pork newly popular. In its 2016 food trends report, Google named char siu, bulgogi and banh mi — which frequently include pork — among the year’s hottest foods.

And Americans are increasing­ly turning to fast-food restaurant­s for breakfast, where bacon and pork sausage are both popular.

Demographi­cs play a major role, as well: Pork is a popular meat in Latino cooking, and sales have grown with that population.

Pork has also benefited from the fact that Americans’ spending on food, particular­ly at restaurant­s, has rebounded since the recession. According to the USDA, Americans have spent more money at restaurant­s in each year since 2010. A 2013 study by researcher­s at Purdue University found that spending on meat, in particular, spiked after the recession, especially for high-quality cuts of chicken, pork and beef.

If all that weren’t enough, pork has also had a little help from an organizati­on called the Pork Board — an industry group that works to grow demand for the “other white meat.” (They are, in fact, the ones who coined that tagline in the 1980s.)

The Pork Board has been waging an aggressive campaign to popularize different cuts of pork, explained Jarrod Sutton, a marketing executive with the organizati­on. Aside from publicizin­g pork recipes and rebranding several cuts — a pork chop can now be a “porterhous­e,” for instance — the board has worked behind the scenes with restaurant­s and retailers, getting things such as pork bellies on their menus and in their meat cases.

Recently, Pork Board partnered with Longhorn Steakhouse — a chain best known, as its name implies, for gigantic servings of beef — to feature a sous-vide pork chop with garlic-herb butter.

According to Datassenti­al, a market research firm that tracks restaurant menus, that is only one of many U.S. restaurant­s that have recently begun introducin­g dishes made with pork belly, pork shoulder, pulled pork and better chop cuts.

“How much pork are people willing to consume?” Sutton asked. “Based on the intelligen­ce we have, it’s only going to grow in the future.”

Anticipate­d growth in the United States is not the only reason that new hog farms and slaughterh­ouses are popping up across the Midwest. Foreign demand is also strong in markets such as Mexico, China and Japan, and hog farms and processors are becoming more productive.

A number of companies have recently decided to embark on expansion projects. In Sioux City, an afternoon’s drive from the Humeston pig farm, Seaboard Triumph Foods is building a huge, $300 million plant that will span almost a million square feet and process upward of 20,000 hogs a day. Prestage Foods, a large producer of pork and turkey, recently broke ground on a new pork plant in Eagle Grove, Iowa, that will process 10,000 hogs each day.

When these facilities open, USDA predicts, an additional 900 million pounds of pork will hit the U.S. market — which may edge prices down a bit and further stimulate demand. In either case, by the end of 2018 U.S. farmers are expected to produce as much pork as beef — which is, for the pork industry, an unpreceden­ted accomplish­ment.

 ?? TYLER MERTINS / NATIONAL PRESS FOUNDATION ?? Piglets in a farrowing pen at the Iowa Select sow farm outside of Humeston, Iowa. A new litter is born in one of these pens every 25 minutes, and the piglets remain from birth to three weeks.
TYLER MERTINS / NATIONAL PRESS FOUNDATION Piglets in a farrowing pen at the Iowa Select sow farm outside of Humeston, Iowa. A new litter is born in one of these pens every 25 minutes, and the piglets remain from birth to three weeks.

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