What is the "porky" taste in certain types of pork?

What is the "porky" taste in certain types of pork? - Cooked Food on White Ceramic Plate

I recently made a simple pasta dish with minced pork and I noticed that the taste was very "porky" or I think some people call it "gamey," and I found it quite unpleasant.

I rarely cook with pork mince, so this surprised me. I'm used to pork flavours from dishes with cuts like tenderloin, or the classic loin porkchops (cuts which don't tend to have a lot of thick fat, or are not super close to skin). These usually have that funky smell when cooking (frying in a pan) that I'm used to, but the minced meat retained a lot of that unpleasant flavour. It's a little difficult to find words to describe it.

I read up about lamb potentially tasting "gamey" from ChefSteps (due to oxidising), and they solved this by introducing a lot of antioxidants - mustard powder, black pepper, salt. Could this be related?

Is there a word for this? Is it porky, gamey, etc?

How would I go on about preventing this porky flavour? Is it possible with things like minced pork meat?



Best Answer

I know this is a couple years too late but I found this post while looking up ‘ground pork tastes weird’ and thought you might still appreciate an answer. This is what I found:

“Boar taint is the offensive odor or taste that can be evident during the cooking or eating of pork or pork products derived from non-castrated male pigs once they reach puberty. Boar taint is found in around 20% of entire male finishing pigs.”

Apparently some people are more sensitive to it than others:

“Studies show that about 75% of consumers are sensitive to boar taint”




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Why does some pork taste Porky?

\u201cBoar taint is the offensive odor or taste that can be evident during the cooking or eating of pork or pork products derived from non-castrated male pigs once they reach puberty. Boar taint is found in around 20% of entire male finishing pigs.\u201d Welcome.

Why do my pork chops taste Porky?

The taste you're experiencing, which you referred to as \u201cpiggy,\u201d is probably what's known as Boar Taint. According to Texas Tech University, when a male pig hits puberty, his body produces the pheromone (Androstenone) and an intestinal product (Skatole).

What is the tastiest pork?

Why is Mangalitsa, the World's Best-Tasting Pork, More Expensive?
  • Most Mangalitsa pigs are raised in different conditions than typical factory-farmed hogs are. ...
  • Mangalitsa pork chops taste as good as they do because of intra-muscular fat and richer meat taste.


What cut of pork has the most flavor?

Pork Loin Roast The loin roast is a larger cut of the loin than the tenderloin (which usually weighs about a pound). Bone-in, it's at its juiciest and most flavorful, but cooking time will be longer, and the bone can make carving a bit challenging.



Looney Tunes | Best of Porky Pig | WB Kids




More answers regarding what is the "porky" taste in certain types of pork?

Answer 2

As I am sure you know, different species have different flavors...beef tastes like beef...chicken tastes like chicken...and, well, pork tastes like pork. Further, when animals are butchered, we find that different parts of the same animal have different flavors. Further still, the animals diet before slaughter greatly impacts the flavor we perceive. Finally, after butchering and during storage and transportation decay begins, and meats can pick up flavors from storage settings. Then there is cooking, where method and seasoning impact flavor.

All of this is to say, that it would be fairly difficult to pinpoint your particular version of "porky", what that means, and what to do about it. I think the best advice I might come up with is to try a different producer of pork mince...or purchase a larger cut and mince your own. Maybe, it will turn out, that you just don't like pork...so move on and use something else.

Answer 3

I'm part of a meat CSA (aka a farm share) where we get pasture raised meats from a ranch each month, including pork. The pigs are Berkshires, which apparently have an especially "porky" or gamey flavor. I notice this the most in fatty cuts, such as bacon, the minced pork used in the ranch's sausage, pork belly, etc. It's possible what you got came from one of these heritage breeds with a stronger flavor, especially if you shopped at a specialty store that sells grass-fed/free range meats.

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