Pork on sale, we’ve hit the bottom of the barrel

Cow trying to lick the bottom of a barrel
Are you sure there aren’t any more pork chops?

Folks, we’ve hit the bottom of the barrel. With the help of Kayla at The Butcher and the Baker in Fayetteville we are officially out of EVERYTHING porcine except for fatback, pigs feet, and smocked ham hocks. Everybody knows that fatback and smoked hocks are great for collard greens and we won’t have any good collards till this coming winter however there are other things you can do with those cuts. Before I talk about that though, let me tell you about feet.

I made pork stock (foot soup as SWMBO called it) and used two pigs feet in the stock rather than pork bones. I simmered the stock for about 24 hours, drained all the chunky bits, and froze the stock in vacuumed bags. Easy! Darling Wifey decided to use some later for a recipe and folks, let me tell you, that stock was jello! I don’t mean it was thicker than the watery stuff you get at the store, I mean you could stick a spoon in it and it would hold it upright. It brought a richness to her cooking you just can’t get any other way. If you’ve never tried homemade stock before, get a couple of feet from us, they are on sale, and find out what real stock is all about. Pork stock isn’t something you can buy in the store like chicken or beef stock. If you aren’t sure what to do with it, there are some good ideas here and a recipe here. You can substitute pork stock for pretty much any stock you would use. It’s a neutral taste and not “porky” but it’s oh so rich.

Now onto fatback. Here is a quick blurb on fatback from Fine Cooking. Have something a bit too lean, add some fatback to make it awesome. Think fat is bad for you? Then read this, or this to learn the truth. Your brain is 60% fat. Give it what it needs. We have a ton of fatback left, it’s time to give fat a try. If you are cooking for your family this weekend, sneak some fatback into the recipe and watch them react to the flavor when it hits the table. Fat makes everything better.

Lastly we have smoked ham hocks. The best breakfast I ever ate was red beans and rice, sitting in a little hut in Tamarindo, Costa Rica. I can’t promise you the view I had, but with some of our smoked hocks, you can have the red beans and rice, plus a whole lot more. Check out these recipes for some ideas.

I can hear you saying now, “But I want PORK CHOPS, wrapped in bacon! When are you going to have that?”

The next pig we have processed will be used at our event on June 28th. If you want some porcine goodness that you don’t even have to cook, then get your tickets now. After that, we have some more pigs that are a few months from being done. We are currently looking to buy some more feeder pigs and should be back in stock going forward.

We also have the first of our cows ready to process. He’s going into the family freezer, but we may sneak a few cuts out for you to sample so good news, meat is on the way.

Ninja pork isn’t your typical pork

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Two pork chops from our pigs from our hog class. Our hogs weigh about 250 pounds before we even think about harvesting them. Typical hogs weigh half that or slightly better. The result? Real flavor, real meat, and really huge pork chops. This is a 14″ pan that can barely hold two pork chops.

Tired of dry, puny, pork chops? Forget the other white meat. Eat real pork like the Ninjas are having tonight for dinner.

Our first written review of our pork

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As you hopefully know we are in stock and  selling pork from last years hogs. One of our customers and great friends, Ron H, send me the above picture from dinner last night and his feelings on how the pork tastes. I didn’t include the entire email, just the following excerpt.

“Again, I stick with my earlier description. Ninja Cow Farms Pork Chops
are not pork chops but rather Pork Steaks! They are the Filet Mignon of
pork.”

The rest of the email was equally as complimentary. This isn’t “the other white meat”. This is what pork is supposed to taste like before factory farming was invented.

We still have some pork chops in the freezer, along with side meat, bacon, smoked ham, breakfast sausage, ground pork, etc, etc. Shoot me an email if you want to buy some pork. You can see all of our wares and the prices on our pork page.

Pork for sale

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We’ve received our first load of USDA inspected by-the-cut pork back from the butcher. That means that you can finally buy locally produced organic pork from your favorite Ninja Cow producer.

We have ground pork, pork chops, smoked ham, bacon, loose sausage, sausage links, seasoned meat, fatback, boston butts and ribs. I will be updating the pricing on our website later. In the meantime if you want some pork contact me at dan@ninjacowfarm.com to make arrangements

The smoke house at 7 degrees

On Thursday I fired the smoke house as I do each morning. I just love the look of the house venting a thin stream if smoke. It’s like watching a fire, but more productive. This particular morning it was only 7 degrees when I took this video. That may explain why its so short.

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Before I fired the smoke house, I took the opportunity to remove some if the items we have in there smoking. Mostly cheeses. This particular cheese is mozzarella cheese that I made from our milk. It went from warm cheese, to a muslin and hung in the smoke house immediately. It developed a very nice rind and took on a good amount of smoke in a couple of days. I shredded some into the scrambled eggs for breakfast before storing the rest away. Good stuff. Actually breakfast was really good all around. Scrambled eggs(our eggs) with ground pork (our pigs) mozzarella cheese (our milk and our cheese) and cantaloupe. Alas, it’s the wrong season for our cantaloupe. Still, pretty local as an average.

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I also pulled the other cheeses we had smoked , along with the cashews. The cashews are no good smoked. They took on a petroleum flavor which isn’t from and fuel as we don’t use any. It’s just the way they taste smoked. Maybe if I had baked them first. Everything else has smoked nicely though. The salt is really good. Any ideas on what to smoke next? We have a month of smoking ahead of us.