Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

woodsprite

(11,916 posts)
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 06:10 PM Feb 2023

Do pork chops taste the same to you as they used to years ago?

If my mom did something different with it, I don't know what it was. It just doesn't taste very 'porky' to me, and the texture is different than I remember it. Pork loin seems a better fit, but pork chops seem different. Maybe it's the feed or the breeding practices that have changed the taste/texture some. I even tried getting pork chops for a family dinner from a higher end butcher shop, and didn't notice a lot of difference (certainly not $30 worth of difference!).

Just wondering if it's me and my old taste buds giving out. There are times that I experience the same with pre-ground beef, but if I get the meat and grind it myself, that fixes that problem.

30 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Do pork chops taste the same to you as they used to years ago? (Original Post) woodsprite Feb 2023 OP
Nope, the new lean diet has removed a lot of flavor. AndyS Feb 2023 #1
or find heirloom breed pork direct from farmer, farmer market or some Kali Feb 2023 #3
Luckily, we have a place in Oakland that sells real meat wryter2000 Feb 2023 #9
worth the price if you aren't feeding teenagers Kali Feb 2023 #10
That's for sure wryter2000 Feb 2023 #13
I throw them out before ten years. ;) Chainfire Feb 2023 #2
I was talking to a friend about this very thing. jimfields33 Feb 2023 #4
it is not you Kali Feb 2023 #5
I've been experimenting with the air fryer w/good results Marcus IM Feb 2023 #6
Taste fine to me. hippywife Feb 2023 #7
Pork is a much leaner product than it was decades ago. n/t Mr.Bill Feb 2023 #8
always been dry and tough samnsara Feb 2023 #11
IMHO, they've rendered pork loin inedible wryter2000 Feb 2023 #12
I cook pork loin once in awhile. Cover it with sliced onions and peeled apple slices. yorkster Feb 2023 #16
It sounds like you're braising it wryter2000 Feb 2023 #22
Plus adds flavor....n/t yorkster Feb 2023 #25
It sounds like you're braising it wryter2000 Feb 2023 #29
As many have mentioned, pork is much leaner than it used to be. rsdsharp Feb 2023 #14
I have the same problem with bacon. OAITW r.2.0 Feb 2023 #15
It's the fat. 2naSalit Feb 2023 #17
Hogs are much leaner today. I have personally witnessed the changes. I have photos sinkingfeeling Feb 2023 #18
They have left so little fat on them that they Still Sensible Feb 2023 #19
The best pork chops quitnesset Feb 2023 #20
They're leaner and safer but the pigs suffer to make them that way Warpy Feb 2023 #21
Ground beef as well KT2000 Feb 2023 #23
No. Funny you say that. I was just commenting on that to my friend. I thought maybe it was me. judesedit Feb 2023 #24
Pork shoulder might be a substitute Major Nikon Feb 2023 #26
I brine my before I cook it and it comes out great. Eko Feb 2023 #27
It's the newer, healthier 'other white meat'. chowmama Feb 2023 #28
Hardly any fat marbling now. trof Feb 2023 #30

AndyS

(14,559 posts)
1. Nope, the new lean diet has removed a lot of flavor.
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 06:14 PM
Feb 2023

The loss of fat in muscle tissue reduces taste and results in a dry mealy texture.

The only way to consistantly get edible lean pork is to use sous vide and cook to 135f or less and sear in a hot skillet before plating.

Kali

(55,011 posts)
3. or find heirloom breed pork direct from farmer, farmer market or some
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 06:20 PM
Feb 2023

specialty meat butchers/retailers.

wryter2000

(46,051 posts)
9. Luckily, we have a place in Oakland that sells real meat
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 06:29 PM
Feb 2023

The chicken there tastes like no chicken you can find anywhere else. It's really expensive, but nowhere near what online buying costs. Partly because of the lack of shipping.

Chainfire

(17,542 posts)
2. I throw them out before ten years. ;)
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 06:19 PM
Feb 2023

No, I have not noticed a change in chops. When I cook them, no one else generally complains either.

jimfields33

(15,808 posts)
4. I was talking to a friend about this very thing.
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 06:21 PM
Feb 2023

No matter how I try, I can’t get them even close to my mothers when I was a kid. I swear I thought I was the only one. Glad I’m not. Lol.

Kali

(55,011 posts)
5. it is not you
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 06:22 PM
Feb 2023

it is breed, management/feed changes. pork is not raised the same as years ago.

you can get good pork but it costs more, of course. generally heirloom breeds. try direct from farm, farmers markets, specialty butchers.

Marcus IM

(2,203 posts)
6. I've been experimenting with the air fryer w/good results
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 06:22 PM
Feb 2023

Usually I marinate then cook at full watts. Depending the size weight and heft of the meat it's usually done in about 18 minutes with a flip in the middle of the cook.

It did take a bit of experimenting.

hippywife

(22,767 posts)
7. Taste fine to me.
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 06:23 PM
Feb 2023

I find there's such a thing as light and dark meat from different cuts that taste different from one another, but otherwise, same as usual.

wryter2000

(46,051 posts)
12. IMHO, they've rendered pork loin inedible
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 06:33 PM
Feb 2023

I guess you can stir fry it quickly. Any other method produces meat that is so dry you can barely choke it down.

The only cuts of pork I will buy are ribs and shoulder aka butt aka chuck. Then, you have to deal with too much fat (possibly) and lots of bones. I have learned how to debone a shoulder roast, more or less. I basically end up with two small roasts and some extra meat.

yorkster

(1,497 posts)
16. I cook pork loin once in awhile. Cover it with sliced onions and peeled apple slices.
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 07:15 PM
Feb 2023

Also put a fair amount of red wine in the pan, then bake.
The wine, apples and onions help keep it tender. And you can make a reduced sauce and have egg noodles and peas along with..

rsdsharp

(9,182 posts)
14. As many have mentioned, pork is much leaner than it used to be.
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 06:45 PM
Feb 2023

In addition, in many cases, pork is injected with a saline solution to help keep it from drying out during the cooking process to try to compensate for the lack of fat.

I don’t mean to be a smart ass, but most pork chops are taken from the loin. It’s exactly the same meat, except one is kept whole, and the other is cut into single serving portions.

OAITW r.2.0

(24,504 posts)
15. I have the same problem with bacon.
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 07:05 PM
Feb 2023

I buy the generic store version most of the time. I've noticed that there is a lot less fat....but also a lot less taste.

Probably better for me, but taste counts for something...

2naSalit

(86,636 posts)
17. It's the fat.
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 07:25 PM
Feb 2023

There's been a great reduction in fat in meats and that is what has all the flavor. I just get ribs or a roast anymore.

sinkingfeeling

(51,457 posts)
18. Hogs are much leaner today. I have personally witnessed the changes. I have photos
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 07:40 PM
Feb 2023

of the Hampshire hogs my dad raised in the 30s and 40s. Then, my leaner, longer ones I raised in the 60s and they look like slobs compared to the breed today.

Still Sensible

(2,870 posts)
19. They have left so little fat on them that they
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 08:14 PM
Feb 2023

have very little taste. Same thing with most tenderloins you buy for roasting. You pretty much have to come up with a good recipe to marinate the meat in before you cook it. With chops, you'll get more flavor if they are battered and fried, but I know lots of folks are trying to avoid fried foods.

Warpy

(111,267 posts)
21. They're leaner and safer but the pigs suffer to make them that way
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 08:28 PM
Feb 2023

There was a routine when I was growing up, my dad would ask what's for dinner and my mother would say pork chops and he'd say let's go out to dinner and we did. I'd know for a fact she hadn't bought any for months. Back in the 60s, you had to cook pork to death to make sure it was safe. I wouldn't eat it, either.

These days, things have changed and the pigs are kept free of parasites, it's one of the advantages of farory farming. The meat is also leaner and more tender, a result of keeping the pigs confined with nothing to do but eat. That might be the difference you're tasting, the increased leanness.

KT2000

(20,581 posts)
23. Ground beef as well
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 09:19 PM
Feb 2023

The ground beef I have purchased from grocery stores does not have much flavor. The beef I purchase that was grown on a local smaller ranch, with the same fat content, has flavor like the old days. The local ranch does not use antibiotics or hormones on their livestock.

judesedit

(4,438 posts)
24. No. Funny you say that. I was just commenting on that to my friend. I thought maybe it was me.
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 09:29 PM
Feb 2023

Very bland. Whether baked or fried. Bacon still tastes good, but even that seems to be different. I was a vegetarian, but wasn't getting enough protein, so started eating meat again. I'm thinking I'll go back to not eating it. I love animals and I feel like a hypocrite eating it, anyway. Honestly, vegetables aren't the same either. Soil, water and air are depleted or full of chemicals. Bound to effect all that we and animals ingest.

Sorry for the negativity

Major Nikon

(36,827 posts)
26. Pork shoulder might be a substitute
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 09:55 PM
Feb 2023

Pork loin is where pork chops come from, so it's the same cut.

Pork shoulder has more fat and flavor, but also has more connective tissue and as such favor cooking low and slow rather than frying as you would with a pork chop.

As previously mentioned, pork chops today have less fat and less flavor thanks to a public which demanded leaner cuts starting in the 90's with the low fat craze. What you can do is salt them and refrigerate overnight. The salt will draw out the moisture from the chop where it will mix with the salt and reabsorb back into the interior of the meat. What this will do is help the pork chop retain juices during cooking. The other thing is do not overcook them as since the meat is lean it will dry out very quickly if you overcook, and with the juices will go much of the flavor. You want to wind up with an internal temperature of 145F, but if you pull them off the grill or skillet at this temp they will overcook because carryover cooking will take them farther. When you pull depends on how thick your chops are. I use 2" chops so I pull mine at 135F and they end up at 145F after resting. For 1" chops you might want to pull at 140F.

Some people will recommend to brine them, but I stopped doing this years ago as I found salting them works much better. It takes longer, but it doesn't wash out pork flavor into the brine.

Another thing I do is take EVOO and your favorite herbs and mix in a blender, food processor, or stick blender. Drizzle over the chops right before serving.

chowmama

(413 posts)
28. It's the newer, healthier 'other white meat'.
Wed Feb 22, 2023, 10:32 PM
Feb 2023

Often dry and tasteless because of the lack of fat and the commercial husbandry that keeps them from grazing around or getting any exercise. You can't cook it as long because of the dryness, so it doesn't get really tender, either.

Co-op pork from small organic farms is more expensive (but not as bad as a high-end butcher shop) and probably not as good for you, but it tastes a lot better. I'd rather have it less often, if I can enjoy it more.

Latest Discussions»Culture Forums»Cooking & Baking»Do pork chops taste the s...