🐖 Unique breeding and specialized diet have made these specialty pork carcasses popular in Japan.
📈 The use of software and data analysis in the 1970s allowed for precise measurement of economic traits and experimentation with genetics and feed composition.
🥩 The resulting four-way cross hog gained weight well, stood out from other hogs, and had desirable intramuscular fat content.
🐖 Japanese wholesaler Sumitomo imports specialty pork from the US with higher fat content and marbling.
🇯🇵 The partnership between Sumitomo and the US hog supplier has resulted in over 12,000 metric tons of pork being shipped to Japan annually.
🦃 The US hog supplier also collaborated with the Maxwell family, the nation's largest turkey processor.
🐖 The Ivy's hog operation in North Carolina grew to over 70,000 breeding sows.
🇯🇵 Sumitomo branded the Ivy's pork as silky pork in Japan.
🍽️ Japanese consumers value high-quality and traceable food.
🐷 Silky pork processed in a plant in Illinois is inspected for quality and safety by Sumitomo.
🔍 Japanese consumers value safe products and traceability.
🍖 Red meat consumption, including pork, has increased in Japan due to the westernization of the Japanese diet.
🐷 In the United States, the demand for specialty pork is growing as more people want to know the story behind their food production.
🔪 Rantoul Foods, the main supplier of the specialty pork, prioritizes accuracy and quality over volume, resulting in a slower but more precise production process.
📦 Each package of pork goes through individual sealing, cooling, and inspection to ensure it meets the specifications set by Sumitomo.
🐷 Specialty pork from Rantoul, Illinois is popular in Japan.
🇯🇵 Japanese consumers slice the belly for cooking.
🌎 The company plans to expand their reach to other markets.