U.S. Pork Impresses Korean Judges in Blind Taste Tests
An independent blind taste test of pork from around the world conducted recently by a leading South Korean magazine delivered some surprising results – at least for the Korean participants and the competition sponsors.
With the introduction of mandatory country of origin labeling for meat products in Korea, the editors of Cookand magazine – a monthly magazine focused on food, cooking, restaurants, chefs and wine that is read by housewives as well as food and restaurant critics, gourmets, cooking instructors and young chefs because of its specialized contents – speculated that consumers might be using labels to drive their purchasing decisions. To measure taste preferences without bias, Cookand conducted its test while disguising both the price and source of the pork samples.
In the end, two five-person panels consisting of food bloggers and meat industry professionals gave U.S. pork very high marks. And several of the respondents expressed surprise when they learned that the pork samples they favored came from the United States rather than domestic sources.
“Beyond our expectations, U.S. pork was rated highly in both the frozen and chilled categories,” wrote the editors of Cookand magazine after the meat industry professionals revealed their choices.
For the competition, Cookand editors selected collar butt and single-ribbed belly, which are the most popular pork cuts among Korean consumers, both at home and when dining out. Frozen meat samples came from Austria, Belgium, Chile and the United States. Chilled meat samples consisted of two domestic brands and U.S. product.
The judges were meat industry professionals (two chefs, a cooking specialist, menu consultant and a meat expert) as well as the panel of power bloggers (Internet bloggers whose Web sites draw 5,000 or more visitors per day).
To ensure a fair comparison, Cookand took steps to minimize differences in freshness among the samples due to time in distribution, using only samples that were less than 20 days after importation.
Professionals want domestic pork, love U.S. pork
The panel of meat industry professionals gave high marks to both frozen and fresh U.S. pork, but the editors of Cookand noted a struggle between the professionals’ taste buds and their national pride.
“What is interesting was the evaluation on personal liking, which was different before and after disclosing the countries of origin,” the editors wrote. “In the case of chilled pork, U.S. pork scored high before disclosing the countries of origin. However, once the countries of origin and prices were revealed, domestic branded pork also scored high. These findings show that the professionals have some degree of emotional preference for domestic brands.”
The professionals gave high marks to both U.S. and Belgian frozen collar butt and belly, while preferring U.S. and a domestic brand when it came to chilled.
The comments from the professionals were revealing:
- “I was impressed that U.S. pork had much better color than domestic pork. It was difficult to distinguish domestic pork from imported pork when the countries of origin were not disclosed. I was amazed that my perception and notions were quite different from the facts.” – Choi Jin-heun, master chef and professor at Yuhan University
- “When the countries of origin were disclosed and I checked the origin of the sample I thought tasted best, I was surprised that it was U.S. pork. In particular, when its low price and high quality are considered, it was very satisfactory. I think it is worthwhile considering when I make a personal purchase as a consumer.” – Seong Myung-hoon, head chef of the buffet restaurant at Incheon Sheraton Walker Hill
Bloggers reinforce the findings
To balance the opinions of the meat industry professionals, Cookand assembled a five-person panel of consumers – not typical consumers but power bloggers active in cooking. While there was some variation in the favorites, U.S. pork was still a surprisingly popular choice.
Among frozen cuts, the bloggers chose U.S. and Austrian pork as the best in the frozen collar butt category while U.S. and Belgian offerings led in frozen bellies. Two domestic brands were preferred in chilled collar butt while U.S. chilled bellies tied with one domestic brand as the favorites.
“Above all, in preference relative to price, chilled U.S. pork was the overwhelming favorite,” the editors reported. “It was highly evaluated as it was not very different from domestic pork considering its quality relative to price.”
The comments from the bloggers were effusive for U.S. pork:
- “In the past, I insisted on domestic beef and pork mainly because of perception. A predominant view was that it is better to eat a safer meat even if we have to eat slightly less of it. Of course, I never doubted that domestic meat would taste better…The outcome was really unexpected. I was amazed at how chewy and juicy U.S. belly was.” – Yun Ji-yeon
- “The U.S. chilled belly was quite tasty…I assumed it was domestic pork. Prejudice causes fear. Going forward, I should boldly try new things. The U.S. pork was fresher than I had expected, and it tasted quite good.” – Lee Jin-Kyung
- “Tasting without indications of the country of origin or price was most impressive. When the prices and countries of origin were disclosed, my perception of U.S. chilled and frozen meat changed. I was surprised at the superb taste and high quality relative to price.” – Lee Na-yeol
Photo for use with this release:
Photo 1: Korean chefs pick U.S. pork in blind taste test
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The U.S. Meat Export Federation (www.USMEF.org) is the trade association responsible for developing international markets for the U.S. red meat industry and is funded by USDA, exporting companies, and the beef, pork, corn and soybean checkoff programs.
For more information, contact Jim Herlihy at jherlihy@usmef.org.
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