salt pork
Noun: * Cured pork: A type of preserved meat, specifically pork (typically from the belly, back, or sides of the pig) that has been heavily cured or packed in salt. It is not smoked like bacon. Its primary purpose is as a cooking ingredient to add fat, flavor, and saltiness to dishes.
Salt pork is used as a flavoring base or ingredient in cooking, not typically eaten alone. It is often diced, sliced, or scored and then rendered (cooked to release its fat) to start a dish. * The recipe starts by rendering diced salt pork in a pot. * Traditional baked beans are slow-cooked with a piece of salt pork for richness. * Before refrigeration, preserving meat like pork with salt was essential.
- "To try the salt pork": An idiom is not commonly associated with this specific term. Its usage is almost exclusively culinary.
- In historical or survival contexts, salt pork was a staple food due to its long shelf life.
- Fatback: A specific cut of fat from the back of a pig, which can be cured to make salt pork or used fresh.
- Salt-cured: The general preservation method used for salt pork, ham, and other meats.
- Bacon: Pork that is cured and then smoked, unlike salt pork which is only cured with salt.
- Cured pork fat
- Salt-cured pork
- To render salt pork: The cooking process of melting the fat out of the diced meat.
- A slab of salt pork: Refers to a whole, thick piece of it.
This term is not commonly used in idiomatic expressions. Its meaning is literal and culinary.
- fat from the back and sides and belly of a hog carcass cured with salt