The great pork debate! It is one of the most common culinary arguments at the dinner table, and the short answer is: You are likely both right, depending on whether you are looking at it through the lens of science or marketing.
To settle your household debate once and for all, here is the breakdown of why pork straddles the fence between red and white meat.
The Scientific Verdict: It’s Red Meat
If you ask a scientist, a nutritionist, or the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), the answer is definitive: Pork is red meat.
The classification of meat depends entirely on the amount of a protein called myoglobin found in the animal’s muscle tissue. Myoglobin is responsible for binding oxygen to muscles, and it contains a deeply pigmented red iron atom.
The Rule of Thumb: Meat from mammals (four-legged animals like beef, lamb, veal, and pork) contains high concentrations of myoglobin, making it red meat.
The Comparison: While a pork chop looks lighter than a ribeye steak, it contains significantly more myoglobin than chicken or turkey (white meat), firmly placing pigs in the red meat category biologically.
The Culinary & Marketing Verdict: It’s White Meat
So, why does half the world think pork is white meat? You can thank one of the most successful advertising campaigns in history.
In 1987, the National Pork Board was facing a massive crisis. Consumers were shifting away from beef and heavy meats in favor of leaner chicken and poultry, which were being praised as healthier “white meats.”
To save the industry, they launched a brilliant marketing slogan: “Pork. The Other White Meat.”
Why the campaign worked:
To save the industry, they launched a brilliant marketing slogan: “Pork. The Other White Meat.”
Why the campaign worked:
The Appearance: When you cook a lean cut of pork—like a pork tenderloin or a center-cut loin chop—the heat denatures the myoglobin, causing the meat to turn a pale, whitish-pink color that visually mimics a chicken breast.
The Nutritional Profile: Lean cuts of pork are incredibly low in fat and calories, matching the nutritional appeal of poultry.
The campaign was so wildly effective that it permanently altered public perception, leaving generations of home cooks convinced that pigs belong in the poultry category in the kitchen.
How to Settle the Debate
To officially declare a winner in your household, look at the context of your argument:
If you are arguing from a health, nutritional, or biological standpoint (e.g., tracking red meat intake for a diet), pork is red meat.
If you are arguing from a culinary, texture, or 1980s pop-culture advertising standpoint, pork is treated as white meat.
Give each other a high-five, split the difference, and enjoy your dinner!