Pork-tober Food Challenge
Bacon is considered meat candy in our home. My almost 9 year old son will try anything
that has bacon in it. Most grownups will try about anything that has bacon in
it too. The Farmland Bacon Club and Altec animal feed in their National Pork
Month shout outs say the average American will eat about 18 pounds of bacon
annually… That’s a lot of pork belly – which ironically comes from the lower
sides of the market hog.
When I grew up in the 80’s, bacon was a breakfast food and a
swanky restaurant might wrap it around a London broil on the grill. Today bacon
is found about everywhere… in potato side dishes, wrapped around cream cheese
stuffed jalapeno peppers, around a smoked loin, on about any kind of burger you
can imagine and fast food and high end dinning have embraced bacon as a way to embellish
their offerings… Bacon has finally earned a place of respect on our plates and
has turned what was once a hard to move cut into a prime source of retail
income in the local and national chain restaurants and at the meat counter.
Bacon isn’t just for breakfast anymore.
When I was a senior in high school, I was our county pork
queen and my favorite part of the duties were the annual visits into elementary
classrooms to talk about pork production with kids who thought meat came from
the grocery store, not realizing it began on farms like the one I had grown up
on. It was almost like food came from a fairy or a bit of magic over night when
the store’s lights were dimmed. It was an amazing moment when the kids would
realize that my family helped to feed them. It was an experience that helped
shape my love for agriculture communications and consumer education.
I didn’t really think about who I would be married to 25
years later and that I would still be supporting the pork industry as the wife of
and mom to the next generation of Iowa pork producers. I spent a year working
out of state while the Farmer and I were dating and many weekend dates were
spent helping to run electrical wire or pex tubing for water and heating systems
in the farrowing barn we still use. I made a crock of chili for the night a few
neighbors joined us before we filled it with sows ready to give birth.
I’m really proud of what my family raises and I’m even more
proud of the improvements that we have made in our production techniques from
the days I was a county pork queen and eventually the Iowa Pork Princess. Sorting hogs in our confinement finishing
barn is a much different experience for our hogs as well as for us as producers. When I grew up our hog buildings were open
front finishers that provided shelter from the elements, but not the
temperatures. Those buildings were an improvement from pasture a frames and
free-running sows. Feeder fills were at
the mercy of the producer’s management and time, water access was easily
contaminated as lids either stuck flipped open or animals wrangled for position
to drink. Animals sorted from different
pens to be loaded for transport or market the night before many times fought to
figure out new pecking orders. That’s
not what our hogs experience today.
Hogs on our farm have stable temperature buildings and well
bedded and managed hoop structures that allow them to eat to grow, not eat to
stave off hypothermia. Our pens have
watering systems that provide clean water that many hogs can drink from at the
same time. Pens are built with sorting
and holding fences and gates that can sort off sick or injured pigs for
treatment and recovery or can be used to hold hogs for market sales alongside
their penmates who have already established a pecking order and will eliminate
or at least reduce fighting between animals.
I’m really proud that our farm has introduced our children
to the ideas of responsible use of medications, how to care for animals at all
stages of the production cycle and how to share the story of our livelihood
with others. I can’t tell you how many
friends have gone through our farrowing barn to see piglets and nursery pigs on
up to our market weight hogs. Each time
they leave saying they had no idea how much thought or work goes into raising
pork.
I love to share good recipes that feature the pork our
family proudly raises and when my friend Shannon Latham asked if I would like
to make a recipe and give samples at her pumpkin farm’s last weekend – I knew I
had to come up with something that showed how pork pairs with flavors we might
not think about every day. My offering for Shannon’s customers and the three
other accomplished food bloggers also sharing their kitchen know-how this weekend was a bacon wrapped, maple spiced
squash bite that could be served as an appetizer or as a specialty side for the
upcoming holidays. It passed the kid
test and was a fun way to feature two great foods that are abundantly produced
in Iowa.
Get out and find a local pumpkin or squash patch and buy up some of
their amazing produce to store for the winter holidays. And if you have some
locally produced pork from a locker or regular bacon from your local grocery store, know that
families like ours worked hard to provide that food for your family.
Maple Spiced Bacon Squash Bites
The Groceries:
¾ C Real
Maple Syrup
½ t Pumpkin
Pie Spice (my favorite from scratch recipe follows in the end notes)
2 T brown
sugar, packed
1/4 C Orange
Juice
1 T Canola
or Vegetable Oil
1/8 t
Cayenne Pepper
1/8 t Smoked
Paprika
1 1/2 pounds
bacon
1 Cinderella
or Pie type Pumpkin, sweet squash or sweet potato will work, too
The Process:
Combine the
syrup, pumpkin pie spice, brown sugar, orange juice, oil, pepper and paprika in
a small sauce pan and bring just to a simmer to bloom the spices. Remove from heat and set aside.
Cut the
squash into 1/3 inch thick slices and then into bacon width pieces. (about
60-65 pieces of squash will fill your cookie sheet and use the 1.5 pounds of
bacon) Toss the squash with 1/3 cup of the sauce.
Cut bacon
slices into thirds. Wrap around the
seasoned squash bites and lay seam side down on a parchment paper lined rimmed
cookie sheet. (The parchment paper will make clean up a snap! Don’t use waxed
paper, the bacon grease will melt it and it will be a mess.) Leave ¼ inch
between each row and column on your cookie sheet.
Bake the
bites at 350 for 40-45 minutes or until the bacon is rendered and looks to be
getting done. Take the rest of the syrup
mixture and baste the bites with it.
Return to the oven for another 5-10 minutes watching that the glaze
doesn’t overbrown.
Serve immediately
or put in a crockpot on low with any remaining glaze drizzled across the top.
Notes:
You can make the pieces of squash larger, just allow for more baking time and be ready to throw a piece of tinfoil across it if the bacon is cooking faster than the squash.
If you don't like the heat of Cayenne and Paprika, feel free to omit or just use a dash which is about a 1/16 of a teaspoon.
If you don't like the heat of Cayenne and Paprika, feel free to omit or just use a dash which is about a 1/16 of a teaspoon.
My favorite pumpkin
pie spice recipe is:
2 t Ground
Cinnamon
1 t Ground
Ginger
1/4 t Ground
Cloves
1/8 t Ground Nutmeg
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