APORKALYPSE

U.S. bacon reserves hit a 50-year low as farmers are producing more pigs than ever

Welcome to the Aporkalypse!

According to a statement released Tuesday by the Ohio Pork Council, a non-profit resource organization, the demand for bacon has surpassed its supply.

“Today’s pig farmers are setting historic records by producing more pigs than ever, yet our reserves are still depleting,” president of the organization Rich Deaton told USA Today.

While the reserves are the lowest they have been in half a century, the council said prices have increased by 20 percent just since the start of the new year.

Frozen pork belly inventory totaled 17.8 million pounds in December 2016, the U.S. Department of Agriculture reported.

But Deaton said bacon lovers are not to worry about the loss of the greasy goodness.“While bacon may become more expensive for consumers, rest assured pork industry will not run out of supply,” he added.

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22 Comments
Bostonbob
Bostonbob
February 2, 2017 1:17 pm

My daughter was in health class several years ago and they were discussing nutrition. They went around the room and asked everyone what they had for lunch. I had packed my daughters lunch everyday throughout the school year and she proudly stated that she had a baggie full of bacon, another full of chips, a protein bar and a bottle of water. Fortunately I did not get a note home. Several days a week she got a bag of bacon in her lunch. She is also thin and in excellent health. Bacon truly is a health food.

Bob.

B Lever
B Lever
February 2, 2017 1:29 pm

The real Aporkalyse is that a large percentage of (Brands) sold here in the US are processed in China and owned by a Chinese corporation. No thanks.

Trapped in Portlandia
Trapped in Portlandia
  B Lever
February 2, 2017 1:49 pm

B, you don’t have to buy Chinese bacon. First fine a local butcher shop or organic grocery store and talk to the butcher. Find out if the pork comes from local farms and where it is processed. If the butcher tells you the pork was pastured raised by Farmer Joe and processed at a meat processor in a local town, buy the bacon.

If that doesn’t work go to a farmer’s market and find the guy selling pork. Talk to him to make sure he grows it himself. If so, buy the bacon.

Or you could do what I do and find a local farmer who raises pasture-raised pigs and has them slaughtered locally. Then just buy a pig or half a pig and there’s your bacon.

Avoiding industrial food is not difficult, but it takes some effort.

B Lever
B Lever
  Trapped in Portlandia
February 2, 2017 2:04 pm

Trapped
I do seek out bacon that is cured/processed local but most folks don’t. They just presume that the brands that USED to be American and processed here are safe. I guess I did give the impression that I gave up bacon in my post but that is not the case. Thanks for the reply. 🙂

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Trapped in Portlandia
February 2, 2017 2:55 pm

Geez ……….

You don’t have to buy the stuff, Oklahoma and Texas got feral pigs running all over the place and you can just go shoot one.

The landowners will welcome the help, and you can use anything you want to shoot them in any way you want to do it. There are even (or were a few years ago and probably still are) helicopters available with door mounted machine guns you can hire to let you do it Rambo style if you can afford it.

goofyfoot
goofyfoot
February 2, 2017 1:49 pm

I bet there is plenty of this delicious treat in and around Dearbornistan, MI.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
February 2, 2017 2:23 pm

This is fake news guys.

No such thing.

Anyone needing bacon within an hours drive is welcome to come on up and buy all you want.

Rob
Rob
February 2, 2017 2:27 pm

I can’t buy bacon in CA. They sell something that they call bacon but it isn’t bacon and it doesn’t cook like bacon and it doesn’t taste like bacon. Every store I go to gives me the same blank stare when I ask for real bacon. They don’t even know that they are selling fake bacon.

I am under the impression that it comes from a misguided effort to do good. They think that bacon is bad and try to come up with a better bacon alternative but in truth…it just isn’t bacon. As I understand it, they think that they can use celery salt in stead of real salt and that somehow that is better. It isn’t. It tastes like shit and cooks like shit. So the end result is I don’t get no stinkin bacon. Fuck these assholes.

javelin
javelin
  Rob
February 2, 2017 2:52 pm

Bacon angst–I get it. Same thing I feel when the wife buys fat-free ( taste free) sour cream, coffee creamer, salad dressing etc.
Fat is one of the 3 primary parts of nutrition for a human body, and it adds flavor to everything…just like REAL bacon adds flavor to anything.

Dutchman
Dutchman
  Rob
February 2, 2017 4:06 pm

Nueske’s is a family owned company – they have the best bacon – bacon freezes well. Fuck Commiefornia!

https://www.nueskes.com/store/bacon/

David
David
  Dutchman
February 2, 2017 8:20 pm

Yep, my home state, bacon, cheese and beer. Try Usingers sausage for another treat.

Stucky
Stucky
February 2, 2017 2:46 pm

When I get my morning coffee at Quik-Check I always top it off with a dab of whipped cream and chocolate. Around last November they put up a sign “Due to a whipped cream shortage we will no longer be supplying whipped cream” WTF?

They still don’t carry it.

Sho’ nuff … there IS a whipped cream shortgage … due to nitrous oxide.

==========================

If you were planning to serve whipped cream with your holiday desserts this year, you might want to acquaint yourself with the homemade kind. Thanks to a nationwide shortage of nitrous oxide, a critical ingredient in aerosol whipped creams, some major manufacturers have announced that they won’t be able to keep up with holiday demand.

Among the companies that expect to see shortfalls are ConAgra, which makes best-selling whipped cream Reddi-wip, and Dean Foods, which sells whipped creams under a range of local brands. But the impact of the shortage will likely be more widespread than that, experts say. Dairy cases from Boston to Omaha have already gone empty.

The story behind the whipped cream shortage — which involves laughing gas, a tragic explosion and a federal investigation — reveals one of the industrial food system’s core weaknesses: the increasing concentration of power among a few companies in a few areas and at a handful of plants.

“This story is a metaphor for the vulnerability of the entire food system,” said Daniel Block, a professor at Chicago State University who has studied the geography of food distribution. “It serves as a sort of canary in a coal mine, in the case [there] was a real industrial disaster.”

[Why grocery stores can’t seem to keep shelves stocked during snow storms]

A key ingredient in whipped cream is nitrous oxide, sometimes called “laughing gas” for its ability to relax people and ease pain when getting teeth pulled. But it also acts as a propellant to get whipped cream out of the can and a preservative to keep it from going rancid.

Just two companies, Air Liquide and Matheson Tri-Gas, produce nitrous oxide for all of the United States and Canada. Together, they operate five nitrous oxide plants, which supply the three packing facilities that can the majority of America’s whipped creams.

At each of these highly consolidated nodes, even a small disruption could impact a large number of products further down the supply chain.

“It’s very concerning how vulnerable we’re making our food system to weather, fuel shortages, accidents, strikes, foodborne illnesses,” said Philip Howard, a sociologist at Michigan State University who studies consolidation in the food system. “There are many variables that make it possible that the food on our grocery shelves this week won’t be there the week after.”

On Aug. 28, the Air Liquide nitrous oxide facility in Florida — operated by its subsidiary Airgas — experienced a fatal explosion that left one man dead. The incident, which is still under federal investigation, reduced the company’s nitrous oxide output in “the short-term,” spokeswoman Sarah Boxler said — though she did not give a specific timeline and said that the explosion handicapped the facility “indefinitely.”

Air Liquide has allocated its remaining supply to medical clients first and back-burnered its clients in food manufacturing. With a limited supply of nitrous oxide, ConAgra and Dean Foods said they had to slash their whipped cream production, leaving peppermint hot chocolates and gingerbread cakes naked in the midst of the holiday season.

“We are proactively managing the production of Reddi-wip and are doing the best we can to make it available to as many consumers as possible,” said Lanie Friedman, a spokeswoman for ConAgra. “We should have our full supply up and running by February.”

[Why a top food poisoning expert won’t ever eat these foods]

Neither Kraft, which makes Cool Whip, nor Saputo, which sells whipped cream under the Land O’Lakes label, responded to questions about whether they too would see shortages. But because most aerosol whipped cream brands are made at the same large packing facilities, it’s likely that a shortage that impacts one label impacts all of them.

“The nitrous oxide shortage has impacted the majority of food suppliers who distribute aerosol products,” said Reace Smith, a spokesperson for Dean Foods. “Our co-packer is working closely with suppliers and allocating the supply based on greatest need.”

Manufacturers say the shortages will strike consumers on a store-by-store basis, depending on demand and preexisting inventory. Right now, Smith added, restaurants, hospitals and schools — not grocery stores — are taking priority.

And yet, even after Reddi-wip is back in stores, the core problem will remain: the concentration of food production among a few companies in a few areas and at a handful of facilities.

For instance, dairy farms — which supply the cream in whipped cream — are growing larger and less numerous, as are the dairy cooperatives that distribute their product. The number of dairy manufacturing plants fell by 75 percent between 1970 and 2005, according to the Department of Agriculture.

Howard said they see a close parallel in the Eggo waffle shortage of 2009, which deprived consumers of the frozen breakfast food for several months. Kellogg’s, which makes Eggo, eventually revealed the cause was a flood in one manufacturing facility and the outbreak of listeria in another — problems that would have had a less dramatic impact, Howard argues, if Kellogg’s had a less concentrated production process.

[This is what life would actually be like without processed food]

A similar — albeit vastly more dangerous — scare broke out around spinach in 2006, when an E. coli outbreak infected 199 people in 26 states. Investigators traced the bug back to a single manufacturing facility in San Juan Bautista, Calif., which processed the spinach sold by 40 different brands across the country. As a result of the ensuing recall, consumers learned that even competing brands, like Earthbound, Dole and Ready-Pac, often came from the same places and were processed in the same plants.

“If there is a problem at a single facility, there’s a big impact,” said Paul Wolfe, a policy specialist at the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition, which advocates on behalf of midsize farmers. He calls the whipped-cream shortage a “symptom of the consolidation taking place” everywhere from pork slaughterhouses to California pear orchards.

Reversing the trend will not be easy, Wolfe acknowledged. NSAC has lobbied for more antitrust enforcement in the agricultural sector, particularly in chicken and livestock processing, where the market is dominated almost entirely by four large firms.

Howard said he would also like to see regulators reduce subsidies for large companies and do more to empower competition from small producers. He points to craft beer as one industry where such initiatives have worked. Despite the mergers of large beer companies like Anheuser-Busch InBev and SABMiller, small and independent breweries have flourished, benefiting from federal and local tax incentives that target smaller operations. The number of breweries in the country reached a record high 5,005 this year, according to the Brewers Association.

In the meantime, consumers will still be able to get whipped cream this season if they’re willing to compromise or look around. For instance, brands that have already built up their inventory will be spared, such as Natural by Nature, an organic brand sold along the East Coast. There will also be no impact on non-aerosol whipped cream products, such as Cool Whip tubs.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Stucky
February 2, 2017 3:03 pm

FWIW, I make my own whipped cream and use nitrous oxide chargers to do it (yeah, I actually use those things to make whipped cream).

It serves as more than just a propellant, nitrous is fat soluble and absorbs into the cream so that it expands in tiny, tiny bubbles when you depressurize it by squeezing the handle or otherwise opening the valve. It’s both a propellant and a necessary component of real whipped cream (i.e. trying CO2 would just give you carbonated cream at best and air pressure would just squirt liquid cream).

Stucky
Stucky
  Anonymous
February 2, 2017 3:23 pm

I would do that except the QuikCheck is a half mile from the house and I can’t find an extension cord that long.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  Stucky
February 2, 2017 3:13 pm

I say whippet. Whippet good.

Unprocessed
Unprocessed
February 2, 2017 2:50 pm

This is bad. Real bad. Because it could set the LGBT movement back years.

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IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
February 2, 2017 3:27 pm

I just laid in a 3 year supply of Benton’s Bacon. It’s slow cured with a traditional dry curing process then smoked Hickory smoked to perfection. https://shop.bentonscountryham.com/ Best bacon on the planet!

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  IndenturedServant
February 2, 2017 6:48 pm

3 years worth of quality bacon. Now that is getting ones priorities straight! Plus in a SHTF situation, the barter worth would be off the charts. Air-Water-Bacon, in that order.

And always save the bacon fat. Use it in cooking. Don’t waste a drop.

HSF, next time I am up there, I will definitely purchase some. I’ve seen the quality food your hogs eat.

Oink.

mangledman
mangledman
February 2, 2017 5:33 pm

Healthy food baaad. The attack on bacon came about the same time as butter. The attack on healthy food kicked in the 70s through the 80s and keeps picking up speed. Look into Margarine, seriously it has little to no nutritional value. My grandparents ate butter and lard up till their last days and gmaw got close to 100. The truckstop was still using lard on the griddle until the 80s. How old did cowboys get that lived out of a saddlebag with beans and saltpork,and jerky. We did have a piglet shortage back two or so years, might have something to do with the supply pers epidemic I think they called it.

TampaRed
TampaRed
February 2, 2017 7:42 pm

You guys have got it all wrong as to why there’s a shortage.I have it on good authority that Trump is having the DHS buy up the entire supply so that we will be able to feed all the Syrian refugees that are coming in.

lamont cranston
lamont cranston
February 2, 2017 11:17 pm

Remember that Bacon is Putin’s fav food. And Homer Simpson’s too.

SSS
SSS
February 2, 2017 11:46 pm

One of the few sites on the internet where bacon gets a fair hearing.

I am SSS, and I approve this message.