I know its from last year, but I love it!

Have a Porktastic 4th of July!
- B
Small town flavor. Big town taste.
I know its from last year, but I love it!

Have a Porktastic 4th of July!
- B
Every once in a while, cooking feels exactly like this: we don’t feel like we know what we’re doing; get frustrated with the options and choices; throw a bunch of things together and end up cooking an iPad instead! Okay, well maybe not the iPad, but the same feelings exist.
I have to say that Jake did do something right- slightly shocking, I know- by wrapping that iPad in bacon. It seems today that if you want to add a little bit of flavor and culinary finesse to any recipe, it’s as simple as wrapping it in bacon. Wrap a little bacon around a pork tenderloin, a pork chop, or even a jalapeno if you dare, and you have dressed up the main course for any situation. All of these recipes are porktastically simple and versatile. Go ahead and use them for your next family meal, party, or dinner for two!
Bacon-Wrapped Pork Medallions
Ingredients:
1 pork tenderloin, 1 to 1 1/4 pound
4 slices bacon, hickory-smoked
Wooden picks
Salt and pepper
Cut tenderloin in 8 slices (medallions) approximately 1 to 1 1/4-inch wide. Place two slices (medallions) together and wrap bacon slice around both pieces to hold together to make pork “mignons.” Secure with wooden pick. Repeat with remaining pork medallions and bacon. Season both sides with salt and pepper and spray lightly with cooking spray. Broil or grill per directions below.
*Remove wooden pick and serve.
Makes 4 servings.
Directions for Broiling: Pre-heat broiler to 500º. Broil pork mignons about 4-inches from heat source for 7 to 8 minutes per side or until internal temperature reaches 160º F.
Direction for Pan-broiling: Heat skillet or grill pan over high heat; add pork mignons. Lower heat to medium-high; cook (uncovered) for 6 minutes or until nicely browned. Turn; cook an additional 6 minutes or until internal temperature reached 160º F.
Directions for Grilling: Pre-heat grill to 400º. Place pork mignons directly over high heat. Close grill lid; grill for 6 to 7 minutes per side or until internal temperature reaches 160º F.
Today we would like to take a few moments to salute television’s biggest fan of bacon and everything else pork, Homer J. Simpson.
Ok, so he doesn’t know that pork comes from pigs, but he sure has eaten a lot of it and is quite possibly responsible for keeping all of Springfield’s invisible hog farmers afloat. And since so many pork lovers tune in to watch their kindred spirit, we’re pretty sure Homer’s eating habits are the reason for the show’s success.
Since Homer doesn’t know the most basic thing about pigs and pork (one becomes the other) we’re guessing he’s not up on other facts of modern hog farming either. Like how pigs are raised in state of the art barns that provide a stable climate year round and protection from predators and disease, or that they eat feed that has been specially formulated to meet their needs at every stage of growth. He probably also missed the memo announcing that pork is leaner than ever and that pork tenderloin is just as lean as skinless chicken breast. But we can forgive him for not knowing all that as long as he remembers farmers are doing what’s best and keeps right on eating pork!
So, Homer keep baconing up your sausage, ordering your smiley-face breakfasts with bacon noses, bacon hair, bacon mustaches, five o’clock shadows made of bacon bits and bacon bodies, and enjoying the wonderful, magical animal that gives you pork, bacon and ham, and we’ll keep watching your show for another 20 years.
Today is the most important day of the year. It is a day to stay home from work. It is a day of celebrating with family and friends. It is bigger than Thanksgiving and Christmas and New Year’s and the Fourth of July combined. It is a day to honor the reason there can be delicious bacon and pork chops and swine inspired doo-dads and even a nation of Porktastic. My fellow Porktasticans prepare yourselves because today is National Pig Day.
My friends, we will be grilling, baking and slow roasting all of our favorite forms of pork throughout the day, not to mention watching our favorite famous pigs like Babe, Porky, Gordy and Miss Piggy. So come party with us! We’ll be easy to spot since we’ll be the ones decked out head-to-toe in true pig style – nose, ears and of course curly-q tail.
But, if for some crazy reason your boss won’t let you off to celebrate this holiday of holidays, we have a few ideas to help you take the party to work with you:
Have a Porktastic day holiday and be sure to tell us how you celebrated National Pig Day by emailing stories or pics of your celebration to Mr.Oinkers@gmail.com.
Do you love bacon? How about pepperoni? Since we already know that the answer is “yes,” we’ll go ahead and tell you how to get some for FREE.

It’s Porktastically simple to do: just submit a recipe featuring bacon or pepperoni, and Sugardale will send you a FREE pack of their bacon or pepperoni. Don’t forget to download the recipe booklet for inspiration and treats featuring your two favorite pre-packaged pork products!
At Porktastic we’re usually so consumed with our favorite form of sustenance that we often fall behind on what’s hip and now. So when we took a giant leap for Porktastic kind and checked out The Food Channel’s Top Ten Food Trends for 2010 we were shocked and pretty proud to find out that we were already doing them all!
1. Keeping It Real
Scientists may be making meat in test tubes, but around here we’re all about the real thing. Recipes like Pepper Pork Chops turn simple everyday ingredients into delicious homemade meals in minutes.
2. Experimentation Nation
It’s all about trying new things and what’s more Porktastic than that? In the past eight months we’ve introduced you to new ways to have your pork on the go, bacon gumballs and jelly beans, and the Porktastic Nine. If you haven’t tried all of these yet, what are you waiting for? Get out there and experiment!
3. More in Store
Porktastic is when every grocery store has every ingredient you need, for every recipe, right where you expect it to be. And what about those recipes that call for special cuts of meat no one knows? What is a paillard anyway? Well many grocery stores are bringing back the butcher who can help put these meat mysteries to rest and package pork to your exact specifications.
4. American, the New Ethnic
You’ve always heard that America is one big melting pot of cultures, well now so is our food! We’re taking food ideas, flavors, and techniques and combining them to make something that is totally American like this Crispy Oriental Pizza.
5. Food Vetting
In case you haven’t noticed, more people are getting their food from the grocery store and less are growing it themselves. This has led to wanting to know where your food comes from, which contrary to popular belief, isn’t just from the grocery store. Pork today is safer and healthier than ever. Thanks to new technologies farmers can raise pigs indoors, protecting them from disease spread by birds, rodents and bugs. The barns provide a stable environment so the animals don’t have to deal with weather extremes – would you want to stand outside during snow storms, scorching heat or thunder storms? Didn’t think so. Pigs are also getting more individual attention and diets designed for the highest level of nutrition at each stage of their life on farms that are owned and operated by families. With all these improvements, today’s pig farms may not look like Old MacDonald’s, but they are making it possible for you to enjoy food that is among the safest in the world.
6. Mainstreaming Sustainability
Sustainability is the buzzword of the year, but farmers have been focusing on sustainability from day one. They grow the crops that feed the pigs that make the poop that feed the crops – it’s all a big cycle. A healthy environment is key for productive land to grow the crops that feed the pigs that feed us. Why would farmers want to mess that up when they’re living on the same land and eating the same food?
7. Food With Benefits
I don’t know a food that has more benefits than pork! Six of the most common cuts of pork are 16% leaner and have 27% less fat than they did 20 years ago. And ounce for ounce, pork tenderloin is just as lean as skinless chicken breast. Pork is also full of protein and a great source of B-vitamins, phosphorus, zinc and potassium. In fact, cutting calories but including more protein (like six delicious ounces of lean pork a day) let you keep more muscle mass than just cutting calories alone. Plus higher-protein diets also help you feel fuller after meals so you’re not raiding the cupboard for sweets an hour later. Seems pretty beneficial to me.
8. I Want My Umami
Umami is that elusive fifth basic taste that makes our food delicious. Ok, so I still don’t get what it is, but this trend is basically mixing flavors and putting formal and relaxed together. And what is the king of this trend? Bacon! This meat candy has made its way into actual candy and desserts, like bacon baklava at Brown Hotel in Louisville, bacon flavored cupcakes in Chi-Town, bacon chocolate crunch bars in LA, and bacon brittle in NYC. We always knew bacon was special, it just took the rest of the world a little while to catch up.
9. Will Trade for Food
In a time where money is tight, people have brought back the ways of the early days of the old frontier. That’s right my friends bartering. People are using websites like Craig’s List to trade and sell everything, even pork. You heard right, pork. In fact, we just came across a Craig’s List ad where a guy was willing to trade a big ol’ hog roast shindig for a covered trailer. Hog farmers are taking the same cue and are looking to international trade as another market to sell their product. I guess you could say it’s working pretty well, since trade is one of the biggest things that has helped keep the industry alive amid all its economic hardships.
10. I, Me, Mine
It’s all about you. What you want – the size, the flavors, the ingredients. With pork it’s amazingly easy to get what you want. Pork goes well with most flavors so it can be a part of practically any dish and can be substituted into your favorite beef and chicken dishes almost seamlessly. The possibilities are bordering on endless.
Tis the season to be jolly – and to party. The holiday season is upon us and it seems like our weekends have suddenly been filled with company Christmas parties, gatherings with extended family and New Year’s Eve countdowns with friends. This year, as we don our gay apparel and head off to our various shindigs (where we hope they’ll be serving some delicious form of pork) we’ll be celebrating our favorite meat candy… BACON!

Our bacon necktie and bacon nails are Porktastically stylish and great conversation starters for when you can’t think of anything to say to your Great Aunt Harriet. Just point out your bacon homage and start talking to her about her favorite cut of pork. Since pork is the world’s most popular meat, she’ll probably be talking for awhile. Sorry.
Go ahead and indulge in the king of breakfast, the sultan of brunch, and the czar of porktastic mornings. Just be careful if you are enjoying your pork like this!
“I enjoy having breakfast in bed. I like waking up to the smell of bacon, sue me. And since I don’t have a butler, I have to do it myself. So, most nights before I go to bed, I will lay six strips of bacon out on my George Foreman grill. Then I go to sleep. When I wake up, I plug in the grill. I go back to sleep again. Then I wake up to the smell of crackling bacon. It is delicious, it’s good for me, it’s the perfect way to start the day.”
- Michael Scott – The Office
Pork month may be halfway over, but the good news is that here in Flavor Country, we still have 15 days to celebrate and several prizes left to give away.
If you haven’t won anything yet, keep trying because the prizes just keep getting better.
Today’s giveaway: A signed copy of Heather Lauer’s book, “Bacon: A Love Story.”
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From the creator of the blog, Bacon Unwrapped, “Bacon: A Love Story” is possibly the most comprehensive book about bacon to date featuring: different ways to make bacon, cooking methods, bacon recipes, history of bacon and more.
E-mail Mr. Oinkers and explain why you are deserving to win.