Houston Chronicle

So, pigs did fly — from Spain to Georgia.

- By Tim Carman

BLUFFTON, Ga. — Inside the summer-camp-like restaurant at White Oak Pastures, the picnic benches have been pushed together to form one long banquet table. Employees have covered the rough wood tabletops with white linens, flower boxes and candelabra­s, small touches of elegance for the guests who will sample the first pork produced at this Georgia farm from the offspring of 30 Spanish pigs flown first-class from Europe.

On its face, the dinner is a celebratio­n of a Spanish-American partnershi­p that has

invested more than two years and hundreds of thousands of dollars in a project to raise the famous black-footed Iberico pig on Georgian grasses and nuts. But it’s also a recognitio­n that two vastly different cultures — the relaxed, drink-till-dawn conviviali­ty of Spaniards and the punctual, bull-spit-and-barbed-wire toughness of rural Georgians — share a love of pork. The pig is their unbreakabl­e link, a gift to the New World from Spanish explorers, and perhaps the only animal that could create such a bond between Southerner and Spaniard.

“Once we got to know each other, they became like our Georgian family,” says Kurt Oriol, the New York-based managing partner of Iberian Pastures, a 50-50 collaborat­ion between White Oak and Cobacha, the Oriol family farm in Alburquerq­ue, Spain.

Counters Will Harris III, a fourthgene­ration cattleman and the celebrated cowboy-shaman behind White Oak: “I wasn’t looking for family. I got plenty of family,” he drawls. “But we’ve just become incredibly close.”

If the partners speak differentl­y, they also have different tastes in pork, though both have a distaste for the high-volume industrial system that dominates pork production in America. Before the Iberian pigs arrived, in early 2015, White Oak raised mostly hogs that were a cross of Berkshire, Tamworth and Old Spot heritage breeds. The pigs grazed on pasture, were finished on non-GMO corn and soybeans, and were processed for the chops, shoulders and other cuts that Americans love. By contrast, Cobacha owner Jaime Oriol, Kurt’s father, raises Iberian and Iberian-Duroc crosses that graze on meadowland­s and are finished on acorns or another feed high in oleic fatty acids, the monounsatu­rated fats that may benefit human health and have earned the pig the nickname “the olive tree with legs.”

Then there are the fresh Iberico cuts, so foreign to Americans that Brian Sapp, the director of operations for White Oak, must explain the meats that are artfully arranged on a serving board at the dinner. There’s the lagarto, a snaky strip of meat pulled from the pig’s spine; the presa, a prized piece sliced from the section where the loin meets the shoulder; the secreto, a luxuriant cut found under the belly fat; and so on.

The displayed meats create an odd tension inside this wood-frame restaurant behind the slaughterh­ouses at White Oak. It’s Super Bowl Sunday, and on this warm winter night, the crowd must decide where to focus its attention: on the Iberico dinner or on the TV streaming the game. This may be the only place in Georgia where many eyes are trained on pig meat, not pigskin.

The pig’s presence in the United States has also created a stir back in Spain, where farmers are concerned about the impact American Iberico will have on their products. Their concerns are not exclusive to Iberian Pastures, either. There is, after all, a second producer of the Spanish pigs in America.

Banking on acorns

Manuel Murga and Sergio Marsal, the co-founders of Acorn-seekers, were the first to import Iberian pigs to America. They did it in the summer of 2014, months ahead of the swines’ arrival at White Oak. Their initial herd of 150 sows and boars may have been the first such pigs to root around in the United States since the 16th century. Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto brought 13 hogs to Florida in 1539; they are thought to have been eaten or disappeare­d into the wild, where their genetic identity was lost after countless cross-breedings, though some think the Ossabaw Island hog in Georgia still carries traces of Iberico DNA.

As the Iberian pioneers, Murga and Marsal were the first to deal with the onerous U.S. Department of Agricultur­e import protocols, which require testing,

vaccines,specially madetwo quarantine periods and crates for the pigs’ transatlan­tic flight. Murga says Acorn-seekers paid $300,000 for 150 crates, which the company had to burn once the animals were quarantine­d in Rock Tavern, N.Y.

“The most expens sive fire in the U.S.,\ I think,” deadpans M own farm in the south of Spain for 30 years.

Unlike the Oriol family, which sought an American partner, Murga

and Marsal decided to do it themselves. They found an abandoned hog farm in Flatonia, Texas, with lots of live oak trees, which drop acorns in the fall and winter, similar to the pig- fattening season in Spain called la montanera. The landscape, Murga suggests, compares favorably to the Spanish dehesa, an area where farmers raise their pigs on a mixture of meadows and forest. But unlike in Spain, where producers have been dealing with a devastatin­g oak tree disease, the Texas acreage offers an ecosystem with healthy live oaks that produce higher acorn yields than their cousins in the dehesa.

Acornseeke­rs’ ability to finish its purebred Iberian pigs on acorns will be a prime selling point. For years, one of the best-kept secrets in Spain was the fact that contrary to their reputation, precious few Iberico products — whether fresh meats or cured hams — came from purebred Iberian pigs finished only on acorns.

Murga says his products will compare with those reserved for purebred black Iberian pigs finished only on acorns. The problem, as he sees it, will be educating American consumers on the value of an Iberico product that may be foreign or far more expensive than its U.S. counterpar­t. As such, Acornseeke­rs doesn’t sell just the Spanish cuts of meat. On its website, the company also offers familiar shoulder cuts, pork belly and even spare ribs, which cost $95 for a five-pound rack.

When Acornseeke­rs debuts its cured hams in the spring of 2018, the price may startle Spanish producers, who have yet to fully recover from a price drop a few years back (despite China’s large appetite for pig legs). Murga plans to charge as much as $2,000 a leg for his Americanma­de Iberico hams, or several hundreds more than the going rate from similar products from Spain. The owner makes no apologies. He’s aiming for a high-end boutique market, not unlike that of Napa Valley wines.

“People here are willing to pay a little bit more,” he says.

A wary competitor

If you ask Jose Andres his opinion of American-produced Iberico, the chef and face of Think Food Group will talk almost in circles, a reflection of his own complicate­d position in the world of Spanish gastronomy. He’s an ambassador for his native country’s products. He’s a businessma­n who profits from them, too. But most important, he’s a partner with Fermin USA to import Iberico products into the United States.

Yet even with a disclaimer about his conflicts of interest, Andres says “it was a bad decision” to allow purebred Iberian pigs into the United States. If he were in charge, he adds, he would never have allowed Spanish farmers to export pigs to America, where it’s already difficult for Spanish producers to enter the retail market. Only nine operations in Spain are certified to export Iberico products to the United States (including Fermin, by the way).

Spanish farmers, Andres says, have become alarmed by the sudden competitio­n in America; their fears can be easily traced to similar U.S. imports, such as Japanese Wagyu beef, which has become almost impossible to identify among all the crossbred livestock and misleading menu claims.

But farmers’ fears may also connect to the fact that, unlike French Bordeaux or Spanish cava, Iberico pork has no designatio­n-of-origin protection­s in the European Union, so anyone can freely use the name. The Spanish government may be listening to its producers. Since the Oriol family exported its pigs in late 2014, no other Iberian sows and boars apparently have left Spain.

Some in the Iberico industry suspect an unofficial ban by the Spanish government. But Isabel Artime, counselor of agricultur­e, fisheries, food and environmen­t for the Spanish Embassy in Washington, says the government has no decision-making role in the export of Iberian pigs. It only helps private companies deal with USDA protocols for moving the animals.

But Murga says the Spanish government may be playing a semantics game: It might not explicitly say no to Iberian pig exports, but if officials don’t sign the appropriat­e paperwork, the private parties involved are stymied nonetheles­s. If the government is indeed blocking the export of pigs, Murga says, it’s shortsight­ed. Spain, he says, has limited capacity to produce Iberico products.

The taste of Spain

One look at the operation at White Oak Pastures, and you have to think this Iberico venture is a win-win-win for pigs, agricultur­e and American diners (at least those with deep pockets). Out on an impossibly green winter field, which Will Harris bought specifical­ly for its pecan trees, Iberian pigs are turning up soil in a merry hunt for morsels. The animals also serve a secondary role as tillers.

“We’re going to use their nose as a shovel to go in and (till the soil), so we’re not getting a guy on a bulldozer burning diesel by the hour,” says John Benoit, White Oak’s livestock director.

Come fall, those pecan trees will produce nuts for the pigs at White Oak, a herd that should reach 300 by then. In the meantime, Iberian Pastures has engaged a Spanish nutritioni­st to create a proprietar­y feed that mimics the qualities of acorns, a diet that’s increasing­ly popular in Spain, where acorn production can vary widely by year. The Iberian Pastures blend includes non-GMO corn, soybeans and Georgia-grown peanuts, a mix that will change when pecans are added to the diet during the colder months.

A question remains: Will anyone care about American- produced Iberico? Will consumers pay $67.50 for a 1.8-pound package of Iberico presa? They might if they had sampled Manuel Berganza’s preparatio­n at White Oak Pastures in early February.

John T. Edge, a writer and director of the Southern Foodways Alliance, was a surprise visitor to the Iberian Pastures dinner, much to the delight of farmer Will Harris. Edge drove more than six hours for the meal, and he walked away impressed. The pork tasted much like the stuff he’d sampled last year during a trip to the Oriol family farm.

“The taste almost reminds me of what would happen if a cow jumped the fence and started rooting around with the pigs,” Edge says. “There’s kind of a beefy texture to the pork that is singular.”

 ??  ?? Will Harris III, left, of White Oak Pastures and Jaime Oriol of the Cobacha farm in Spain worked together to bring the Iberico pig from Spain to the U.S.
Will Harris III, left, of White Oak Pastures and Jaime Oriol of the Cobacha farm in Spain worked together to bring the Iberico pig from Spain to the U.S.
 ??  ?? Iberico pigs forage
Iberico pigs forage
 ??  ?? A pimenton lacqueer flavors the abanico, a cut from the frontal part of the
pig, near the ribca age
A pimenton lacqueer flavors the abanico, a cut from the frontal part of the pig, near the ribca age
 ?? Rob Culpepper photos / For the Washington Post ?? e in a pecan grove at White Oak Pastures. Pecans are added to the diet during the colder months.
Rob Culpepper photos / For the Washington Post e in a pecan grove at White Oak Pastures. Pecans are added to the diet during the colder months.
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