Pork rind is the cooked skin of a pig. This may be either eaten warm with a meal, or served cold as a snack. In both forms some fat is commonly still attached to the skin.
Microwavable pork rinds are sold which pop like popcorn and can be eaten still warm. Pickled pork rinds, on the other hand, are often enjoyed refrigerated and cold. Unlike the crisp and fluffy texture of fried pork rinds, pickled pork rinds are very rich and buttery, much like foie gras. Unfried pork rind is also processed into colorful and appealing shapes for use as fish bait.
In the Southern United States, pork rinds carry less social stigma, whereas elsewhere they are often poorly regarded due to their origins, high fat content (despite being similar in fat content to potato chips, yet much higher in protein), and perceived crudeness as a snack. When he was in the White House, U.S. President George H. W. Bush said that pork rinds were his favorite snack.
In modern times the fine layer of hair is removed from the skin by burning; however this is not completely effective and some pieces still have the hair attached. Some people prefer the rind to have the hair attached.
Butchers started selling pork scratchings in the 1930s, and more recently a product called pork crunch has been developed, in which much of the fat is scraped off, resulting in a lower-fat, softer alternative.
In Britain, they are known as pork scratchings, and are often eaten as an accompaniment to drinks in a pub. They have been popular in the Black Country since the days when every family used to fatten up a "tunkey pig," slaughter it for meat, and slice the skin with the fat into strips which they would then deep fry.
Pork rinds are a Black Country delicacy. They are also known as pork scratchings or crackling, and hark back to the days when every West Midlands family used to keep pigs in their garden. The Black Country is the original industrialised heartland of the UK, deriving its name from the smoke and soot from the heavy industries such as chain and anchor making, iron works, and heavy mining. The Black Country (pronounced blacountraye by locals) has its own dialect. Most of the pork scatching factories are based in Wolverhampton, Walsall and Tipton.
As a snack, cracklings is usually understood to consist of cooked pork rind that has had salt rubbed into it and that has been scored with a sharp knife. This produces a crisp, bubbly outer surface with a layer of cooked fat on the underside. Crackling is considered by some to be an essential part of joint of roast pork. However, the term in cooking also applies to a variety of fatty materials, fried to crispness, such as poultry skin or the remains of trying out for fat of a number of animal products lamb, et cetera.
In the USA, cracklins are fried pieces of pork skin with attached underlying fat which are generally considered to be part of soul food cooking. Cracklins are not frequently served as part of a regular meal unless they are served in cracklin bread, which is cornbread in which cracklins have been placed in the batter prior to its being baked or fried. Rather, they are a snack item which would typically be served at times other than regular mealtimes, and are regarded as more of a delicacy or treat.
Cracklins are naturally very high in fat and cholesterol, which is to be expected considering what they are composed of and the fact that they are generally prepared by being deep-fried or skillet-fried in lard. Cracklins prepared by persons who still conduct the home butchering of hogs, which is still occasionally conducted in the rural South but with decreasing frequency, have a decidedly different taste from those which are available commercially.
They are usually made with different cuts of pork, but sometimes with other meats, like poultry, beef, ram, etc. In Cuba, Puerto Rico and Venezuela chicharrones are also made with chicken and, in Argentina with beef. In these cases they are consumed mostly as snacks.
The cueritos type is a Mexican snack. It is made with pork skins and marinated in vinegar instead of being deep fried. They are eaten as a snack.
In México and the USA, snack-food companies have commercialized a vegetarian version of the deep-fried type, with chile and lime flavorings.
Fried pork skins go by various names in Filipino cuisine like chicharon from the Spanish word chicharrones. They may be referred to by their English name "cracklings" if they contain a considerable portion of meat.
Snack foods | British cuisine | Pork | American cuisine | Serbian cuisine | Peasant foods
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