Pork - Nutrition

Nutrition

Pork, fresh, loin, whole,
separable lean and fat,
cooked, broiled
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy 1,013 kJ (242 kcal)
Carbohydrates 0.00 g
- Sugars 0.00 g
- Dietary fibre 0.0 g
Fat 13.92 g
- saturated 5.230 g
- monounsaturated 6.190 g
- polyunsaturated 1.200 g
Protein 27.32 g
- Tryptophan 0.338 g
- Threonine 1.234 g
- Isoleucine 1.260 g
- Leucine 2.177 g
- Lysine 2.446 g
- Methionine 0.712 g
- Cystine 0.344 g
- Phenylalanine 1.086 g
- Tyrosine 0.936 g
- Valine 1.473 g
- Arginine 1.723 g
- Histidine 1.067 g
- Alanine 1.603 g
- Aspartic acid 2.512 g
- Glutamic acid 4.215 g
- Glycine 1.409 g
- Proline 1.158 g
- Serine 1.128 g
Water 57.87 g
Vitamin B6 0.464 mg (36%)
Vitamin B12 0.70 μg (29%)
Choline 93.9 mg (19%)
Vitamin C 0.6 mg (1%)
Vitamin D 53 IU (9%)
Calcium 19 mg (2%)
Iron 0.87 mg (7%)
Magnesium 28 mg (8%)
Phosphorus 246 mg (35%)
Potassium 423 mg (9%)
Sodium 62 mg (4%)
Zinc 2.39 mg (25%)
Percentages are relative to
US recommendations for adults.

Its myoglobin content is lower than that of beef, but much higher than that of chicken. The USDA treats pork as a red meat. Pork is very high in thiamin (vitamin B1). Pork with its fat trimmed is leaner than the meat of most domesticated animals, but is high in cholesterol and saturated fat.

In 1987 the U.S. National Pork Board began an advertising campaign to position pork as "the other white meat" — due to a public perception of chicken and turkey (white meat) as healthier than red meat. The campaign was highly successful and resulted in 87% of consumers identifying pork with the slogan. The board retired the slogan on March 4, 2011.

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