Above is what you will get on a half a pig. You can elect to have some sliced, all sliced, your thickness, etc. Let me describe each piece and approximate yield:
1st off, see if the farmer will grind all your fat just once into bags instead of leaving in chunks; it will render much easier.
Head: you will have 1 jowl about 4" round, and pickings off the snout and head
Pork butt: about 8lbs of roast with blade bone; pork steak or country style pork ribs, part or all rolled into a roast, or half it for buckboard bacon.
Arm shoulder: fresh for roast, cured and smoked for smoked picnic, leave whole, cut in half, cut out center slices fresh or smoked, boned and rolled into a roast. Cut hock off for beans or soup (or saurkraut - yum!)
The backbone off the pork butt/arm shoulder can be trimmed out for trimmings, plus also cut into chunks for fresh and/or cured and smoked backbones, great flavoring for beans and soup, pork stock, smoked for split pea soup, etc.
Loin: whole loin is comprised of three major parts: Rib End, Center Cut and Loin End. Each can be cut into chops, boned and rolled into roasts, split in half and sliced into country style ribs, boned and sliced into boneless chops, etc. The rib end is the prime rib, and is fattier than the loin end (which is sirloin, porterhouse, etc.). If you get any boned out, again ask for the bones for soup, broth and/or smoking. Plenty of flavor instead of throwing them out!
Belly: off the inside of the belly are the rack of spareribs, you'll get one. The belly itself can be done into three products: fresh it's called 'sidepork'; slice it and fry it. Cured it's called 'salt pork', great for beans and soup. After curing you can smoke it and it's the All American Favorite - bacon!
Hind leg: This is the ham of the hog. Fresh is a pork roast. Cured and smoked it's a classic ham (see my ham thread at the bottom). It consists of three parts: the Shank portion nearest the hind hoof, large knuckle joint inside, wastey. Center Cut roast or Center Cut Slices, most meat and least bone, can be fresh pork or cured and smoked. Butt portion, the end nearest cut off the loin, one knuckle joint also but not the fat or skin like the shank portion, more yield, again can be fresh or smoked. Off the ham is another hock.. (saurkraut! yum!) or pickled and/or smoked. Also, off the front arm and the hind leg you have the pig's feet which can be split, pickled and/or smoked, great for munching!
Tail, ears - usually deep-fried crispy along with the skin from the belly, ham, loin and shoulder for deep-fried pork skins - great salted!
Liver - fried, baked, smoked, ground, chopped, any way you want it - liverwurst, boudin, etc.
Heart - fresh, pickled and/or smoked; delicious!
Kidneys - kidney pie, baked, broiled, boiled, etc.
Eyes - deep fried
Tongue - fresh, pickled and/or smoked - soak and par boil first to peel off the skin, then cook up
Jowl - delicasy - fried, baked, pickled, smoked, etc. tender!
Neck: for sausage, pork stew
Hope this helps! It all depends on what you want from it, but seeing what you'll be getting gives you more of an idea of what parts are what and sizes, etc.
Regardless, eat the whole thing and see if you can get some intestines for casings too or if he'll give you some salted down. Even if you don't make your own sausage yet, save them in the fridge (do NOT freeze) salted down (just table salt all over them) and they'll last a year or more.. ya never know when that grinder and stuffer will magically appear and you can process your own hogs! You can use a hand saw to section the parts and bone out for slicing vs. having a power saw!
A local farmer put an ad on craigslist for a few Hampshire hogs. I called him and asked if anyone else was inquiring about getting only 1/2. He said he would split the one he and his wife were going to keep.
So now I've got a 1/2 hog in the pipeline. Farmer said the hog should dress out to about 150 pounds. I told him I'd take my half and all the weird bits, liver, heart, head, etc. He agreed to that. My total cost, including kill, cut & wrap will be about $150, so its lots of quality pork for less than $2.00 per pound
Can some experienced folks recommend how I should instruct the butcher to process my share? I have a good large smoker and want to try making bacon for the first time. I plan to cure & smoke the side, jowls, hocks and maybe make some buckboard.
What parts should I get fresh, and what parts frozen? How thick for chops and how big for roasts? Are there any specialty cuts you don't normally see in the supermarket that would be good to try? I'm remembering that last rack of lamb, which is basically the prime rib of lamb. Maybe there is a porky equivalent?
Also recipe suggestions for the offal are welcome. I'm thinking head cheese, liver pate, render the fat to lard, etc.
Thanks in advance for advice!
Greg
Please add any suggestions you may have, thanks!
Here is my start on the instructions to the butcher:
Pig Parts
Package and freeze in quantities for two or three people.
Do not freeze, just refrigerate:
Head
Side for bacon
Hocks
Fat – I will render to lard at home
I have my own smoker and will smoke the bacon, jowls, and hocks myself.
Cuts Desired
Fresh ham cut in half
Shoulder cut in half
Do not discard
Any fat
Liver
Heart
Head