OT: Is that Jersey pork product the same as spam?

RUSK97

All-American
Dec 28, 2007
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Just random pork bits, pork fatback, tons of salt and preservatives. The only difference would be the spices, right? And the shape of the packaging?
 

Southern Gentleman

All-Conference
Aug 10, 2011
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Just random pork bits, pork fatback, tons of salt and preservatives. The only difference would be the spices, right? And the shape of the packaging?

Taylor Ham, In the North half of Jersey, a.k.a. Pork Roll in the Southern half of Jersey, is a gift from heaven. It had to be created by God but marketed by John Taylor here on Earth as God is too busy for such things!

It is a delicate blend of spices that will send your taste buds in to orbit. Spam is nothing more than an afterthought of blandness create by mere mortals who pick up food scraps off the processing floor.

If you have to ask, you will never know the bliss.
 

RUSK97

All-American
Dec 28, 2007
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Taylor Ham, In the North half of Jersey, a.k.a. Pork Roll in the Southern half of Jersey, is a gift from heaven. It had to be created by God but marketed by John Taylor here on Earth as God is too busy for such things!

It is a delicate blend of spices that will send your taste buds in to orbit. Spam is nothing more than an afterthought of blandness create by mere mortals who pick up food scraps off the processing floor.

If you have to ask, you will never know the bliss.
LOL, coming from SG no less! Did our fans introduce you to this manna or was it your wife? Oddly enough, I've lived in NJ close to 20 years and just had this for the first time.
 

Upstream

Heisman
Jul 31, 2001
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Just random pork bits, pork fatback, tons of salt and preservatives. The only difference would be the spices, right? And the shape of the packaging?

I guess by that definition, pepperoni, bologna, pork hot dogs, pulled pork, Jimmy Dean sausage, and Spam are all the same. After all, they are all chopped up pork bits with salt, preservatives, and spices. The only difference is the spices and the shape. Right?

Oh, and they all taste completely different.
 

RUich

All-Conference
Aug 2, 2001
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How can anyone somehow compare SPAM to any form of meat much less Taylor Ham??? The only people who I have ever heard even liked that mush were the English who saw a lot of it in WW2. And, hell they make pies out of kidneys!!!!
[sick]
 

RUSK97

All-American
Dec 28, 2007
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I guess by that definition, pepperoni, bologna, pork hot dogs, pulled pork, Jimmy Dean sausage, and Spam are all the same. After all, they are all chopped up pork bits with salt, preservatives, and spices. The only difference is the spices and the shape. Right?

Oh, and they all taste completely different.
Ah, point very well taken!
 

RUSK97

All-American
Dec 28, 2007
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How can anyone somehow compare SPAM to any form of meat much less Taylor Ham??? The only people who I have ever heard even liked that mush were the English who saw a lot of it in WW2. And, hell they make pies out of kidneys!!!!
[sick]
It's not the worst thing in the world. Take Spam, slice it into slabs and grill it up over open flames until the edges char slightly and it's more than just edible.
 
Nov 15, 2001
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SPAM is huge in Hawaii. I had it for lunch occassionally as a child. There is nothing like the vacuum-packed sound of that gelatinous slab of by-products as it slithers out of the can. It you're real lucky, your slice will have some of the clear jelly still attached to it and some random unidentified "hard chunks" within it. yum.
 

thad23

Junior
Sep 29, 2006
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I've heard Hawaiians love spam..


Yes, many do. My wife is Hawaiian and grew up there also. She hates Spam though. I have tried Spam Musubi and it's not bad. The rice cuts the saltiness of the spam and I like Nori (seaweed). It is a softer, musher pork roll LIKE product, but definitely not pork roll.

 

sherrane

All-Conference
Aug 17, 2003
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I guess by that definition, pepperoni, bologna, pork hot dogs, pulled pork, Jimmy Dean sausage, and Spam are all the same. After all, they are all chopped up pork bits with salt, preservatives, and spices. The only difference is the spices and the shape. Right?

Oh, and they all taste completely different.

Pulled pork doesn't belong in this list because it isn't processed meat.
 

Upstream

Heisman
Jul 31, 2001
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Pulled pork doesn't belong in this list because it isn't processed meat.


Lloyds Pulled Pork (made by the same company that makes Spam), certainly seems processed enough:

Ingredients: Cooked Seasoned Pork (Pork, Water, Hydrolyzed Soy Protein, Salt, Sodium Phosphates), Tomato Puree (Water, Tomato Paste), High Fructose Corn Syrup, Vinegar, Brown Sugar, Contains 2% or less of Molasses, Modified Cornstarch, Seasoning Blend (Salt, Paprika, Spices, Sodium Benzoate, Potassium Sorbate, Onion Powder, Sodium Diacetate, Garlic Powder, Yeast Extract, Erythorbic Acid, Natural Flavors [Including Smoke Flavor], Tamarind Extract [Corn Syrup, Prune Juice Concentrate, Extractives of Tamarind, Water, Tartaric Acid, Caramel Color, Citric Acid, Molasses]), Salt, Caramel Color, Natural Smoke Flavoring, Cultured Dextrose, Propionic Acid, Nisin Preparation (Salt, Nisin).​

But the OP didn't even state that processing was part of his definition. Only that the product contain bits of pork, salt, preservatives, spices, and be put in a package. Lloyd's pulled pork certainly fits that definition.
 

RUDiddy777

Heisman
Feb 26, 2015
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Taylor ham is probably our biggest secret weapon to keep kids home. Good luck finding TEC on an everything in Ann Arbor..
 

Scarlet Pride

All-Conference
Jul 25, 2001
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Lloyds Pulled Pork (made by the same company that makes Spam), certainly seems processed enough:

Ingredients: Cooked Seasoned Pork (Pork, Water, Hydrolyzed Soy Protein, Salt, Sodium Phosphates), Tomato Puree (Water, Tomato Paste), High Fructose Corn Syrup, Vinegar, Brown Sugar, Contains 2% or less of Molasses, Modified Cornstarch, Seasoning Blend (Salt, Paprika, Spices, Sodium Benzoate, Potassium Sorbate, Onion Powder, Sodium Diacetate, Garlic Powder, Yeast Extract, Erythorbic Acid, Natural Flavors [Including Smoke Flavor], Tamarind Extract [Corn Syrup, Prune Juice Concentrate, Extractives of Tamarind, Water, Tartaric Acid, Caramel Color, Citric Acid, Molasses]), Salt, Caramel Color, Natural Smoke Flavoring, Cultured Dextrose, Propionic Acid, Nisin Preparation (Salt, Nisin).​

But the OP didn't even state that processing was part of his definition. Only that the product contain bits of pork, salt, preservatives, spices, and be put in a package. Lloyd's pulled pork certainly fits that definition.

Lloyd's pulled pork is not the standard by which you judge pulled pork. It is a processed version of it - some might call it an impostor.

Pulled pork is fresh pork shoulder cooked and prepared not bought in a tub at the store.

And while Spam is most certainly processed it can be quite delicious in tough times. It got me through some lean budgetary times at Rutgers.
 

Wild_Knight

Redshirt
Aug 4, 2015
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Having had two egg sandwiches today, one with spam and bacon and the other with pork roll and bacon, and usually having the same several times a week (unless I can find scrapple in the grocery), I consider myself an authority. I forego cheese for health reasons.

It's the same basic concept, only the shape and spices are different. Therefore the taste is very different. Neither is better than the other; tastes differ. Most people eat with ketchup anyway, muting their favors.

Neither tops bacon for powerful flavor, and I'd put scrapple pure flavor at 2, pork roll and spam tied for #3 and kielbasa at 5.
 

RUDiddy777

Heisman
Feb 26, 2015
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Lloyd's pulled pork is not the standard by which you judge pulled pork. It is a processed version of it - some might call it an impostor.

Pulled pork is fresh pork shoulder cooked and prepared not bought in a tub at the store.

And while Spam is most certainly processed it can be quite delicious in tough times. It got me through some lean budgetary times at Rutgers.

Gonna cheat this weekend and use some pork butts for my pulled pork. Don't have the 14 hours to smoke it tomorrow.
 

RUDiddy777

Heisman
Feb 26, 2015
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Having had two egg sandwiches today, one with spam and bacon and the other with pork roll and bacon, and usually having the same several times a week (unless I can find scrapple in the grocery), I consider myself an authority. I forego cheese for health reasons.

It's the same basic concept, only the shape and spices are different. Therefore the taste is very different. Neither is better than the other; tastes differ. Most people eat with ketchup anyway, muting their favors.

Neither tops bacon for powerful flavor, and I'd put scrapple pure flavor at 2, pork roll and spam tied for #3 and kielbasa at 5.

You must be from SJ. Tried scrapple for the first time last year - i think it would have tasted better after I digested it. There is nothing better than bacon - but Taylor ham is a close second.
 

Upstream

Heisman
Jul 31, 2001
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I forego cheese for health reasons.

Other than being lactose intolerant, I can't think of a single health reason you'd have to forego cheese but still be willing to eat 2 egg sandwiches with bacon, spam, and pork roll.
 

RUJohnny99

All-American
Nov 7, 2003
64,667
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I LIKE LONDON BROIL!
 
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lighty

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Aug 13, 2003
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"Taylor Ham, In the North half of Jersey, a.k.a. Pork Roll in the Southern half of Jersey,"

It's really only called Taylor Ham in a small part of the state. There's just a lot of people who live in that part. Central Jersey loves its pork roll.

And it doesn't taste like spam at all. Nothing like it. I can't imagine there's much similar between the two
 

jmg75

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Jan 8, 2008
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Taylor Ham, In the North half of Jersey, a.k.a. Pork Roll in the Southern half of Jersey, is a gift from heaven. It had to be created by God but marketed by John Taylor here on Earth as God is too busy for such things!

It is a delicate blend of spices that will send your taste buds in to orbit. Spam is nothing more than an afterthought of blandness create by mere mortals who pick up food scraps off the processing floor.

If you have to ask, you will never know the bliss.

Sir, I believe you have the soul of a poet. Well done!
 

Vejai

Sophomore
May 25, 2007
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Gonna cheat this weekend and use some pork butts for my pulled pork. Don't have the 14 hours to smoke it tomorrow.

Huh? Pork butt (Boston butt)and Pork shoulder are the same unless I'm missing something. No?
 

Southern Gentleman

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Aug 10, 2011
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Gonna cheat this weekend and use some pork butts for my pulled pork. Don't have the 14 hours to smoke it tomorrow.

That's NOT cheating! In the South, one can use either pork butts(not anywhere near the actual butt) or pork shoulders. Pork shoulders have a little bit more fat than the butt. And, to do either the butt or the shoulder properly, you need my rub on them and smoke them at 225 degrees for 8-12 hours depending on their size. I like peach, hickory, or Apple wood to form the smoke; NEVER Mesquite!
 

Southern Gentleman

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Huh? Pork butt (Boston butt)and Pork shoulder are the same unless I'm missing something. No?

YES. They are not the same! The pork butt is actually from the shoulder of the hog and the pork shoulder is more akin to the forearm of the hog. Both are damn tasty if cooked properly!
 

RUDiddy777

Heisman
Feb 26, 2015
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That's NOT cheating! In the South, one can use either pork butts(not anywhere near the actual butt) or pork shoulders. Pork shoulders have a little bit more fat than the butt. And, to do either the butt or the shoulder properly, you need my rub on them and smoke them at 225 degrees for 8-12 hours depending on their size. I like peach, hickory, or Apple wood to form the smoke; NEVER Mesquite!

Shoulders have taken me a bit longer due to their size - picked up some smaller pork butts in hopes of being done smoking before 1am... I inject with Apple cider (this work will be done when I get home tonight). For OSU, it got so tender, I was able to pull the bone out clean with my bare (gloved) hands.

Also have a brisket going in - spent most of the last decade in Texas, so it's become an essential.

As for wood, going with Apple, hickory and pecan. Never tried peach - where do you get that around here?
 

Southern Gentleman

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Aug 10, 2011
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Shoulders have taken me a bit longer due to their size - picked up some smaller pork butts in hopes of being done smoking before 1am... I inject with Apple cider (this work will be done when I get home tonight). For OSU, it got so tender, I was able to pull the bone out clean with my bare (gloved) hands.

Also have a brisket going in - spent most of the last decade in Texas, so it's become an essential.

As for wood, going with Apple, hickory and pecan. Never tried peach - where do you get that around here?


I am in Arkansas. Peach is very available around here.

For everyone that cooks pork butts or pork shoulders, cook long enough to get the internal temperature to 195-200 degrees. The internal bone will come out both easily and clean.

Additionally, the pork will fall apart in your hands so be careful when pulling them out of your smoker or oven.