Game meat Established

Wild boar (cinghiale)

Sus scrofa (wild populations)

Wild boar — the European game animal whose cured-meat tradition concentrates in Tuscany. Source for cinghiale prosciutto, salami, and traditional Italian wild-meat charcuterie.

Category
Game meat
Primary origin
European wild populations (Italy, France, Spain, Eastern Europe)
Significance
Established
Cured products
4
Related brands
2
Related origins
2
Flavor profile
Gamey, iron-rich, deeper red-meat character than domestic pork. Less fat-driven; the lean wild meat concentrates flavor strongly during cure.

Wild boar is the wild ancestor of domestic pork and remains a significant game animal in Europe, with stable wild populations across Italy, France, Spain, Germany, and Eastern Europe. The Italian regional tradition of wild-boar charcuterie (cinghiale = wild boar) concentrates in Tuscany, where the Chianti hills and Maremma have produced traditional cured-boar products for centuries — cinghiale prosciutto (cured wild-boar ham), salame di cinghiale (wild-boar salami), and various spalla and lonza preparations. Falorni, the 11-generation Tuscan butcher, is the producer most associated with serious cinghiale charcuterie.

The flavor profile is meaningfully different from domestic pork — gamier, more iron-y, with deeper red meat and less fat than even heritage pork breeds. Cure times are typically shorter than equivalent domestic-pork products because the lean meat doesn't sustain long aging without becoming over-dried. Corsican wild-pig charcuterie (using the semi-feral Nustrale breed grazing maquis vegetation) is editorially adjacent but uses semi-domesticated pigs rather than true wild boar.

Editorial note
Genuine wild-boar product (not farmed wild-boar-domestic crosses) is regional and limited. Tuscan tradition is the reference; Falorni is the producer worth seeking.

Typical cured products

Related brands

Related origins

Related cures

Related pairings