Heritage pork breed Foundational

Iberian (Ibérico) black pig

Sus scrofa domestica (Ibérico race)

The acorn-fed, dehesa-grazing pure-breed Iberian pig. Produces all jamón ibérico and the meat of the Iberico DOP universe.

Category
Heritage pork breed
Primary origin
Iberian Peninsula (Spain, Portugal)
Significance
Foundational
Cured products
5
Related brands
5
Related origins
6
Flavor profile
Nutty, sweet, fermented-fat aromatic complexity with a long acorn-derived finish. The fat is the dominant flavor carrier; lean meat has unique iron-and-iron-rust mineral notes from the breed.

The Iberian black pig is a registered breed (Cerdo Ibérico) genetically distinct from all other European pigs, traceable in unbroken lineage to the wild boars of the Iberian Peninsula. The breed has black or dark-grey skin (sometimes tinged red-brown), thin legs, a long snout, and the metabolic adaptation that defines its product value: the ability to accumulate marbled intramuscular fat at extraordinary levels (often 30%+ of body weight as fat by slaughter, vs ~14% in commodity pigs). The grading hierarchy starts with breed purity (100% Ibérico de Bellota requires both parents pure-breed verified; 50% allows Duroc-cross dams) and feed regime (bellota = acorn-fed during montanera; cebo de campo = pasture-finished; cebo = grain-finished indoors).

The fat profile is what makes the meat extraordinary: 50%+ oleic acid content (similar to olive oil), high antioxidants from acorn polyphenols, and a chemical structure that translates to translucent marbled fat at room temperature. No other commercial pig breed produces remotely similar product.

Editorial note
DOP labeling distinguishes 100% Ibérico (black tag) from 75% Ibérico (red tag) from 50% Ibérico (green tag) from non-Ibérico (white tag). The black-tag bellota is the reference tier.

Typical cured products

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