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Berkshire pig

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Conservation status
  
Rare breed

Scientific name
  
Sus scrofa domesticus

Higher classification
  
Domestic pig

Country of origin
  
England

Rank
  
Breed

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Berkshire pigs are a rare breed of pig originating from the English county of Berkshire.

Contents

Herds of the breed are still maintained in England by the Rare Breeds Survival Trust at Aldenham Country Park, Hertfordshire, and by the South of England Rare Breeds Centre in Kent. The Berkshire is listed as vulnerable; as of 2008, fewer than 300 breeding sows were known to exist. Some pigs of the breed are also kept in New Zealand and Australia, but fewer than a hundred purebred sows are there now.

In the United States, the American Berkshire Association, established in 1875, gives pedigrees only to pigs directly imported from established English herds or to those tracing directly back to such imported animals. The pig is also bred in Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan, under the trademarked name Kagoshima Kurobuta (かごしま黒豚, "Kagoshima black pig").

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Appearance

Berkshire pig Berkshire pig Wikipedia

While the original Berkshire pig was sandy-brown, modern Berkshire pigs are almost entirely black, with white points on the feet, nose, and tail. They are an average to large breed of pig, with an average weight at maturity of 600 pounds (270 kg). They are a short-legged breed. They have prick ears and a relatively short snout with an upturned nose.

Culinary uses

Berkshire pig Berkshire RBST

Berkshire pork, prized for juiciness, flavour and tenderness, is pink-hued and heavily marbled. Its high fat content makes it suitable for long cooking and high-temperature cooking.

In literature

Berkshire pig Heirloom Group

  • The Empress of Blandings in P. G. Wodehouse's Blandings Castle series of novels and stories, and the sow Pig-Wig in Beatrix Potter's The Tale of Pigling Bland, were both Berkshires.
  • The antagonist pig Napoleon in George Orwell's novel Animal Farm is a Berkshire boar.
  • References

    Berkshire pig Wikipedia


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