What Is SPAM® Made Of?

What sets SPAM® apart from other products that are made from chopped meats that are cooked and pressed together (we're thinking about scrapple): Spam is made from pork shoulder and pork ham, with no other scraps from the hog.
Pork shoulder is considered a high-quality cut of pork today, although in 1937, it was not. Pork shoulder is sold in the supermarket and many people braise it until it becomes fall-apart tender. Pork shoulder is what sausage is made from because it has the perfect ratio of meat to fat to make the very best sausages. Shoulder meat is what a pork steak is called when it's sliced and grilled in St. Louis.

The other meat that's added is ham: like what you get at the deli and make into a sandwich.

And the four remaining ingredients include salt, potato starch to bind the meat together and retain moisture, pure sugar - no syrups - and sodium nitrite to preserve the meat.

What Does SPAM® Stand For?

This is the kind of question we love, because sometimes there just isn't an answer. Some people think is stands for special processed American meat. Some say it's a mash up of the words "spice" and "ham", except that's odd, because there weren't any spices in original Spam. Another story is that there was a contest to name it at a New Year's Eve party, and after a few toasts, someone shouted "Spam!" and the name stuck. We'll let you decide which story you think is best, and you can go with that one.

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Hormel Foods Corporation published this content on 04 October 2021 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 07 October 2021 21:26:04 UTC.