Is Pork OK on the Carnivore Diet?
Yes, pork is completely acceptable on the carnivore diet. As an animal-sourced food, pork fits within the framework of eating exclusively from the animal kingdom. Pork offers a wide variety of cuts, excellent flavor, and solid nutrition that makes it a valuable part of your carnivore rotation.
What Are the Best Pork Cuts for the Carnivore Diet?
Not all pork cuts serve you equally on carnivore. Fattier cuts are generally preferred because fat is your primary energy source:
- Pork belly: The gold standard of pork on carnivore. Extremely high in fat with rich flavor. Slice it thick, salt it, and pan-fry or roast until crispy.
- Pork shoulder (Boston butt): Excellent for slow cooking. High fat content with beautiful marbling that renders down during long cooks.
- Pork ribs: Both baby back and spare ribs work well. The connective tissue provides collagen, and the fat keeps the meat flavorful.
- Bacon: A carnivore staple. See our dedicated guide on whether bacon is OK on carnivore for detailed buying advice.
- Pork chops (bone-in): A leaner cut but still viable, especially when cooked in butter or paired with a fattier side like bacon.
- Pork loin: The leanest common cut. Similar to chicken breast, it needs added fat to work well on carnivore.
Should You Worry About Omega-6 in Pork?
This is the most common concern about pork in carnivore circles. Pork fat contains more omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids than ruminant animals like beef and lamb. The typical omega-6 to omega-3 ratio in pork is roughly 15:1, compared to about 3:1 in grass-fed beef.
The concern is that excess omega-6 relative to omega-3 may contribute to inflammation. However, context matters enormously:
- If beef is your primary meat, eating pork a few times per week is unlikely to skew your overall fatty acid balance significantly.
- Adding fatty fish like salmon or sardines to your rotation helps balance omega-6 with omega-3.
- Pasture-raised pork has a somewhat better fatty acid profile than conventional pork, though it remains higher in omega-6 than beef.
- You have eliminated seed oils, which are the primary driver of excessive omega-6 in the modern diet. Pork fat is a minor contributor by comparison.
The practical takeaway: enjoy pork freely, but build your diet around beef and ruminant meats as the foundation.
How Does Pork Compare Nutritionally to Beef?
Pork holds its own in many categories but falls short in a few key areas compared to beef:
- Protein: Comparable across similar cuts
- B vitamins: Pork is actually higher in thiamine (B1) than beef
- Iron: Beef contains significantly more heme iron
- Zinc: Beef wins on zinc content
- B12: Beef provides more B12 per serving
- Fat quality: Beef fat is predominantly saturated and monounsaturated, which is more stable and has a better omega ratio
Pork and beef complement each other well in a carnivore diet. Rotating between the two, along with chicken and fish, gives you broad nutritional coverage.
What About Processed Pork Products?
Many pork products involve some form of processing. Here is how to navigate them:
- Bacon: Generally fine. Look for products with minimal ingredients: pork, salt, and maybe celery powder for curing. Avoid maple-glazed or brown sugar varieties. Read our full bacon guide.
- Sausage: Check ingredients carefully. Many sausages contain fillers, sugar, or seed oils. Italian sausage with just pork, salt, and spices works if you tolerate seasonings.
- Hot dogs: Lower quality options often contain corn syrup and other additives. All-beef or all-pork franks with clean ingredient lists exist but require label reading.
- Deli ham: Often contains sugar, dextrose, or other sweeteners. Seek out options cured with only salt.
- Pork rinds: Pure pork skin fried in its own fat is technically carnivore, though some brands use vegetable oil.
The general rule: the fewer ingredients, the better. If it is just pork, salt, water, and basic curing agents, you are in good shape.
How to Cook Pork for the Carnivore Diet
Pork is incredibly versatile and lends itself to many cooking methods:
- Pork belly slices: Score the skin, salt generously, roast at 400 degrees for 45 minutes until the outside is crackling and the inside is tender.
- Slow-roasted shoulder: Salt a bone-in pork shoulder, cook at 275 degrees for 6-8 hours. The fat renders and the meat shreds beautifully.
- Pan-fried chops: Sear bone-in chops in butter for 4 minutes per side, then rest for 5 minutes. Finish with the pan drippings.
- Smoked ribs: Low and slow at 225 degrees for 5-6 hours with just salt. No sauce needed when the meat is properly cooked.
Pork pairs exceptionally well with butter and eggs, two other carnivore staples.
Can You Eat Pork Every Day on Carnivore?
You can, but most carnivore practitioners recommend building your diet primarily around ground beef, steaks, and other ruminant meats. Use pork as a regular rotation meat rather than your sole protein source. A practical approach might be beef 4-5 days per week with pork, fish, and other meats filling in the remaining days.
Pork is a delicious, affordable, and practical part of the carnivore diet. For a complete overview of all approved foods, check out our carnivore diet foods hub page.