Discover the Benefits & Key Nutrients of Lean Pork - National Pork Board

Choose Lean Pork

Your guide to health and flavor.

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Select a Lean Cut

 

Pork tenderloin is one of the leanest, most tender cuts of pork.

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Find the proper pork cooking temperature and enjoy the flavor.

For flavorful, tender and juicy pork, cook lean whole muscle cuts (roasts, chops and tenderloin) until a meat thermometer reads 145° F (medium rare), followed by a 3-minute rest. Ground pork should always be cooked to 160° F.

Benefits of Lean Pork

8 cuts of pork meet USDA guidelines for “lean”*

Lean = less than 10g fat, 4.5g saturated fat and 95mg cholesterol per 100g of meat. Pork tenderloin and sirloin pork chop meet USDA guidelines for “extra lean.”*

Extra Lean = less than 5g total fat, 2g saturated fat and 95mg cholesterol per 100g of meat.

Pork tenderloin is a source of 11 key nutrients.**

Excellent source:

  • protein
  • thiamin
  • riboflavin
  • niacin
  • vitamin B6
  • vitamin B12
  • selenium
  • zinc

Good source:

  • choline
  • pantothenic acid
  • phosphorous

Practice Portion Control

The average serving size of pork is 3 oz of boneless cooked meat (4 oz raw) – about the size of a deck of cards.

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*National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference, Release 23. Based on 3-ounce cooked servings (roasted or broiled), visible fat trimmed after cooking.
**U.S. Department of Agriculture, FoodData Central, 2019. Based on 3-ounce serving cooked pork. NDB# 10093. “Excellent” source: 20% or more of Daily Value; “Good” source: 10-19% of Daily Value.