Reserve · Kurobuta Berkshire
Kurobuta Pork Chops
100 percent Berkshire chops from Circle 7. Kurobuta is the Japanese designation for purebred Berkshire pork, considered the wagyu of the pork world. Dark, marbled, sweet, and impossibly juicy when cooked correctly. This is the chop you cook when steak is not the answer.
Cut Story
Berkshire is a heritage breed that traces back to England in the 1600s. Japan imported it, named it Kurobuta (literally “black pig”), and built an entire premium pork market around it. The Japanese Kurobuta designation requires 100 percent Berkshire genetics with verifiable lineage, not crossbred. Most American “Berkshire” pork is crossbred. Circle 7 Kurobuta is purebred.
The breed produces meat that looks more like beef than commodity pork. Deep red color, heavy intramuscular marbling, and a fat composition that melts at a lower temperature than regular pork fat. The eating experience is dense, sweet, and almost buttery. It is a different category of pork entirely.
Each Reserve tier Kurobuta chop is cut bone-in to 1.25 inches thick. The marbling visible on the cross section looks like prime grade beef, with white threads running through deep red muscle. The fat cap on the bone side is thick and creamy. Cooked to 145F internal, the chop slices into a juicy interior with audible drip when pressed.
This is the chop that proves the gap between commodity pork and real pork is not subtle. It is a different food.
Why Kurobuta
Kurobuta is Berkshire pork raised to the original breed standard. The pH after harvest is higher than most pork, which means the muscle holds water during cooking. The intramuscular fat is denser and melts at a lower temperature than commodity pork fat, which means the chop self-bastes as it cooks. The flavor is sweeter and more complex because slower-growing animals on real diets deposit more flavor compounds in their muscle.
Marbling and Quality
- Genetics: 100 percent Berkshire, purebred Kurobuta
- Color: deep red, occasionally mahogany
- Marbling: heavy intramuscular, visible white threading
- Fat cap: thick, creamy, slow-melting
- pH: elevated, which improves moisture retention
How It Ships
Chops are cut, vacuum sealed in pairs (two 8 oz chops per pack), and flash frozen within hours of cutting. Orders ship frozen with dry ice. Use within 12 months for peak quality.
Suggested Cooking Method
Thaw in the refrigerator. Pat dry, salt generously, let sit at room temperature for 20 minutes. Heat a heavy cast iron skillet until smoking. Sear 3 minutes per side, render the fat cap on edge for 60 seconds, finish in a 400F oven 3 to 5 minutes. Pull at 140F on a probe thermometer. Rest 5 minutes (the temperature will climb to 145F during rest).
Kurobuta punishes overcooking more than any other pork chop on this site, not because the meat is fragile, but because there is so much to lose. A chop cooked to 160F throws away the entire reason you bought it. A chop pulled at 145F is the best pork chop you will eat this year.
Cut Specs
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Cut | Bone-in pork chop, center cut |
| Thickness | 1.25 inches |
| Weight per chop | 8 oz |
| Pack size | 2 chops, 1 lb total |
| Breed | 100 percent Berkshire (Kurobuta) |
| Tier | Reserve |
| Price | [INSERT PRICE] |
What’s Different About Circle 7 Pork
- 100 percent Berkshire genetics, purebred Kurobuta
- Pasture raised, not confinement raised
- Slow grown to natural finish weight
- No added hormones, no routine antibiotics
- Cut and packaged on the ranch
- Direct from the family that raised the animal
Customer FAQs
Is Kurobuta the same as Berkshire? Kurobuta is the Japanese term for 100 percent purebred Berkshire pork. Some American producers label crossbred animals as Berkshire. Kurobuta is the stricter, purebred designation. Ours is 100 percent.
Why is the meat so dark? Is something wrong? Nothing is wrong. Berkshire pork is naturally darker than commodity pork because of breed genetics, slow growth, and pasture movement. Dark color is correct.
Is it safe to eat pork at 145F? Yes. The USDA safe internal temperature for whole muscle pork is 145F followed by a 3 minute rest. The 160F guideline was retired years ago. Pink center is correct.
Is this worth more than a regular heritage chop? Different. Kurobuta has higher intramuscular marbling and a sweeter, denser eating experience. Heritage chops have their own depth and a more classic pork flavor. Some customers prefer one, some the other, some buy both.
Will it taste fatty or greasy? No. Kurobuta fat melts at a lower temperature than commodity pork fat, which means it renders into the meat as a natural baste rather than sitting heavy on the plate. The eating experience is rich but clean.
Pairing Recommendations
- Brown butter and crispy sage
- Roasted figs and balsamic
- Miso glaze and pickled daikon
- Smoked sea salt and lemon
- A medium-bodied red Burgundy or a chilled junmai sake
Storage
Keep frozen at 0F or below. Thaw in the refrigerator over 24 hours. Once thawed, cook within 3 days. Do not refreeze raw.
Learn More
Image Specs
- Hero: raw bone-in chop showing heavy marbling, top-down, 2400x1600
- Detail 1: marbling close-up against deep red muscle, 1600x1600
- Detail 2: seared chop sliced to show pink juicy interior, 2400x1600
- Lifestyle: chop plated with seasonal accompaniments, 2400x1600
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