Real salami is dry-cured and aged for weeks. Most commodity salami is rushed — accelerated curing, added acidifiers, sometimes partially cooked — so it ships in days. Why? Follow the money. Aging ties up cash and space, and the meat loses weight as it dries. Fillers add that weight back cheaply. Factory pork costs a fraction of heritage breeds. So here's what ends up on the label: isolated soy protein, dried milk, whey, carrageenan, modified starches. Phosphates for water weight. Preservatives like BHA and BHT — restricted in the EU, still legal here. Vague "natural flavors." Pork from antibiotic-fed factory herds. Fillers alone can cut a meat product's cost by 10 to 30%. You pay the premium price. They keep the margin.