A whole new look at micro-perfs for produce packs
A whole new look at micro-perfs for produce packs
Drysdales has been using PerfoTec technology for the past several years on Brussels sprouts packed in polypropylene on vertical form/fill/seal systems. The MicroPerf gear is mounted on the plant’s f/f/s systems.
New from Drysdales as of last fall are Easy Swedes. In the UK, rutabagas are known as “Swedes,” and these particular Swedes can be microwaved right in the bag. Thus the name “Easy Swedes.”
With Easy Swedes, three important processing steps precede packaging, says general manager Chris Keenan. “We abrasively peel the rutabagas and then polish them,” says Keenan. “The peeling shatters the cells at the surface, which in turn makes that surface tough enough and crusty enough so that water doesn’t easily penetrate. Polishing addresses this shattered-cell condition and returns the surface of the rutabaga to a condition where water can penetrate as it’s supposed to.”
The third processing step is cutting the large, round rutabaga into eight wedges in an automated press. Following a quick dip in ascorbic acid, the wedges move to a vertical form/fill/seal machine. Above it is a combination scale that meters 500 g of sliced rutabagas into the PP film that is formed into bags by the f/f/s system. The film, of course, is microperfed on PerfoTec’s Automated OTR Control system. Graphics are printed by the converter, so the f/f/s system makes pouches in register. A clear window on the back lets shoppers see the product inside.
Finished packs are sold through the Tesco’s chain of supermarkets for about 89 pence ($1.45 U.S.) each. The consumer simply puts the bagged product into the microwave for 10 minutes and then serves the conveniently cooked product with butter, olive oil, or salt.
“The rutabaga is difficult to cut and difficult to prepare when it’s purchased raw in the store,” says Keenan. “Processed and packaged this way, it becomes a convenient produce option to enjoy.”
Drysdales is pushing the PerfoTec technology even further with its recent installation of a PerfoTec Fast Respiration Meter (FRM). The need for such a device stems from the fact that produce respiration rates vary considerably depending not just on the part of the growing season in which vegetables are harvested but also on such things as the amount of water or sun or nutrients to which they are exposed. Produce packers can have their product tested to more accurately pinpoint its respiration rate, but current technology requires a week or so for the testing to be completed. And then once this more precise respiration rate is known, it has to be communicated to the film converter so that the size of the holes being microperforated can be optimized. The amount of time involved makes this a less than desireable option, so produce packers usually base their microperforation calculations on an average respiration rate.
This is where the FRM comes in. PerfoTec describes it as a patented method of determining a vegetable’s respiration rate in eight hours. A produce marketer can then plug that number into a Perfotec Web site along with the package dimensions that are involved and the FRM system will then communicate automatically with the PerfoTec laser perforation system, mounted right on the f/f/s machine in the produce packers plant, to calibrate it for optimally sized laser perforations.













Comments(0)
Add new comment