Packaging helps a new market blossom

California flower grower enters the foodservice market by developing an MAP packaging system that's right at home in the refrigerated foodservice distribution chain.

Side view of the thermoformed PVC tray shows its 3 1/2? depth
Side view of the thermoformed PVC tray shows its 3 1/2? depth

Foodservice institutions around the country rely on a steady stream of fresh produce from the bountiful growing area around California's Salinas Valley. But the foodservice distribution system that delivers fruits and veggies to the other 49 states has rarely been able to include fresh flowers grown in California. The reason is simple enough: Flowers are traditionally distributed either in tubs of water or in corrugated boxes with ice packs. The former method is too heavy and messy for foodservice distributors to deal with, and the latter offers inadequate shelf life.

Now that's begun to change, thanks to the pioneering efforts of Salinas-based Matsui Wholesale Florist. "Pioneering" may not be the most accurate word to describe Matsui's year-old program; the modified-atmosphere packaging technology used by Matsui has been used for produce for some time now. But Matsui is the first to try it with flowers, and the firm now gets a three-week refrigerated shelf life on light-weight, dry-packed flowers in clear, protective packages.

"In our business, there never has been a good way to get flowers from growers to foodservice distribution centers and then to individual restaurants, hotels or other institutions," says Matsui general manager John Costello. "The extended shelf life and handling ease of this package let us do just that. The flowers the customer receives are as fresh as the day they were picked."

Freshness is only one part of the picture. More important to foodservice distributors is that the flowers are dry-packed. Handling buckets of water is out of the picture. The 21-day shelf life of the new package also triples that of ice-packed flowers in boxes.

Three-component package

The extended shelf life is a function of three packaging components that work together as a system. First is the thermoformed polyvinyl chloride tray in two different sizes: 27" long x 3 1/2" deep x 6" wide or 15" long x 3 1/2" deep x 8 1/4" wide. Supplied by VGS (Salinas, CA), it's lidded with a 1.5-mil Mylar® polyester film from DuPont (Wilmington, DE).

The rigid tray provides protection and clarity. So does the lidding material, whose heat-seal coating produces seals that won't burst when the pressure changes during air shipment. (A portion of Matsui's shipments go by air.) The lidding also displays gloss and anti-fog properties that let the flowers' natural beauty show through.

The third component in the package is a polypropylene-based FreshHold® spot label, applied to the lidding like any p-s label. It covers a small hole that is punched into the lidding material. The label permeability allows gases to pass in and out of the package at a predetermined rate, depending on the FreshHold label formulation. The permeability of tray and lid are also taken into account. The package's total permeability results in an internal atmosphere high in carbon dioxide, which is given off by the flowers, but low in oxygen. This lets the flowers respire, thus allowing them to stay fresh. The technology, introduced about four years ago and now quite popular among produce marketers, is available through FWM/Fisher Holdings (Salinas, CA), which holds several patents on it.

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