Case-ready meat is hitting its stride

As more meat packaging is centralized, processors are finding ways to keep meat fresh longer. But how best accomplish that?

The Corrugated Packaging Alliance is promoting voluntary standards for case dimensions to make handling and shipping case-ready
The Corrugated Packaging Alliance is promoting voluntary standards for case dimensions to make handling and shipping case-ready

In-store butchers who cut and wrap cuts of fresh meat in the back room are still common enough in America’s supermarkets. But more and more grocers are turning to case-ready meat that is processed and packaged at a central facility and delivered to the store ready to be put directly into the meat case. A teenage stockboy can take unit packs from a master shipper and put them on display without ever requiring a butcher, who not only is expensive but also increasingly hard to find today.

“Think of the amount of space that’s needed for preparation, especially if you have a meat-cutting operation within the body of the store,” says Mike Hranicka, vice president of sales at Pactiv, producer of specialty packaging products. “You’re going to have a lot of area that’s going to have to hold inventory, equipment for cutting meat, tons of costs. When you go case-ready, all that area can now be retrofitted and used for merchandising space.”

As is so often the case lately with advancements in distribution technology, much of the case-ready meat market is being driven by Wal-Mart, which sells only case-ready meat in its more than 1귔 Supercenters and 67 neighborhood markets across the country. The company estimates that it handles about 16 percent of all groceries sold in the U.S.

“Case-ready offers a variety of customer benefits, including leak-proof packaging and enhanced quality control, because the product leaves a federally inspected plant in a sealed package that isn’t opened until the customer takes the product home,” explains Karen Burk, a Wal-Mart spokesperson. “It also offers an improved ability to keep meat products consistently in-stock for our customers.”

Centralizing the labor costs of preparing meat is a significant cost savings across the board. But it also offers advantages from a safety standpoint because the centralized plant has to have USDA inspection and must establish reliable processes and controls to provide the safest product possible.

“Compare that to 100 supermarkets where the backrooms and meat rooms are producing products under widely different circumstances,” says Frank Basil, North American sales manager at Exact Equipment, maker of automatic stretch-wrapping machines. “Probably one of the biggest things that will drive case-ready is the idea that the supermarkets would love to be able to transfer the liability from their own markets and backrooms to the big distributors of the world.”

Case-ready is attractive to meat marketers because it presents a branding opportunity, and they’d like to brand everything they can. But it’s important that this branding issue be negotiated carefully with the supermarket chain, because they’re pretty fond of seeing packs with their own store label.

“The retailers really are different,” says Chris Hodges, vice president of fresh pork at Farmland Foods, based in Kansas City. “They have lots of different strategies and approaches to the marketplace. Our approach has always been to customize and tailor programs to their requirements.”

The oxygen issue

The problem with meat is that from the moment the animal is butchered it begins to decay. But while some decay is beneficial—research shows that beef cuts reach ideal maturation after 21 days, for example—both the safety and aesthetic issues pose a challenge to the meat supply chain.

The main culprit is oxygen, the element that makes red meat “bloom” with the red color that consumers are accustomed to seeing. Oxygen is also a cause of bacteria growth, which affects color, taste, and shelf life. Temperature and packaging can also impact the rate of bacteria growth, but essentially if the meat can be kept from oxygen it can stay fresher longer.

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