Thermoformed Skin Packs Catch Attention, Hook Consumers

To accommodate retailers’ and consumers’ growing demand for case-ready skin packs of fresh fish, this seafood processor and packager turned to flexible, high-speed thermoforming equipment that makes sanitation easy.

North Coast Seafoods packs its range of fresh fish filets in vacuum skin packs using thermoformed semi-rigid trays and a printed belly band for its case-ready package program.
North Coast Seafoods packs its range of fresh fish filets in vacuum skin packs using thermoformed semi-rigid trays and a printed belly band for its case-ready package
program.

North Coast Seafoods operates out of three USDC Grade A compliant processing facilities in Chatham, New Bedford, and in the Boston Seaport District, where Packaging World visited. Each facility undergoes voluntary inspections by the US Department of Commerce and the FDA.

The company sells its North Coast Chef’s Catch brand fish, both fresh and frozen, through club store retailers like BJ’s and Costco. North Coast recently began adding value to the previously unadulterated fish fillets in the form of slices of herbed butter, added seasoning, or other in-pack value-adds that are aimed at simplifying meals and demystifying seafood recipes for consumers. 

But delivering fish to retail is a challenge, especially fresh fish. Any faulty link in the chain from baited hook to retail cooler compromises the entire supply chain. Plus, waste or scrap is expensive and only gets more expensive as value is added in processing and packaging. 

In order to guarantee the freshest fish imaginable, North Coast vertically integrated its business from dock to door to control every part of the process. Such under-one-roof ownership produces an unbroken chain of custody spanning the time on water, to how the fish are caught, to who catches them, to fish handling, to the way they’re processed, to—most important for our purposes—how the fish are packaged and routed to retail. Vertical integration makes the process trackable and verifiable every minute the seafood is in North Coast’s possession. This way of doing business also lets the company set its own pace in throughput, buying it more hours or even days of unfrozen retail freshness. 

“Fish is unique in its timing and pace, and how fast the product moves,” says Jim O’Hara, Director of Operations at North Coast Seafoods. “We don’t keep any inventory. Everything comes in and goes out immediately. It’s a constant, fast-moving flow. And we have to carefully connect production with logistics and timing, so there are a lot of moving parts, and they’re moving fast.”

Automating fish packaging with thermoformed skin packs
That sort of speed lends itself to automation. There’s less opportunity for it in fish processing, which largely remains an artisan hand skill. But once the cod or haddock is broken down into consumer-sized fillets, packaging automation can keep up with the constant flow, at speed and at volume, without the heavy labor inputs that the processing side requires. 

“Finding labor is getting harder,” O’Hara says. “And labor’s expensive, that’s why we’ve got to automate things. All things considered, you’re going to spend $30,000 or $40,000 a year for a person. But if you can buy something automated, that costs $100,000, and it lasts more than a few years, there’s a quick payback. So I think you’re going to see that happening in a lot of industries in the next five, six years. It’s coming really quickly.”

The company recently has turned to vacuum skin-pack (VSP) thermoforming equipment to automate and provide shelf-standout packages for its fish. Of course, the primary function of a skin pack is to extend the fish’s shelf life. But compared to traditional vacuum packaging, the process adds characteristics that provide additional value, such as improved liquid retention. With VSP, as compared to say, MAP packaging, the upper and lower film in a skin pack are welded together on the entire potential contact surface, except of course for the space occupied by the product, thus safeguarding it, holding it in place, and retaining its appearance. 

Single and meal-for-two packs of fish are therefore center-of-the-bullseye applications for the skin-packing thermoformers at North Coast’s Boston processing and packaging facility. 

Case-ready sockeye programs inspire equipment upgrade
Last year, North Coast began a new sockeye salmon program for Costco and more recently another salmon program for BJ’s, featuring what the company calls its case-ready package format. 

Trays are thermoformed on the TFS 707 from roll stock via metal dies designed to accommodate the full range of fish sizes, shapes, and portions, including but not limited to 1x3, 2x3, or 3x2 formats. Fish and any value-add ingredients (pictured is Atlantic salmon with herbed butter) are currently hand-filled, but look for North Coast to apply robotic solutions for tray filling in the future.Trays are thermoformed on the TFS 707 from roll stock via metal dies designed to accommodate the full range of fish sizes, shapes, and portions, including but not limited to 1x3, 2x3, or 3x2 formats. Fish and any value-add ingredients (pictured is Atlantic salmon with herbed butter) are currently hand-filled, but look for North Coast to apply robotic solutions for tray filling in the future.

“This case-ready packaging format is great for a supermarket selling fresh fish right out of the case,” O’Hara says. “The skin pack seems to be getting more popular over the last few years. People like to grab and go. They don’t even have to go to the fish counter at their supermarket.” 

These two programs, vanguards of a larger trend leaning toward case-ready pack formats in fish, precipitated a technology jump at the Boston facility from legacy machinery to a faster, more robust thermoformer with in-line vacuum skin pack equipment. After shopping around, O’Hara decided on the TFS 707 in-line skin packing machine from Harpak-Ulma, a thermoforming machine specified for full sanitation. 

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