Pouches, vf/f/s system add sizzle to sauce sales

Vf/f/s system helps Fontina Foods increase sales threefold and expand its product line for foodservice/institutional customers. Eight-month equipment payback is projected due to selling product in flexible pouches rather than HDPE pails.

A customized vf/f/s system (top) produces pouches holding liquids as thin as water to sauces laden with particulates as shown ab
A customized vf/f/s system (top) produces pouches holding liquids as thin as water to sauces laden with particulates as shown ab

In the early 80s, J. Michael Buscaino made pesto sauce in his basement and sold it to a single retail store in the Miami area. This year, his company, Fontina(TM) Foods, predicts sales of $6 million, a threefold increase over 1994's. This impressive growth is attributable in great part to a new 27ꯠ-sq-ft headquarters facility in Port St. Lucie, FL, where Fontina processes herbs, sauces, chutneys, salsas and cobblers, then fills them into flexible pouches or bottles on either of two new lines. Products are sold both under Fontina Foods' brand name and private labels.

Approximately 60% of Fontina's sales are packaged on a Key-Pak V-350 from Research & Development Packaging Corp. (Lebanon, NJ). The vertical form/fill/seal machine is equipped with a Model SP-160B liquid piston filler from Hinds-Bock (Redmond, WA). This customized system packs more than 30 SKUs, including both hot-fill products and ambient-temperature fills. Fontina's products range from water-thin juices to particulate-laden sauces. The primary package is a 1-gal pouch filled at about 15/min; production of 1/2-gal sizes, filled at 25/min, is limited. A 6-oz pouch may also be in the cards.

The second line fills some 25 SKUs into glass or polyethylene terephthalate bottles, in sizes from 1 to 32 oz, at speeds between 60 and 100 bpm. At the heart of this line is another Hinds-Bock filler.

Fontina (the name comes from an Italian cheese) sells about 90% of its production to the foodservice market, primarily restaurants. Another 8% goes to institutional customers, mostly other sauce producers. The remainder is sold to specialty retail outlets in Florida and New York.

Pouches replace pails

Pouches produced on the vf/f/s line have replaced 1-, 2- and 5-L high-density polyethylene pails/lids, which were filled by a contract packager. The change results in numerous benefits for Fontina Foods and its customers.

"We wanted to get out of HDPE pails for several reasons," says Craig Basiliere, Fontina's director of operations, purchasing and supplier quality assurance. "Our customers were demanding flexible film as a means of easing solid waste disposal problems. There's a big space, weight and cost difference between disposing of a corrugated case and two 1-gallon pouches versus two gallon pails. Switching to pouches was a perfect opportunity to give customers what they wanted, and in turn, save us considerable money."

Much of Fontina's savings are labor-related. "We use two people to fill the pouches compared with 10 needed by the contract packager to denest pails, fill them, apply tops and label them," notes Basiliere. "Labor savings alone will give us a return on the investment in about 8 months."

Besides labor, the change to pouches reduces material costs. "We used to pay 78 cents for the pail and lid. It's about 20 cents now for the film required for the 1-gallon pouch," he points out. "That reduction helps offset rising costs for things like raw materials and corrugated. This means we're able to hold the line on prices for our customers."

Warehouse space savings offer yet another advantage. "Instead of bringing in a truckload of pails, I order a single pallet of film," he says. "That pallet takes up about 4 percent of the space of a load of pails, so that's a 96-percent space savings."

Custom vf/f/s

Videos from Universal Labeling Systems, Inc.
Annual Outlook Report: Automation & Robotics
What's in store for CPGs in 2025 and beyond? Packaging World editors explore the survey responses from 118 brand owners, CPG, and FMCG Packaging World readers for its new Annual Outlook Report.
Download
Annual Outlook Report: Automation & Robotics
Annual Outlook Report: Sustainability
The road ahead for CPGs in 2025 and beyond—Packaging World editors review key findings from a survey of 88 brand owners, CPG, and FMCG readers.
Download Now
Annual Outlook Report: Sustainability