Innovations in plastics help foods flourish

Pinched-grip PET, an innovative pastry bag, a take-out bag for chicken, foamed CPET, and barrier beer bottles and food containers all win DuPont awards.

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As if bottles and jars made of polyethylene terephthalate haven't already made enough inroads into markets previously ruled by glass, a new food category is now cozying up to this popular member of the polyester family: hot-filled applesauce. Judges in the twelfth annual DuPont Awards for Innovation in Food Processing and Packaging were so impressed with two pinched-grip, heat-set, wide-mouthed applesauce jars, they broke with tradition and named both dual winners of the prestigious Diamond Award (for more DuPont winners, see p. 72). One contains product marketed by Seneca Foods and the other by Knouse Foods.

First to reach store shelves with a pinched-grip PET jar was Seneca Foods (1) of Marion, NY (see Packaging World, June '98, p. 2). This spring the company launched three varieties in 48-oz net weights and one slightly less dense variety in a 46.5-oz version all in the same jar. All sell for $1.99 to $2.49. Injection stretch/blow-molded by Graham Packaging (York, PA) on two-stage equipment, the jar has a 63-mm finish. Specialized geometry helps provide top-load and hoop strength so that the round container won't deform as the hot-filled product cools and internal vacuum pressure builds. The container can be filled at temperatures to 200°F.

The Seneca jar is topped by a linerless Sun-Twist Closure that is injection-molded of polypropylene by Kerr/Sun Coast (Sarasota, FL). Inside the closure is an induction-seal foil membrane with a special coating. When it's induction-sealed, the coating helps provide a reliable hermetic seal at high temperatures. The patented Edge Seal(TM) feature molded into the closure keeps water from being drawn between the container's neck finish and the closure during cooling. If allowed in, the water could collect on top of the foil membrane, which is unsightly and could allow mold growth over time.

On a per-ounce basis, consumers pay about the same for Seneca apple sauce in either plastic or glass, says Seneca director of marketing Kevin Hennessy. "For us the plastic is about ten percent more costly than glass, but we're putting in ten percent more sauce into the plastic jars," adds Hennessy.

Different strokes

Different strokes

The applesauce sold by Knouse Foods of Peach Glen, PA, is in a different bottle (2) and takes a different closure. The bottle is injection stretch/blow molded, again on two-stage equipment, by Schmalbach-Lubeca (Plymouth, MI). It has a white crystallized neck finish that marks it as a product of the Yoshino technology that S-L is licensed to use.

"We like the crystallized finish because we saw minimal distortion in tests we ran," says Knouse quality control manager Bob Binkley. "We can fill up to two-hundred and five degrees Fahrenheit, which is right in line with our process here."

The 63-mm injection-molded PP closures, supplied by White Cap (Downers Grove, IL), have no foil membrane. The VHJ closure does have, however, a full-disk liner compression-molded of a thermoplastic elastomer compound that is designed to ensure seal integrity. The closure may change in the near future, says Binkley, as White Cap continues to develop a ring-lined version in which the liner only covers where the threads of the neck finish contact the closure.

Decaser, filler and in-line capper all remained unchanged at the three Knouse plants where 46- and 48-oz glass has been replaced-or is being replaced-by PET. The most significant change to the packaging lines is the addition of a Starmatic front-and-back cold-glue labeler from Krones (Franklin, WI). It detects a lug molded into the bottom of the bottle to orient it properly for front-and-back labeling. Also installed were p-s labelers that apply a label on top of the closure to draw attention to some of the benefits of the plastic container. Finally, vision inspection equipment from White Cap was also installed to detect for missing or misapplied caps.

Shelf life provided by the 81-g container is "probably not as great as with glass-packed sauce," says Binkley. "But the idea is to not keep it on store shelves as long as glass-packed product was kept. We won't build a large inventory. We may even pack this product year round."

Barrier bottle

High-barrier packaging almost always makes a strong showing in the DuPont Awards, and this year's no exception. Bass Brewers of Burton-on-Trent in England won a silver award for its 33-cL plastic bottle (3) for Carling Black Label beer (see PW, January '98, p. 2 and March '98, p. 54). The 29-g bottle is made by American National Can (Batavia, IL), a Pechiney subsidiary. ANC co-injection molds the preforms and blows the bottle in its U.S. facilities. Bass fills it at an unnamed contract packager in the U.K.

The three-layer construction incorporates ethylene vinyl alcohol between two layers of PET. When the bottle debuted, shelf life was pegged at 12 weeks, sufficient to get the contents safely to consumers at the outdoor and stadium events at which it was aimed. Bass's Bill Dando, director of package development, says recent improvements in the ANC technology have increased the shelf life to 14 to 16 weeks. Distribution has expanded, too, to include some pubs and clubs.

"We're still not mass distributing the bottle," says Dando. "But it's time to seriously look at additional market outlets." When it comes time to enter those new markets, it may be with a different bottle. The shelf life Bass now aims for in a plastic beer bottle is six months.

"We feel three different technologies will each give us a six-month shelf life,"says Dando. "I think we'll wind up going with the best cost. It's a good position to be in."

From down under

Based in Australia, packaging supplier Southcorp Packaging's NuWave Div.-represented in the U.S. by Southcorp Packaging USA (Atlanta, GA)-won a gold award for clear, PP food cups (4) that have high-barrier properties and are retortable.

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