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Flexible films find gold in FPA awards

Vacuum skin packaging, gorgeous stand-up pouches, and a WHO winner with life-saving potential are among the highlights in this year’s FPA competition.

Pw 5714 Asparagus2

Case-ready asparagus

In the end, a case-ready microwavable package of asparagus proved to be a cut above the other Flexible Packaging Assn. (www.flexpack.org) entrants, earning both a Gold Award for packaging excellence and Highest Achievement Award for the Cryovac div. (www.cryovac.com) of Sealed Air Corp. (www.sealedair.com). Cryovac’s Cre8 package design division, and especially manager Marc Edlein, also contributed to the project.

The technology takes what Cryovac learned initially in the case-ready meat category and adapts it for the special needs of produce. In this instance, it’s for 8-oz packs of three varieties of asparagus spears—green, white, and a blend—and mixed vegetables from Southern Specialties, Pompano Beach, FL.

Unveiled in October 2008 at the Fresh Summit tradeshow of the Produce Marketing Assn. (www.pma.com), the products are currently in trial at retail stores in Minneapolis and Florida, where the line of 8-oz Southern Selects brand products retail for $4.99 each. That’s according to the Southern Specialties vp of business development, Charlie Eagle, who describes the refrigerated, heat-and-serve line as “microwavable, steamable products in tray form.” The company has previously offered its produce in bags that were microwavable, but not steamable.

“This unique packaging has a lot of attributes to help sell our high-end products,” says Eagle. “The main attribute is the product flavor once it’s cooked using this [packaging technology].” He also notes that the format provides good shipping integrity, excellent presentation, and shelf-to-table convenience.

Cryovac reports that the technology permits processors to cook in the package.

The packaging comprises a polypropylene-based tray, breathable film, and two paperboard bands for graphics. The vacuum skin film is a 3-mil, highly permeable, multilayer polyolefin structure. It lets oxygen in and carbon dioxide out at controlled rates, says Cryovac business development manager Myra Foster. It also maintains carbon dioxide levels of 5% to 10% within the package; this delays decay and softening of the asparagus spears. It provides the products “a good” 10-days’ shelf life, Eagle says. Several film structures were tested before the company settled on one that worked well for the different products.

The tray and film combination permits a steamable tray sealed with a film that balloons and self-vents during microwave heating. The tray has flanges on the ends that act as stay-cool handles.

The vacuum skin film is sealed to the trays using a Multivac (www.multivac.com) tray sealer that Eagle calls a “product-specific machine” installed at the company’s plant in Pompano Beach. Eagle notes that the packaging is done two-up, though he could not disclose rates.

He expects to move forward from the trial during Q1. “We’re hopeful that we’ve got a product that will work for many of our customers,” he says. “Our company has never had a better working relationship than we’ve had with Cryovac Sealed Air in this project,” he adds. “They’ve been great.”

This is yet another FPA Gold Award for Cryovac Sealed Air’s Simple Steps packaging concept, which also won an FPA technical achievement in 2006 for an application for veggies from Sun Valley Foods (see pack world.com/package-20531). —Rick Lingle

 

Matte/metallic granola pouch bursts with shelf presence

Consumer appeal springs forth from the graphics on Verde Valle’s Branli brand stand-up pouch for its CrujiNola crunchy granola mixed with yogurt-covered raisins. The Guadalajara, Mexico-based company worked with Printpack (www.printpack.com) to develop the pouch, a Gold Award winner in the 2009 Flexible Packaging Assn.’s Packaging Achievement Awards competition.

Supplied premade with a reclosable zipper, the 4.4-mil, three-layer adhesive lamination’s structure includes 48-ga matte polyester/60-ga vacuum-metallized, biaxially oriented polypropylene/3.3-mil low-density polyethylene coextrusion.

The PET layer is reverse flexo-printed in eight colors. The metallic look behind the outer PET layer’s matte finish lends an appealing sense of dimension as yogurt and almonds appear to float upwards from a milk-filled bowl of the product, against a blue-and-gold background.

According to Rudolf Schaich, Printpack’s market development manager, the PET provides vapor and gas barriers, and tensile and tear strength. The metallized BOPP delivers moisture and light barrier. The LDPE coextrusion, he says, offers seal strength. The 400-g product is sold in two varieties, at ambient temperature, with a six-month to one-year shelf life.

Printpack ships premade pouches from its Guadalajara facility to Verde Valle for filling on specially designed vertical form/fill/seal machinery. Product is sold in supermarkets in Mexico.

Schaich says Printpack has worked with Verde Valle for about 10 years, starting with rollstock for vf/f/s equipment, primarily for rice and beans, then evolving into zippered stand-up pouches and preformed pouches for precooked rice, cereals, bird food, etc.

For the Branli CrujiNola line, he says, “the main challenge was to obtain the matte/metallic look combined with a nice graphic design in a package that catches consumer attention on the shelf, without losing product preservation capabilities or reclosability.” Mission accomplished!  —Jim Butschli

 

Vaccine ‘backpack’ earns FPA’s Special Citation

When a package innovatively addresses societal health and wellness issues, the Flexible Packaging Assn. takes notice. In FPA’s 2009 Flexible Packaging Achievement Awards competition, the association awarded its Special Citation for Social Responsibility to the World Health Organization’s Coldpack AntiFreeze Vaccine Backpack, developed by Coldpack System (www.coldpacksystem.com). Coldpack refers to the backpack as the AirLiner, an inflatable, insulating liner designed to convert a corrugated box into a cooler for heat-sensitive vaccines. It ships and stores flat, taking up little space in a warehouse or during transportation.

WHO field-tested the AirLiner containers in Sudan about three years ago, says David McKinney, Coldpack System’s COO. In a September 2007 test report, WHO noted that the Backpack met WHO/UNICEF Standard E4/VC2. The report offered the following comments:

“Comes in flat packing, and must be assembled by the user based on the pictorial guidelines provided. Inside surface of the lid has a table and a thermometer for user to decide the number of ice packs required based on the ambient temperature. Five ice packs are required at 43ºC ambient to secure 35 hours of cold life without openings. [Fewer] ice packs are required at lower temperatures. Ice packs must be loaded as fully frozen in this carrier. The system is designed to prevent freezing temperatures in the vaccine compartment. It is designed with self-gripping strips to allow users to carry it as a backpack.”

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