Innovative applications bag awards

Flexible bags protect bone-in meat products, provide a barrier for respiring cheese, and allow high-altitude shipping of tortilla chips. All three earn awards from the Flexible Packaging Assn.

Kettle Foods wanted to keep the paper look of their previous bags but put in a window so customers could see the tortilla chips
Kettle Foods wanted to keep the paper look of their previous bags but put in a window so customers could see the tortilla chips

Improved product protection, as well as reduced use of materials and associated costs, helped eight packages earn distinction as Flexible Packaging Assn. 1998 award winners.

Three of the eight awards went to bags for foods. One economically protects bone-in meat products, another holds respiring cheese, while a third prevents bursting as tortilla chips are shipped at high altitudes. (For details on additional winners, see stories on p. 42 and p. 62.)

Protecting meats

Bone-in meat cuts that are vacuum-packaged in pre-made bags often require some protection where the bone meets the film so that abrasion won't cause leakers. That suggests two possible solutions: Make the bag with film so thick and tough that the bones can't penetrate it, or use a thinner web and augment it with "patch" material, such as bone guard cloth, in the specific locations where bone meets film.

Both solutions have their drawbacks. A heavy film all around the meat is costly overkill where no bone touches the film. As for the patch approach, there's little to keep the patch from slipping out of position. If that happens, the patch is useless and a leaker is likely.

Overcoming these problems is the Rotated Patch TBG (Total Bone Guard) Bag (1) from Cryovac Div., Sealed Air Corp. (Duncan, SC). The clear patch is laminated to the outside of the clear bag. Specific information about the multilayer barrier bag material, what the multilayer shrinkable patch is made of, or when or how it's applied is not available from Cryovac.

Customers who use the FPA-award-winning bag are nearly as reticent as Cryovac. "It reduces leakers compared to what we had before," says Rodney Orell, executive vice president at Smithfield Foods in Smithfield, VA. "That means less rework and reduced costs." Smithfield uses the pre-made Cryovac bags for rib and shoulder cuts of pork sold in the refrigerated supermarket meat case. These cuts weigh anywhere from 5 to 10 lb each.

According to Cryovac, the technical achievement behind the bag is the ability to put the patch material on the two sides of the bag without covering the middle. "Technology has existed to put a bone guard patch on the front and/or back, and even to extend the patch over the front and back edges," says Cryovac's Jim Mize. "But until now it was not possible to cover each side of the bag without covering the middle." In placing the patch material where it does, Cryovac has "rotated" the patch from its more conventional position, which is why the company calls its bag a "rotated patch" TBG bag.

After the meat is loaded, the bags are vacuum-sealed on rotary chamber systems commonly used in the meat industry.

Barrier bag for cheese

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