Note from overseas

Keeping packaged meat looking attractive is essential for retailers because clean, crisp-looking packaging is what their customers prefer.

By Kate Bertrand Connolly, Packaging Editor | 07/16/2007

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To ensure the good looks of the Oscar Mayer Wieners it packages in Europe, Campofrio Alimentacion SA (www.campofrio.es), Madrid, Spain, uses a vacuum thermoformed structure called Amcor OptiSur.

Campofrio Alimentacion SA packages its Oscar Mayer wieners in Europe in Amcor OptiSur. The resin is stiffer and glossier than polyethylene, and its secondary sealing process prevents liquids from flowing within the package, improving the presentation.
Campofrio Alimentacion SA packages its Oscar Mayer wieners in Europe in Amcor OptiSur. The resin is stiffer and glossier than polyethylene, and its secondary sealing process prevents liquids from flowing within the package, improving the presentation.

Packaging is supplied by Amcor Flexibles (www.amcor.com), Gloucester, England. DuPont Surlyn resin from E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Co. (www.dupont.com), Wilmington, Del., is used to form the packages.

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The resin is stiffer and glossier than polyethylene, and it enables a secondary sealing process in which heat is applied to the closed vacuum pack. The heat and strength of the vacuum create a second seal in all parts of the package that don't contain product.

Thanks to the secondary seal, liquids do not flow freely inside the package. The result is a clean presentation for the product and the elimination of potential bacterial growth in the liquid. The secondary seal also reduces the chance of punctures, which can lead to vacuum loss, product contamination and leaky packages.

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