The NuTEC 745 can portion beef, pork, poultry, fish, veal, lamb, cheese and even vegetables. It feeds directly to a mold plate cavity and can portion up to 11,700 pieces hour. See this product and more in our Product Resource Center
|
"In the beginning it was simply the desire to increase manufacturing capabilities," Colegrove says. "Bigger was better, and faster was better, and so forth, all to increase production. These needs to increase production, however, made it necessary for equipment manufacturers to develop new technologies to handle and manipulate larger quantities of raw materials at a wide variety of consistencies and temperatures -- all the while making exact portions, in exact shapes, in fractions of a second. No small task! Basic mechanical systems eventually gave way to more powerful hydraulic and servo systems."
The meat and frozen foods sectors are two of the heaviest users of portioning equipment. As consumers have come to expect it, food manufacturers continue to offer more variety of product types, sizes and shapes.
"We now have to not only deliver precise and accurate portions weights and shapes but to do so in a manner that provides for enhanced cooking characteristics, better particle definition and on and on," Colegrove says. "Close proximity portion depositing has been on the increase, and the innovative design of our C-Frame machines have made them even more popular in applications for things like hand-held sandwiches, empanadas, tortilla shell depositing et cetera. The ability of our C-Frames to precisely portion in these applications with excellent particle definition and piece identity has led to an increase in the demand of these specialized units."
In all segments of the food industry, processors are using higher-value raw materials, and are therefore more concerned with limiting waste. Above all else is the ever-present concern about food safety, says Reiser's McIsaac.
"The consumer speaks, and the food industry listens," he says. "People are first and foremost concerned about the safety of their food. The producers are concerned about this risk, as well as their reputation. Hygiene has been elevated at the portioner. In bakeries, where aluminum once was OK, today only stainless steel will do."
There is also raw material pricing pressure that drives the need for extremely accurate portions, McIsaac adds. "Inconsistent portioning results in giveaway," he says. "While this is fairly obvious, under- and over-weights present other problems in production. For instance, if a meatball portioner is not accurate, the cook time will need to accommodate."
Colegrove agrees that regulatory and retailer concerns have led to increased emphasis on sanitary design. "That has been a huge factor for us in making material changes and systems changes in order to be able to manufacture in a more safe and wholesome manner," he says.
Some of the newest equipment includes precision cheese shredding units designed for pizza making, and the latest gear for forming burgers in a very specific fashion, McIsaac says.
"We are having a run on our equipment to form home-style patties," he says. "Interleaved with paper and stacked, they look and eat like they are made by Mom."