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Nut Producer Rethinks Inspection Strategy After Adding Packaging Lines

Bringing retail packing in-house prompted Andersen & Sons Shelling to add X-ray inspection along with its new packaging line. With improved user interface and detection levels, Mettler-Toledo Safeline’s X36 X-ray system is helping to ensure food safety.

Andersen and Sons Shelling produces a variety of tree nuts that go to market under both private labels and its Glenda’s Farmhouse brand.
Andersen and Sons Shelling produces a variety of tree nuts that go to market under both private labels and its Glenda’s Farmhouse brand.
Mettler-Toledo Safeline

When one of your largest retail customers tells you they want you to start packaging your products in addition to processing, you’re not likely to say no. You find the equipment needed and step up your game.

This is the situation that Andersen & Sons Shelling—a fourth-generation, family-owned-and-operated nut producer founded in 1904—found itself in a few years ago. Andersen produces a variety of tree nuts that go to market nationwide, as well as internationally, under both private labels and the company’s own Glenda’s Farmhouse brand.

“Prior to 2017, we were sending all our nuts in bulk to contract packers that produced retail packs for our customers,” says Mike Andersen, owner and vice president of sales at Andersen. “When one of our biggest retailers told us they were having problems with their contract packer, they asked us to start private label retail packaging our nuts in addition to processing.”

At its facility in Vina, Calif., Andersen handles walnuts, almonds, macadamia nuts, cashews, hazelnuts, pecans, and more—in roasted and salted varieties as well as flavored products—packaged into a variety of retail packs. The company has recently been growing 15-20% per year, and now processes about 125 million lb of nuts annually.

Moving to filling those retail packs in-house required not only Andersen’s first retail packaging lines; the company needed to rethink how it was handling inspection as well. Graders and optical sorters were (and still are) being used further upstream in the process, but adding X-ray inspection after packaging was an essential step to ensure product safety for consumers.

Finding the rocks

“Rocks are a huge concern in our industry. When harvesting nuts, each tree is shaken so the nuts fall on the ground and are then mechanically gathered. But inevitably, some rocks get scooped up as well,” says Mallory Daily, food safety manager at Andersen. “This means that a metal detector won’t cut it now that we’re responsible for ensuring final product quality on retail packs.”

X-ray technology is even more essential in certain situations. “The medium pieces of walnuts are more prone to having smaller rocks that are more difficult to detect with optical sorting and can’t be detected with metal detection,” says Ryan Bughao, director of operations at Andersen. “So having the X-ray in line helps definitely reduce the amount of foreign materials that are getting out to the end users.”


Read article   Learn how product recalls and new demands from retailers are impacting inspection placement in food manufacturing.
INTRODUCING! The Latest Trends for Food Products at PACK EXPO Southeast
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INTRODUCING! The Latest Trends for Food Products at PACK EXPO Southeast