HMR package serves dual markets

Southern BBQ restaurant chain and mail-order business employs the same dual-ovenable CPET tray and attractive paperboard carton to introduce frozen dinners sold both in hospitals and grocery stores.

A three-compartment CPET tray, PE-based lidding film and colorful SBS carton are employed by Corky?s for its frozen HMR dinners
A three-compartment CPET tray, PE-based lidding film and colorful SBS carton are employed by Corky?s for its frozen HMR dinners

When Memphis-based Corky's Bar-B-Q introduced frozen dinners of its tasty barbecue last May, it targeted not only retailers but also a local health care provider. Surprisingly, the same packaging materials are used for both markets:

* A three-compartment, dual-ovenable tray thermoformed from 30-mil crystallized polyethylene terephthalate (CPET) by Green-Tek (Edgerton, WI)

* A 1-mil PE-based see-through lidding film manufactured by Rockwell Solutions in Scotland, represented in the U.S. by Green-Tek, and

* A 22-pt SBS outer folding carton that's offset-printed in five colors by The Milton Sternberger Co. (Memphis, TN)

"We call these our home meal replacement dinners," says Andrew Woodman, chief financial officer for family-owned Corky's. "We didn't want to have two separate stockkeeping units for our hospital cafeteria customers and for the grocery stores, so we decided to use the same packaging for both."

Initially, Corky's introduced two dinners: Bar-B-Q Chicken Breast (14 oz) and Bar-B-Q Pork Dinner (13 oz). The main entree is filled into the tray's largest compartment, which takes up about half of the tray. The trays also have two smaller compartments, one for baked beans, the other holding cinnamon apples. More recently, Corky's introduced a third HMR variety: Hot Tamales with Chili.

As this issue was going to press, Woodman said that Memphis-based Methodist Health Care was the exclusive institutional customer. The health care system operates 13 hospitals. Five of them sell the two original Corky's dinners from small cafeteria freezers.

"The Corky's products give us other selections we can offer to hospital visitors or staff members," points out Steve Scranton, MHC's director of food and nutrition services. "We started offering them last May. It's sold in an attractive printed package."

Beyond its graphic appeal, Scranton says the ability to quickly heat and eat the product wherever the buyer wants is an important advantage provided by the package.

"We often have microwaves available in the cafeterias," he says. "But we're finding that a lot of our nursing staff and office personnel who feel they can't take much time away from their office or floor come in and buy these. They take them back to their break areas or stations, microwave them and can enjoy them in a more private setting."

Plenty of potential

Scranton says that as the weather starts to get cooler, more people are going to want to stay in and eat a heartier meal like this. I think it's a product with potential," he adds.

Potential is precisely what Corky's believes the new product/package combination offers. "We sell our other products in different packaging configurations to Aramark, the airline service company, and for meals consumed on westbound Northwest airline flights," says Corky's Woodman. "We also sell packaged meals to companies such as Federal Express and Schering-Plough, where employees can grab them and go."

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