Case-ready fish in a cook-in tray

OceanPro launches its Fish N’ Easy brand of fresh fish in a cook-in CPET tray. Refrigerated shelf life is 11 days, enough to give retailers two weekends to make the sale.

Acolorful paperboard sleeve delivers shelf impact, while the CPET tray lets consumers cook the meals right in the package.
Acolorful paperboard sleeve delivers shelf impact, while the CPET tray lets consumers cook the meals right in the package.

With case-ready fresh meat finally gaining momentum in American supermarkets, some retailers have begun to press for case-ready fresh fish. As with meat, key objectives include minimizing in-store labor costs and reducing the square footage required in the fish department. Also, retailers want to capitalize on the extended shelf life that comes with modified-atmosphere packaging. The goal: make sure that consumers consistently find the fish they want in stock, yet avoid the overstocking that leads to markdowns as expiration dates are reached.

OceanPro Industries of Washington, DC, has responded to retailer requests for case-ready fish by developing a seven-item line of entrees called Casten’s Fish N’ Easy. Consumers remove the clear lidding material from the crystallized polyethylene terephthalate tray and place the tray in a conventional oven for about 16 minutes. If they’re in a hurry, they can microwave their dinner in under four minutes.

“It’s fresh fish in a two-compartment cookable tray along with a starch and a packet of sauce,” says production manager Jonathan Charmatz.

“We’re trying,” adds president Craig Casten, “to create a branded fresh seafood program throughout our region. We’ve added a precooked starch—rice, pasta, or potato—because that’s what retailers are telling us the consumer wants: a full meal.”

Consumers also want an easy cleanup when the meal is over, and OceanPro’s plastic cook-in tray eliminates washing up altogether. “Plus,” says Casten, “this addresses the widespread problem of people not knowing how to cook fish. The instructions are right on the package.”

11-day shelf life

A combination of processing and packaging technologies enables OceanPro to give its packaged fish an 11-day shelf life. That’s what retailers said they wanted, Casten claims, “Because it gives them two weekends to sell the fish.”

Before packaging begins, the fillets are immersed in a 150-gal vat of what technical coordinator Ron Goodman calls “natural ingredients and flavorings.”

“This includes,” Goodman continues, “certain antimicrobials and antioxidants, all of them natural, though I’d rather not specify what they are. It’s not so much a matter of ‘killing’ bacteria. ‘Inhibiting the growth of bacteria’ is a better way of putting it. Even something as ordinary as sugar or salt can act as an antimicrobial. As it enters the cell of the bacteria, water content is reduced, which means certain bacteria are inhibited from growing.”

Goodman also emphasizes how important sanitation is.

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