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Pre-packed lunches—a busy parent’s dream?

Some observers are calling them next-gen Lunchables, and while there is undoubtedly a similarity in appearance, these preservative-free pre-packed lunches are quite different.

Four thermoformed ‘pods’ snap into each paperboard tray.
Four thermoformed ‘pods’ snap into each paperboard tray.

Launched just over two years ago in Chicago, Wise Apple is a good example of where e-commerce and packaging meet. The firm prepares, packages, and delivers ready-to-eat meals and snacks to homes where school-age children live. Consumers select online which of 10 meal varieties they want for the week, and the corrugated case holding the meals arrives typically on a Sunday between 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. Thus, busy parents—by simply removing a tray from the refrigerator and putting it into a school bag—can send their kids to school with a lunch that is fresh, free of preservatives, organic when possible, and dietician-approved.

It’s basically Blue Apron or Hello Fresh for kids—without any need to do any cooking. Structurally, the Wise Apple offering is similar to Oscar Mayer brand Lunchables from Mondelez: Four compartments in a tray, one holding a protein, one a vegetable, one a fruit, and one a sweet treat. One Wise Apple tray sells for about $7.99. But whereas Lunchables includes extenders, preservatives, conditioners, colorings, and flavorings to ensure a refrigerated shelf life of several months, Wise Apple’s products have no such ingredients and are meant to be eaten in two weeks.

The role of packaging in this e-commerce offering, both from a machinery and a materials perspective, is essential. We begin with the thermoformed “pods,” as Wise Apple calls them, that hold the products themselves. These are either single or two-compartment containers supplied by Transparent Container. The sheet from which they are thermoformed is a structure that Transparent Container calls GRG. It’s a three-layer coextrusion consisting of food-grade PETG/recycled PET/food-grade PETG. The RPET in the center helps reduce cost compared to a monolayer PETG material. The structure provides enough gas-barrier properties to keep oxygen out and keep the backflushed gases in for the duration of the product’s two-week refrigerated shelf life. The GRG material is produced by Nan Ya LLC in its Texas facility and Transparent Container purchases it from Mark Products.

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