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Long ago and far away ...


Publishers Note:

Saul Beck purchased Quick Frozen Foods from Harcourt Brace Jovanovich in 1985. The magazine name was changed to Frozen Food Digest (including Quick Frozen Foods). The following pages contain events and news that were compiled beginning in 1938. Saul Beck Publications also publishes Quick Frozen Foods Annual Processors Directory & Warehouse Guide.

The first issue was 64 pages, of which 18 were advertising. Among the advertisers in that first issue that are still familiar today were processors Birds Eye
This article is about the company. For other uses, see birdseye.
Birds Eye is an international brand of frozen foods such as seafood, meat and vegetables.
, Booth Fisheries fisheries. From earliest times and in practically all countries, fisheries have been of industrial and commercial importance. In the large N Atlantic fishing grounds off Newfoundland and Labrador, for example, European and North American fishing fleets have long , Long Island Duckling duckling

baby duck.
; cabinet maker C. V. Hill; warehousemen U.S. Cold Storage, Merchants Refrigerating re·frig·er·ate  
tr.v. re·frig·er·at·ed, re·frig·er·at·ing, re·frig·er·ates
1. To cool or chill (a substance).

2. To preserve (food) by chilling.
 Company and National Cold Storage; and packaging company DuPont.

Circulation was only 2,000, advertising rates were commensurately low, but despite that the magazine edged into the black with its first issue. This was extraordinary, because the nation was still in the throes throe  
n.
1. A severe pang or spasm of pain, as in childbirth. See Synonyms at pain.

2. throes A condition of agonizing struggle or trouble: a country in the throes of economic collapse.
 of the deepest and most prolonged Depression in its history.

The total volume of frozen foods in 1938 was 268 million pounds. The category with the highest production was frozen fruits, which today has the lowest poundage POUNDAGE, practice. The amount allowed to the sheriff, or other officer, for commissions on, the money made by virtue of an execution. This allowance varies in different states, and to different officers. . In 1938 almost half, 130 million pounds, of everything frozen was fruits. Much of this was bulk, for use in ice cream, for preservers and bakers. Fruits were good items at retail, as well; a fine store might stock peaches, apricots, apples, strawberries, loganberries, gooseberries, cherries, cranberries, red raspberries, blackberries, currants, Persian melons and grapefruit grapefruit, pomelo (pŏm`əlō), or pummelo (pum`məlō), citrus fruit (Citrus paradisi) of the family Rutaceae (orange family).  sections. Fruits would remain the primary products through 1947, after which vegetables surged ahead, primarily because of their popularity in the retail cabinets.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The dollar value of all frozen products in 1938 was just $68 million. The main categories, in order of their importance, were fruits, vegetables, seafoods, poultry and meats. There were no frozen prepared foods and no concentrated juices, though a very limited amount of whole orange juice was frozen. There probably were about 200 processors, using the loosest definition of the term--but no one knows for sure, because at that time there was no directory of the industry.

A lot of what was frozen was intended for further processing and sale in a non-frozen form. Most retail stores had no frozen food cabinets at all. Those that did have them were usually quality stores catering to the carriage trade carriage trade
n.
Wealthy patrons or customers, as of a store.

Noun 1. carriage trade - trade from upper-class customers
. Very few supermarkets had any frozen foods. The large department stores This is a list of department stores. In the case of department store groups the location of the flagship store is given. This list does not include large specialist stores, which sometimes resemble department stores.  like Macy's Bamberger's and Marshall Fields would only that year begin to sell frozen foods in their gourmet departments and were early promoters of the products.

Usually a store kept only one brand because the cabinet was supplied to him either by a large company like Birds Eye or by his distributor. They paid rental or in certain circumstances were loaned the case. Many stores stocked frozen foods in their ice cream cabinets. Virtually all of these cabinets were closed, and a clerk had to be called if the customer wanted to buy a package. It was this fact that retarded the introduction of frozen foods into the supermarkets, because frozen foods were not suitable for self-service. About 90 percent of frozen food sales were bulk or institutional.

There either were signs above the cabinets listing the frozen products and the prices of each (and frozen foods were relatively high in price for the Depression) or glass thermopane windows, through which the packages might be seen--but even in those cabinets, a clerk or the store owner had to secure the package for the customer. Because of the cost of refrigeration refrigeration, process for drawing heat from substances to lower their temperature, often for purposes of preservation. Refrigeration in its modern, portable form also depends on insulating materials that are thin yet effective.  and service, coupled with low volume, retailers placed very high markeups on frozen products and kept them more as a convenience, regarding them as unprofitable, which they probably were. An estimated 5,000 to 6,000 stores carried frozen foods in 1938. The only storage space the consumer had for frozen foods was the ice cube compartment in the refrigerator. The frozen food packages were rectangular and small in size so they could fit into such compartments.

The word "frozen," when applied to food, had been considered a synonym synonym (sĭn`ənĭm) [Gr.,=having the same name], word having a meaning that is the same as or very similar to the meaning of another word of the same language. Some are alike in some meanings only, as live and dwell.  for "spoiled," for any fresh fruits or vegetables that became frozen by cold weather lost texture and flavor and were virtually inedible. For that reason many of the early brands had names like Honor Brand Frosted Foods Corp., or Birds Eye Frosted Foods. There still are vestiges remaining of that terminology such as the Eastern Frosted Foods Association, which still bears the old designation. QUICK FROZEN FOODS magazine was considered quite daring to use frozen foods in its title, but then, it was dealing directly with the trade and not the public.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

It should also be remembered that in 1938 something like 20 per cent of those people 21 to 65 years of age in the labor market labor market A place where labor is exchanged for wages; an LM is defined by geography, education and technical expertise, occupation, licensure or certification requirements, and job experience  were unemployed. A starting salary in most companies of $15 per week was considered fair, and $30 per week was adequate to support a family of four in modest circumstances. Less than two per cent of the high school graduates went on to college, and 40 per cent of American-born children never finished high school. There were no superhighways, radio was the big thing and television sets were not yet available in the stores, though you could build your own if you bought the components. A drawback was that there were no channels to tune in on.

Only certain areas of the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  sold frozen foods at all. Great sections of the country had no cabinets and no distributors, so the products were simply unavailable. That was the situation as the first issue of QUICK FROZEN FOODS appeared, and we have capsulated cap·su·late   also cap·su·lat·ed
adj.
Enclosed in or formed into a capsule.



capsu·la
 some of the events--both highlights and fascinating trivia--of the 68 years that our magazine has been the magazine of record, the spokesman, the prophet and the inspirator in·spi·ra·tor  
n.
1. A device, such as a respirator or inhaler, by which a gas, vapor, or air is drawn in.

2. One who inspires or motivates others.
 to the frozen food industry.

1938

August

Super markets: "Some super markets have taken to frozen foods in a big way. This is so in the East, but more especially throughout the Midwest. Most distributors of standard frozen food lines can count anywhere from 2% to 10% of their outlets as super markets. Interesting also is the super market's merchandising attitude towards frosted foods. Some large supers have installed two cases, each with a complete line."--Frozen Foods Forum.

Distribution: "Birds Eye has complete control over its distribution. All advertising is furnished by them--prices are maintained. Price cutting may mean loss of franchise.... Birds Eye ... rents the case for $10 to $12.50 a month on a three-year contract ... but the case remains their property."

England: Birds Eye established Frosted Foods Ltd. in Great Britain Great Britain, officially United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, constitutional monarchy (2005 est. pop. 60,441,000), 94,226 sq mi (244,044 sq km), on the British Isles, off W Europe. The country is often referred to simply as Britain.  to sell its brand frozen foods, as well as franchise it to other nations; but eventually it was purchased by Unilever and is today the major brand in the United Kingdom, and in tonnage and dollar sales it has at times ranked first in the world.

Warehouse holdings: The first frozen food warehouse holding report in history was published by the U.S Department of Agriculture this month, and as of July 1, 1938, showed 25 million pounds of fruits and 31 million pounds of vegetables in low-temperature storage. Biggest item is strawberries with almost 11 million pounds, second-biggest is green peas with 10.7 million pounds.

September

Airline feeding: The cover of the issue showed a passenger on United Air Lines eating frozen raspberries as part of her meal.

Shrimp freezing. Birds Eye announced that it would be opening a plant for the freezing of shrimp in Jacksonville, Fla.

October

Retail prices. Frozen spinach (pound), 23 cents; peas, 25 cents; peas and carrots, 23 cents; cauliflower cauliflower (kô`lĭflou'ər, käl`ĭ–), variety of cabbage, with an edible head of condensed flowers and flower stems. Broccoli is the horticultural variety (botrytis); both were cultivated in Roman times. , 19 cents; baby lima beans, 25 cents; broccoli, 23 cents; corn, 23 cents; two ears corn-on-the-cob, 16 cents.

Clarence Birdseye Clarence Birdseye (December 9, 1886 - October 7, 1956) was an American inventor who is considered the founder of the modern frozen food industry. Early life
Birdseye was born in Brooklyn in New York City.
. Reported manufacturing his newest invention, the Birdseye Reflector reflector: see telescope.  lamp, silvered on the inside to control the light without external reflection of any kind.

December

Frozen turkey rolls were suggested by QUICK FROZEN FOODS to increase sales and profitability, and a step-by-step photo sequence of how to prepare them for freezing was presented.

1939

January

England: S. W. Smedley, British frozen food processor, ran first full-page frozen food ad in Great Britain in the London Daily Standard, for Thursday, December 29, 1938, promoting frozen vegetables Frozen vegatables (also freeze-dried vegetables) are commercially packaged vegetables that are sold in the frozen section of the store, usually packaged in either rectangular boxes or plastic bags.  and berries for New Year's Day New Year's Day, among ancient peoples the first day of the year frequently corresponded to the vernal or autumnal equinox, or to the summer or winter solstice. In the Middle Ages it was celebrated among Christians usually on Mar. 25.  celebrations.

February

Chipsteaks. The inventor and first producer of chipsteaks, thinly sliced beef with all the gristle gristle: see cartilage.  and fat removed, was Earl F. Shores of the Chipsteak Company, Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. , Calif.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Locker plants. Since few homes have freezers, there are plants in hundreds of small towns and some cities where you can rent a low-temperature drawer and store frozen products. These rental places would usually cut up, wrap and freeze sides of beef as well as poultry for customers, and they are beginning to stock and sell frozen foods in commercial packs, as well as pack some themselves. QUICK FROZEN FOODS is catering to them, running articles every issue on their progress.

March

Frozen food pack. QUICK FROZEN FOODS estimates that of all frozen foods produced in 1938, 60% went to further processors, bakeries, ice cream manufacturers and preservers, 30% to the institutional trade and just 10% to the retail stores.

Frosted Foods Institute of California. This group was formed by California industry for the sole purpose of renting an exhibit at the Golden Gate International Exposition Golden Gate International Exposition (1939 and 1940) was held at San Francisco, California to celebrate two newly-built bridges. The San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge was dedicated in 1936 and the Golden Gate Bridge was dedicated in 1937.  of San Francisco Bay San Francisco Bay, 50 mi (80 km) long and from 3 to 13 mi (4.8–21 km) wide, W Calif.; entered through the Golden Gate, a strait between two peninsulas. , in which they displayed frozen foods and used the slogans: "Fresh summer foods in winter," "Science's Gift to Good Living," and added, "natural flavors," "firm texture," "full vitamin values," "no waste," "sanitary pack," "easily prepared." It was not an association in a true sense, but would meet annually.

Cryovac. The Dewey & Almy Chemical Co. believes it has come up with shrink-wrap of great advantage for packaging frozen poultry.

Birds Eye. At a Chicago dinner Clarence Francis, president of General Foods, reveals that $40 million has been invested in Birds Eye since 1929 and that 4,250 retail stores across the country carry the brand.

1939 New York World's Fair There have been two World's Fairs in New York City:

  • 1939 New York World's Fair (1939-1940) at Flushing Meadows in Queens gave us Futurama, the Trylon, and Perisphere.
. Birds Eye is the only frozen food company with an exhibit.

April

Fruits. Morris Roth, head of Frigid frig·id
adj.
1. Extremely cold.

2. Persistently averse to sexual intercourse.
 Food Products, of Detroit, expands to a Cleveland location to increase production of frozen fruits. (This firm is still a leader in that field.)

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Trucking: 85% of the refrigerated re·frig·er·ate  
tr.v. re·frig·er·at·ed, re·frig·er·at·ing, re·frig·er·ates
1. To cool or chill (a substance).

2. To preserve (food) by chilling.
 truck lines still using dry ice to transport frozen foods.

May

Packaging. Bags, primarily cellophane cellophane, thin, transparent sheet or tube of regenerated cellulose. Cellophane is used in packaging and as a membrane for dialysis. It is sometimes dyed and can be moisture-proofed by a thin coating of pyroxylin. , were in use by 81% of FF packers for at least some products, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 a QFF survey. Some reported using cellophane bags as far back as 1930. In most cases the bags were inserted in the carton, giving double protection and good stacking.

Plant construction. The John Dulany & Sons plant in Exmore, Va., is one of the first built from the ground up specifically for freezing products. Most others have converted from other uses. Vegetables and fruits are the products packed.

June

Eastern Frosted Foods Association. A luncheon meeting is held at the Lincoln Hotel in New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
, presided over by John J. Antun of the Merchants Refrigeration Company, for what would become the nation's first true frozen food association. They call themselves The New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Quick Frozen Foods Luncheon Club, eventually The Eastern Frosted Foods Association.

July

Sales per store. Gross sales Gross Sales

A measure of overall sales that isn't adjusted for customer discounts or returns, calculated simply by adding all sales invoices, and not including operating expenses, cost of goods sold, payment of taxes, or any other charge.
 of all foods in many small stores Noun 1. small stores - personal items conforming to regulations that are sold aboard ship or at a naval base and charged to the person's pay
commissary - a retail store that sells equipment and provisions (usually to military personnel)
 (and super markets are still in their early growth stage) across the country are considered adequate at $2,000 a week. Frozen foods sales in these stores, where they carry frozen products, are averaging $20 to $40 weekly.

August

QFF circulation. Getting advertising was tough, but at the end of its first year, QUICK FROZEN FOODS had 4,853 paid subscribers. The magazine filled a need.

World War II. Packers, brokers, transporters, warehousemen and equipment manufacturers see the outbreak of hostilities in Europe as a boost to business.

September

The big three brands: Birds Eye, the Stokely-controlled Honor Brand, and Booth, all strong in retail sizes.

Fresh frozen dogfood: Scientifically blended by Nieman's.

Carrier Corp. This manufacturer of refrigeration and air-conditioning equipment is the first exhibitor to renew space at the New York World's Fair. As part of its exhibit it has an igloo igloo (ĭg`l) [Inuit,=house]. The Eskimos traditionally had three types of houses.  with a frozen food cabinet, stocked with Adj. 1. stocked with - furnished with more than enough; "rivers well stocked with fish"; "a well-stocked store"
stocked

furnished, equipped - provided with whatever is necessary for a purpose (as furniture or equipment or authority); "a furnished apartment";
 retail products on display.

Door-to-door-sales of frozen foods were instigated by BobWhite bobwhite, common name for an American henlike bird of the family Phasianidae, which also includes the pheasant and the partridge. The eastern bobwhite quail (Colinus virginianus) is about 10 in. (25 cm) long.  Frosted Foods, New York, N.Y., which sold products to housewives on a regular route from a refrigerated truck. During the forties and even into the fifties, there were hundreds of such businesses. Macy's and Bamberger's department store would also deliver with dry ice and Jiffy bags.

December

Full-color frozen food advertisement, a first, appeared on the inside back cover of the Saturday Evening Post, paid for by Du Pont Du Pont (dpŏnt), family notable in U.S. industrial history. The Du Pont family's importance began when Eleuthère Irénée Du Pont established a gunpowder mill on the  Cellophane, then a leader in frozen food packaging.

Frozen lamb. A trial shipment, pro-cut, individually wrapped in cellophane, was shipped from Iceland. Tests were made under direction of QUICK FROZEN FOODS special representative Roy M. Cohen cohen
 or kohen

(Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male.
.

Midwestern Frozen Food Association organized by QUICK FROZEN FOODS at the Hotel Auditorium, December 13, 1939, along the lines of the previously-formed New York group. Price of attendance is the cost of the Chicago luncheon, $1.00.

1940

January

Birds Eye drops price control. Under George Mentley, that primary brand announces that it would no longer enforce price controls on its products, and retailers could now charge whatever they wished. That it would also abandon its policy of renting cabinets, and retailers could use their own or purchase them outright. Birds Eye had 4,400 cabinets on rental and would apply rental money already paid by retailer toward the purchase of the cabinet. Simultaneously it was taking a 22-page schedule in Life magazine for 1940, including some in four-color, to promote its products.

First National Frozen Food Meeting sponsored by QUICK FROZEN FOODS magazine in conjunction with the National Canners Association Convention in Chicago, on January 23, 1940, at the Auditorium Hotel. Two hundred attend and 50 have to be turned away for lack of accommodations. Chairman is John J. Antun and among the featured speakers is H. C. Diehl of the U.S. Frozen Food Laboratories in Seattle, Wash. There are exhibits by 27 members of the frozen food industry. L. F. Noonan, a processor who heads the Frosted Food Institute of California, says that it is now a group of packers dedicated to improving business in that state. At the end of 1939, there were 375 stores with frozen food cabinets in the entire state of California!

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

February

Good Humor Noun 1. good humor - a cheerful and agreeable mood
amiability, good humour, good temper

humour, mood, temper, humor - a characteristic (habitual or relatively temporary) state of feeling; "whether he praised or cursed me depended on his temper at the time";
 is now using its trucks in the winter, selling 23 different frozen fruits and vegetables door-to-door, beginning January 19, 1940, in the Newark and Elizabeth, N.J., environs. Super markets regard it as good advertising for frozen products, all of which are Good Humor brand.

Quick Frozen Foods now claims 7,000 circulation.

April

Refrigerator with freezer compartment built by Philco promoted by an offer of 21 packages of Birds Eye frozen foods for anyone who buys it. This sparks tie-ins by other processors with refrigerator manufacturers.

Frosted Foods Association of New York. The New York Quick Frozen Foods Luncheon club, which had met 10 times since May 1939, decided to formalize activities, and John Antun was elected president. Dues were set at $10 a year. The group has been averaging 60 a meeting.

California: Frozen food sales, which reached an estimated $350,000 in 1939, is given a shot in the arm when Golden State Dairy, of San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden , receives a statewide franchise for the distribution of Birds Eye frozen foods. Birds Eye announces that this would bring the total number of stores selling its products to 7,000, but in spite of this the brand is still unprofitable. It would not renew its exhibit for the second year at the World's Fair world's fair: see exposition.
world's fair

Specially constructed attraction showcasing the science, technology, and culture of participating countries and enterprises.
 on which it had spent $170,000.

May

Statistics. In the absence of any industry body collecting production figures, QUICK FROZEN FOODS begins a comprehensive survey of all packers and estimates seem to indicate a 45% increase in frozen food output in 1939.

Ice cream law blocks frozen. Laws passed many years earlier to keep any other products out of ice cream cabinets on a state-by-state basis effectively slow down the distribution of frozen foods, even though the ice cream companies intended them only to keep butter and other dairy products dairy products dairy nplproduits laitier

dairy products dairy nplMilchprodukte pl, Molkereiprodukte pl 
 out of their cabinets. The long-range effect will be good, because it forces distributors to place frozen food cabinets in their customers' stores.

American Medical Association American Medical Association (AMA), professional physicians' organization (founded 1847). Its goals are to protect the interests of American physicians, advance public health, and support the growth of medical science.  votes to consider placing frozen foods on list of acceptable foods with high nutritive nutritive /nu·tri·tive/ (noo´tri-tiv) nutritional.

nu·tri·tive
adj.
1. Of or relating to nutrition.

2. Nutritious; nourishing.
 value, predominantly due to the research papers of Clarence Birdseye, J. G. Woodroof, Donald K. Tressler, H. C. Diehl, M. A. Joslyn and C. F. Evers--all the papers published in trade magazines and all regular contributors to QUICK FROZEN FOODS. The first product cleared is Birds Eye peas, given the seal of acceptance by The Council on Foods of The American Medical Association.

June

The Eastern Frosted Foods Association makes an arrangement with Carrier Corp., exhibiting refrigeration at the New York World's Fair, to exhibit retail frozen foods. The only cost to participating members is the salary of an attendee and the product displayed. They also arrange a retail Frozen Food Week promotion.

Iceland. The Federation of Iceland Cooperative Societies, Reykjavik, Iceland, opens an office in New York City, feeling there might be a market for its frozen fish in this country.

July

Snider Packing, Rochester, N.Y., has entered frozen under its own label, made famous by ketchup, with peas, asparagus asparagus, perennial garden vegetable (Asparagus officinalis) of the family Liliaceae (lily family), native to the E Mediterranean area and now naturalized over much of the world.  and spinach.

Booth Fisheries. A net income of $153,502.57 for that firm's fiscal year, $100,000 more than the previous year, is announced by president R. P. Fletcher Jr.

August

Low-temperature cabinets. Sales increasing at 100% annually, with 12,000 cabinets now thought, to be in stores. Retail voluntaries and cooperatives lead the field in rate of cabinet installation, whereas corporate chains hold back.

Self-serve cabinets. Schaefer offers center aisle or wall cabinets, with sliding glass doors of thermopane, so the consumer can select own package. Automatic elevator lifts move a new package to the height of the one removed. A major advance in FF merchandising.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Thaw-pack orange juice made available by Citrifrost Corp., Pico, Calif., in a quart-size pliofilm bag that could remain five days in the refrigerator after thawing. The juice is whole juice.

Brand names. QUICK FROZEN FOODS begins the world's first directory of frozen brand names in its August 1940 issue.

Flowers. A Mobile, Ala., cold storage warehouse manager, A. A. Richards, of Alabama State Docks, announces that he has successfully frozen peonies and gladiolis. They keep indefinitely, and when thawed out are like fresh-picked.

Cooked foods. The brand name "Magic Meals" registered by California Consumers Corp., Los Angeles, preparatory to marketing cooked frozen products including roast turkey, halibut halibut: see flatfish.
halibut

Any of various flatfishes, especially the Atlantic and Pacific halibuts (genus Hippoglossus, family Pleuronectidae), both of which have eyes and colour on the right side.
 steak, vegetable soup and a barbecue sauce.

Distributors. Lists of distributors from all over the country who want to buy frozen food from packers published in QUICK FROZEN FOODS. For example, in October 1940: "Mercantile, Inc., Milbank, S.D., are interested in distributing a complete line of quick frozen foods. They have a fleet of refrigerated trucks and cover thirteen counties in South Dakota South Dakota (dəkō`tə), state in the N central United States. It is bordered by North Dakota (N), Minnesota and Iowa (E), Nebraska (S), and Wyoming and Montana (W).  and nine counties in Minnesota This is a List of counties in Minnesota. There are 87 counties in the U.S. state of Minnesota. There are also several historical counties.

The original five Minnesota counties were Benton, Isanti, Ramsey, Wabasha, and Washington.
." That distributor is still in the frozen food business, both retail and institutional, and may have gotten its start in frozen from that notice.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

November

Clarence Birdseye, currently with Gravity Froster Corporation, Boston, Mass., in one of a number of feature articles especially written for QUICK FROZEN FOODS, offers chapter and verse chapter and verse
n.
1. Full, detailed information on a subject or issue: recited the client's complaints by chapter and verse.

2. Bible A specific passage.
 on quality control. For example, fresh-caught pollock left on a dock in the summer will be "sunburned sun·burn  
n.
Inflammation or blistering of the skin caused by overexposure to direct sunlight.

tr. & intr.v. sun·burned or sun·burnt , sun·burn·ing, sun·burns
To affect or be affected with sunburn.
" in six hours, and in the winter will begin to slow freeze, but if immediately iced will stay in good condition for five days.

Pel-freez was registered by H. F. Pelphrey & Son, Los Angeles, on July 15, 1940, as a trade name for frozen California domestic rabbits.

A & P registered "Polestar Polestar: see Polaris. " as a trade name for its private label frozen fish fillets, on July 2, 1940.

December

Home freezers. Initially promoted hard by Deepfreeze Division of Motor Products Corporation to packers and distributors for placement in stores, these units are round with a single cover on top and compressor attached. The company opened a show room in Detroit, with 45 operating units on display, stuffed with frozen foods.

First all-frozen-food store: the Frostar Market, White Plains, N.Y., with 23 Deepfreeze cabinets lining a wall, with signs in back of each telling what products are in them. The reason the store uses home-freezer-type units for display is that it is also the authorized agency for their sale. The food prices are criticized as "unnecessarily low" by other food stores in the area, because vegetables are 15 to 33 cents a package. Average sale is 80 cents, and the store is serving 150 customers a day.

1941

January

Individually Quick Frozen or IQF IQF Individually Quick Frozen (food processing)
IQF International Quilt Festival
IQF Intrinsic Quality Factor (EIA-440/A)
IQF Interactive Query Facility
IQF Integra Query File
 products, called "loose pack," gaining interest.

February

Baked goods. Quick frozen cakes, pies, biscuits, cookies, batters, yeast rolls all practical, Purdue University Purdue University (pərdy`, -d`), main campus at West Lafayette, Ind.  experimenters report. Why doesn't someone do it?

First National Frozen Food Convention and Exhibition, sponsored by QUICK FROZEN FOODS magazine, is held at the Auditorium Hotel, Chicago, Ill., Jan. 21-24, 1941. There are 1,500 people in attendance and 21 frozen food exhibits. Among the exhibitors: Honor Brand, Armour, Swift, Booth, Priebe, Snider, BobWhite, Deepfreeze and Cedergreen. There were 200 at the Annual Frozen Food Luncheon. Among the speakers, Dr. J Noun 1. Dr. J - United States basketball forward (born in 1950)
Erving, Julius Erving, Julius Winfield Erving
. G. Woodroof, of the Georgia Experiment Station of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, said: "The vitamins in frozen products are really higher than those in the fresh products, that is, out-of-season products.... Vitamins in frozen products, particulary A and C, are the highest vitamins that you can get of any obtainable source out-of-season." Hotel rates were $2.50 with bath, $1.50 without.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

April

Quick Frozen Foods and The Locker Plant becomes the name of the magazine; the locker plants are the margin of survival for the publication.

Tin cans tin cans

put on car of newlyweds leaving ceremony. [Am. Cult.: Misc.]

See : Marriage
 are becoming scarce, and it is predicted that frozen foods which could be marketed in paper might benefit as a result.

Frozen ground coffee packed for BobWhite, home delivery frozen food company. Freezing prevents oils in coffee from turning rancid ran·cid
adj.
Having the disagreeable odor or taste of decomposing oils or fats.



rancid

having a musty, rank taste or smell; applied to fats that have undergone decomposition, with the liberation of fatty acids.
, thereby providing better flavor.

Frick freezer. A "Blizzard Freezer" announced by Frick. This box-like affair has doors for carts of products to be frozen. Inside, air is circulated at 40 to 50 degrees below zero Fahrenheit. The freezer has a capacity of 6,000 pounds a day.

July

Refrigerated trucks. An estimated 5,000 trucks capable of transporting frozen foods are in use.

August

Institutional distributors. Twenty-four are recorded by QUICK FROZEN FOODS as adding retail sizes of frozen products, where previously they had not done that type of business.

September

Self-service frozen foods are fitting into super markets through use of transparent, sliding glass-top cabinets. High-Low Food Markets, Chicago, has installed them in 25 stores.

December

R. H. Macy, New York, triples the space for frozen foods in its store.

1942

February

War and frozen foods: "It may well be the literal making of the frozen foods industry. Shortages which may become apparent in domestic distribution of fruits and vegetables can be supplied by quick frozen foods. The industry may make greater strides in the next two years than it has made in the entire time since its inception."--Editorial.

National Association of Frozen Food Packers. Under leadership of E. T. Gibson, Birds Eye head, leading processors of frozen foods assembled January 25, 1942, at the Blackstone Hotel The Blackstone Hotel is located in Chicago on the corner of Michigan Avenue and Balbo Street in the Michigan Boulevard Historic District in the Loop community area of Chicago, Illinois. This 21-story hotel was built from 1908 to 1910 and designed by Marshall and Fox. , Chicago, and in four hours formed a national association with Gibson as president; Ralph O. Dulany, John H. Dulany & Son, vice president; John N. Seaman, Bozeman Canning Co., vice president; and A. E. Stevens, Birds Eye, temporary secretary. The meeting was held the day before The Second National Quick Frozen Foods Exposition at the La Salle La Salle, city (1990 pop. 9,717), La Salle co., N Ill., on the Illinois River; settled 1830, inc. 1852. It forms a tricity unit with Peru and Oglesby. Corn, wheat, and soybeans are grown, and cattle and hogs are raised.  Hotel, Chicago, Jan. 26-29, 1942, sponsored by QUICK FROZEN FOODS magazine.

The Second National Convention. There were 1,300 visitors and 35 exhibitors. Announcement of the formation of the National Association of Frozen Food Packers was made by Gibson at the Frozen Food Forum Luncheon on Jan. 27 to an attendence of 400: "We recognized the need in Washington for accurate information about the frozen foods industry and the need in behalf of the industry itself of having a spokesman who could speak, not for individual companies, but for the producing side of the industry, particularly, which is what Washington is interested in today."

March

Mechanical refrigeration of trucks. Truckers on the West Coast had been discouraged because dry ice could not hold the products properly. However, increasing use of mechanical refrigeration is bringing truckers into favor again. One trucker claimed transporting 25 million pounds in nine Western states during a single year.

Jewel Tea, Chicago retail food chain, is installing FF cabinets in all of its 150 stores.

Hors d'oeuvres are frozen with 10 different fillings by Dover D'oeuvres, New York, N.Y. They are prepared in rolls which are thawed and sliced.

Home freezers. DeepFreeze Company is employing door-to-door salesmen to sell home freezers, trying everything from supplying food themselves to linking up with the customer's favorite store, but it is tough going.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

April

FF men to government: A. E. Stevens, Birds Eye vice president, goes to Washington, D.C., as Administrator of the Fruit & Vegetable section of the Office of Price Administration. Many other important frozen food people move into permanent and consultantancy government posts.

Dog food. Rolled dog food in pound sizes is being packed by Herbert A. Nieman Co., Thiensville, Wis. Shortage of tin is moving some dog food packers into frozen.

May

Macy's in New York City advertises home freezers manufactured by Schaefer, Inc., at $259, and is willing to extend credit for payment.

July

Price ceilings. Through the efforts of the National Association of Frozen Food Packers, very fair price ceilings for packer, distributor and retailer of frozen foods--with the option to pass price increases along--are promulgated prom·ul·gate  
tr.v. prom·ul·gat·ed, prom·ul·gat·ing, prom·ul·gates
1. To make known (a decree, for example) by public declaration; announce officially. See Synonyms at announce.

2.
 by the government. This ensures profitability in frozen foods for all handling them.

Larry Martin Larry Martin (born 1943) is an American vertebrate paleontologist and curator of the Natural History Museum and Biodiversity Research Center at the University of Kansas. Among Martin's work is research on the Triassic reptile Longisquama  elected secretary of the National Association of Frozen Food Packers. Martin had been in charge of the Quick-Frozen Foods Division of the U.S. Office of Price Administration (OPA OPA: see Office of Price Administration. ). He replaces temporary officer Edgar M. Burns, Oregon Burns is a city in Harney County, Oregon, United States. The population was 3,064 at the 2000 census. It is the county seat of Harney CountyGR6.

Burns was officially established in 1884 and incorporated upon Harney county's creation in 1889.
 packer.

August

Prepared Foods. Chicken a la king, roast turkey, lobster a la Newburg Noun 1. lobster a la Newburg - lobster in Newburg sauce served on buttered toast or rice
lobster Newburg

seafood Newburg - seafood in Newburg sauce served on toast or rice
 and halibut a la king all marketed by Frost-Cooked Foods, Inc., Boston.

F. G. Lamb & Co., Freewater, Ore., has undertaken to freeze four million pounds of peas for the Campbell Soup Co.

Baked beans baked beans
Noun, pl

haricot beans, baked and tinned in tomato sauce

baked beans npljudías fpl en salsa de tomate

baked beans bake npl
 in frozen form introduced by Birds Eye.

September

Corn beef hash in frozen form marketed by National Frosted Foods, New York City distributor. The product is frozen in Argentina in one pound blocks.

Ocean Garden brand granted to Marine Products Company, San Diego San Diego (săn dēā`gō), city (1990 pop. 1,110,549), seat of San Diego co., S Calif., on San Diego Bay; inc. 1850. San Diego includes the unincorporated communities of La Jolla and Spring Valley. Coronado is across the bay. , Calif., for frozen shrimp. (Trademark was applied for in 1939.)

The Locker Plant, a separate section which literally splits the magazine in two, is started. All editorial and advertising matter related to locker plants is included in this section, which is frequently half the size of the total magazine.

October

100% production increase is requested of the frozen food industry by the government, which states that it will issue priorities for obtaining equipment. The biggest problem is not obtaining equipment, but labor.

The Pennsylvania Railroad Pennsylvania Railroad, former U.S. transportation company; inc. 1846 by the Pennsylvania legislature. It opened in 1854 as a single-track line between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.  says frozen foods are a godsend god·send  
n.
Something wanted or needed that comes or happens unexpectedly.



[Alteration of Middle English goddes sand, God's message : goddes, genitive of God, God
 for their dining cars, because of indeterminate That which is uncertain or not particularly designated.


INDETERMINATE. That which is uncertain or not particularly designated; as, if I sell you one hundred bushels of wheat, without stating what wheat. 1 Bouv. Inst. n. 950.
 number of people who may eat dinner.

Mixed vegetables, five vegetables in one package, are going over strong for Birds Eye.

Circulation of QFF now guaranteed at 8,000, including 416 copies to packers, 1,719 to wholesale distributors of quick frozen foods, 1,241 to ice cream companies, dairies & creameries and 4,428 to refrigerated locker plants.

November

Pack figures issued by the National Association of Frozen Food Packers for 1941: 107 million pounds of frozen fruits and 97 million pounds of frozen vegetables.

December

Dehydration dehydration

Method of food preservation in which moisture (primarily water) is removed. Dehydration inhibits the growth of microorganisms and often reduces the bulk of food.
. Government urging frozen food packers to go into dehydrated foods Noun 1. dehydrated foods - food preserved by dehydration
dehydrated food

food product, foodstuff - a substance that can be used or prepared for use as food
, wanting 400 million pounds in 1943, and making it very easy for them to get equipment. Some are responding.

National Frozen Food Packers Association sponsors session at Food Processors Conference, at the Palmer House This article is about the hotel in Chicago. For the Sauk Centre hotel, see The Palmer House (Sauk Centre). For Potter Palmer's mansion, see Palmer Mansion

The Palmer House Hilton is a famous and historic hotel in downtown Chicago.
. Chicago, Dec. 16, 1942, in which WPB WPB: see War Production Board.  (War Production Board) officials told the food industry what would be expected of them. There were 300 present, and they learned that four million pounds of metal had been allocated for the frozen food industry, primarily for equipment. No tin at all for cans. No priorities will be needed for paper packaging. Small packers can submit proposals for expansion. Draft deferments were available for essential agricultural workers, and there could be shifting of workers from nonessential non·es·sen·tial
adj.
Being a substance required for normal functioning but not needed in the diet because the body can synthesize it.
 crops, special training of workers and student and volunteer work. The industry suggested Mexican labor, woman and child labor child labor, use of the young as workers in factories, farms, and mines. Child labor was first recognized as a social problem with the introduction of the factory system in late 18th-century Great Britain.  and Army recruit Recruit or Army recruit is a term often colloquially used to refer to the lowest military rank in various armed services. It usually implies that the soldier so labeled has not yet completed basic training.

More formally, "recruit" means a person attending boot camp.
 labor. A packer could borrow up to 25% against amount to be supplied Army.

War Production Board tells the FF industry it will need 7 million additional pounds of frozen vegetables and fruits during 1943 to feed the Armed Forces. The 21 largest packers are producing 97% of all frozen fruits and vegetables. That includes everyone who packed more than 1.3 million pounds.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

1943

February

Government purchases. Virtually all the government demands of the frozen foods fruit and vegetable packers for 71 million pounds of product is offered. "This is indeed a momentous achievement for so young an industry," wrote QFF, "It bespeaks efficiency, organization, and willingness to aid in the war effort."

Rationing. The government puts many frozen foods under point rationing; however, the number of points needed to buy a package of frozen foods was far less than that needed for identical canned foods. For example, equivalant weight of peas were 10 points for frozen and 16 for canned, so the consumer could buy more food by switching to frozen. Every newspaper in America, and every retail food store handling frozen, printed or posted signs indicating the points needed. It was an incredible advertisement for frozen foods and at a time when they had a rationing advantage.

March

Institutional sales halt. The Eastern Frosted Foods Association sends a committee of institutional distributors to Washington, D.C., on March 16 to appeal for relief, because lack of points and specific regulation prevent buying existing stocks in warehouses. The meeting is held with James Stout James Stout (May 6, 1910 - August, 1986) was an American thoroughbred horse racing jockey.

Known as "Jimmy," he began working at a racetrack as a stable boy then in 1930 became a professional jockey.
 of the OPA. Some distributors report no sales in containers under 10 pounds in three weeks.

Ice cream. Government order limiting ice cream industry to only 65% of milk fat and milk solids offered opportunity to up the fruit content and increase the total supply by as much as 10%. This fruit could be supplied in frozen form since tin was unavailable.

Preserves. Any extra cost involved in buying frozen fruits for use in jams and jellies can be passed on to the customer, the government rules.

Price supports. The government agrees to buy peas, corn, lima beans, snap beans and some fruits from farmers at 1943 support prices and to resell them to freezers at 1942 lower prices, providing a subsidy and limiting inflationary impact.

Points reduced. Because frozen food inventories are piling up in the warehouses, the government reduces requirements four points a pound.

Institutional sales dropped from 42% to 65% as a rationing point system was awaited.

Army transport. The 71 million pounds of frozen vegetables purchased by the Army will be moved in 2,500 carloads from May through December 1943.

Dehydration section. The move to dehydration, encouraged by the government, is so precipitous that QFF puts in a special section to run monthly.

Prepared foods. Many prepared foods have no ration points put on them at all, so many small companies begin to freeze them. Among them, Red-E-Foods, Inc., Rochester, N.Y., has fish and clam chowder chowder, stew of fish or shellfish with potatoes, onions, and pork (usually salt pork), thickened with crumbled hard bread. The name chowder seems to have originated from the French word chaudière , chicken chili among other items.

May

Point pick-up. Sales of retail frozen foods increased 48%, and institutional, 27%, the two weeks following drop in points required to buy them. Up to then, 4.6% of consumers' points were spent for retail frozen. In the last two weeks, 8% of available points spent for frozen.

General Foods buys Snider, and a new Snider division is formed. Since General Foods owns Birds Eye, the frozen part of Snider's business is merged into that label.

June

"Bible of the Industry." That phrase, which has today become standard regarding QUICK FROZEN FOODS, first used.

Distributor relief. A ruling anticipated for July will allow institutional distributors a 29% markup (text) markup - In computerised document preparation, a method of adding information to the text indicating the logical components of a document, or instructions for layout of the text on the page or other information which can be interpreted by some automatic system.  on frozen foods. This will permit them to resume normal business.

July

Quick Frozen Foods Confidential Newsletter, a weekly mimeographed paper, is established to give readers instant information on what is happening in Washington, D.C., regarding wartime legislation on frozen foods.

November

Point increase. An across-the-board increase on frozen vegetables, doubling and tripling amount of points needed, causes consternation in view of a pack predicted at 100% greater. Eastern Frosted Food Association of N.Y. and Quick Frozen Foods Association of Chicago file protests to Washington. OPA also discourages packing institutional sizes in particular.

December

Frozen tomatoes, first blanched blanch   also blench
v. blanched also blenched, blanch·ing also blench·ing, blanch·es also blench·es

v.tr.
1. To take the color from; bleach.

2.
 and then frozen whole in 30-pound containers are available from the Loughead Packing Company, Fresno, Calif.

Refrigeration Research Foundation formed as an adjunct of the National Association of Refrigerated Warehouses, November 18, 1943, in Chicago. H. C. Diehl, chief of commodity Processing Division of Western Regional Research Laboratory, Albany, Calif., has requested release from the government to act as its director.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

1944

January

Frozen food store. Deepfreeze Motor Products, manufacturer of home freezers, has opened an all-frozen food store in Hubbard Woods, near Chicago, delivering frozen foods to the homes of freezer owners.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Birds Eye-Snider Division formed within the General Foods organization combining processing and distribution operations under one head.

Ed White resigns as head of Honor Brand and opens brokerage in San Francisco.

February

Production. Out of anticipated 240 million pounds of frozen vegetables for the crop year ended June 30, 1944, the Army will take 74 million pounds.

Ralph Dulany elected president of the National Association of Frozen Food Packers.

Post-War frozen food cabinets. Two meetings were held by QUICK FROZEN FOODS in cooperation with the Eastern Frosted Foods Association and the Chicago Association on January 20th and February 15th respectively on the problem of expansion of retail cabinets after the War. The two meetings were attended by over 500.

William O. Vilter, president of the Vilter Manufacturing Co. Milwaukee, major manufacturer of ammonia compressors for freezing plants, dies at age 62.

Clarence Birdseye sees bright future (15 years off) for dehydrated foods, agrees to join technical advisory board of QUICK FROZEN FOODS.

April

Self-service cabinets. In survey by QUICK FROZEN FOODS of super markets, it is found that 95% prefer self-service frozen food cabinets.

Kold Kist kist  
n.
Variant of cist2.


kist
Noun

Scot & S African a large wooden chest

Kist a chest of money, hence, a store or cache of money, 1619.
 Frozen Foods and Kermin Products are two of half-dozen new frozen prepared food companies in Los Angeles.

June

Whole orange juice frozen in glass under Cold Gold brand by Pure Fruit Juices of Los Angeles. Agitation of the juice while freezing leaves air space in center of container and the additional expansion of juice on freezing is inward, preventing jar from breaking under pressure.

375 foods frozen successfully are listed by QUICK FROZEN FOODS,

Governor Dewey of New York, Republican candidate for President of the United States The head of the Executive Branch, one of the three branches of the federal government.

The U.S. Constitution sets relatively strict requirements about who may serve as president and for how long.
, turns out to be a frozen food user and endorses the industry as one with a future.

Apple sauce. A flood of companies, including the largest, Birds Eye, rush into freezing it.

Orange juice concentrate. Freezing concentrated juice rather than whole juice is the only practical answer to creating a new industry, states Arthur L. Stahl of the Agricultural Experiment Station The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject.
Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page.
, Gainesville, Fla. Experiments with freeze concentration have produced distinctly superior results, and several other methods are available.

October

Distributors beg for product. Some estimated 500 wholesale distributors who want to handle frozen foods are on the waiting list of leading packers to get priority when more product is available.

British Columbia British Columbia, province (2001 pop. 3,907,738), 366,255 sq mi (948,600 sq km), including 6,976 sq mi (18,068 sq km) of water surface, W Canada. Geography
 Packers Ltd., Vancouver, announces plans to go into freezing of fish, specifically fillets, as soon as the War is over.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

November

Frozen food stores. First all-frozen food store in White Plains, N.Y., so successful that Frostar is opening up two new ones in the area. Idea has already begun to spread to other parts of the country, including a new one in Washington, D.C., by Deepfreeze.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

December

Automatic dispensing cabinet for frozen foods--solid wall unit, with each item in a different compartment just as foods are sold in the Automat--is now being sold to stores by Refrigeration Corporation of America, New York.

Soy bean products are experimentally being frozen as possible extenders or substitutes for meat products.

Can the ice man sell FF? J. Clark Bennett in a talk before convention of the National Association of Ice Industries asked the ice men to consider possibility of door-to-door sales to people with home freezers.

Western Frozen Food Association organized November 8, 1944, at the Palace Hotel, San Francisco The current ("New") Palace Hotel (opened in 1909) is an historic hotel located in San Francisco, California, at the SW corner of Market Street and New Montgomery Street, immediately adjacent to BART's Montgomery Street Station. , with Ted Aronson of Santa Clara Santa Clara, city, Cuba
Santa Clara (sän`tä klä`rä), city (1994 est. pop. 217,000), capital of Villa Clara prov., central Cuba.
 Frosted Foods as its first president.

L. Bamberger & Co., Newark, N.J., largest department store in the state, will process, freeze and sell a line of precooked pre·cook  
tr.v. pre·cooked, pre·cook·ing, pre·cooks
To cook in advance or partially.

Adj. 1. precooked - cooked partially or completely beforehand; "frozen precooked meals from the supermarket"
 frozen foods.

Marathon Corp. new name of Menasha Products Co., Menasha, Wis., major supplier of frozen food packaging.

1945

January

Cancelled conventions. The National Association of Frozen Food Packers and the National Canners Association have cancelled their planned annual meets due to War conditions. QUICK FROZEN FOODS has cancelled its annual Frozen Food Forum Luncheon.

Brand names. There are 250 different brand names in the frozen food industry.

Vertical freezer. Prominent refrigeration engineer Van Rensselaer Van Rens·se·laer   , Killian or Kiliaen 1595-1644.

Dutch merchant who was a founder of the Dutch West India Company (1621) and established Rensselaerswyck (1635), the only successful privately held colony in America, on his estate in
 H. Greene invents a freezer with trays fed into the bottom and moved upward, freezing in the process of rising, and discharged at the top. The unit can hold 50 trays and freeze up to 2,000 pounds an hour including IQF. It works continuously. For his achievement Green is invited to join the QUICK FROZEN FOODS' technical staff and accepts.

February

Seabrook Farms is a new label, launched by The Deerfield Packing Co., Bridgeton, N.J., for its retail products. Deerfield is the largest frozen vegetable packer in America.

March

Frigid-Dough, freezer of raw dough products, has opened a retail store exclusively for the sale of frozen fruit pies, chicken pies, cookies, cloverleaf rolls, muffins. Products are baked off by the housewife.

The California Frozen Food Institute formed by Frank Wright Foundation in San Francisco. Aim is to promote frozen products, educate production and marketing men and coordinate efforts of California processors and allied industries.

April

Complete frozen dinner developed by W. L. Maxson Corp., New York. Each meal consists of meat, vegetables and potatoes in a three-compartmented round tray. All components processed to heat simultaneously and pyrex or bake-ware tray are disposable. Entire output taken by the Army, which utilizes a Whirlwind oven that heats six meals simultaneously in airplanes. Typical menus include: steak, french fried potatoes French fried potatoes, French fries (US) nplpatatas fpl or (LAM) papas fpl fritas

 and carrots; meat loaf, candied can·died  
adj.
Permeated, covered, encrusted, or cooked with sugar: candied sweet potatoes.


candied
Adjective

coated with or cooked in sugar:
 sweet potatoes and spinach, etc.

June

Froz-n Coff-e introduced by Cusak Coffee Company, Los Angeles, contains enough concentrate for three to five cups in a cup-shaped container, six for 30 cents.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The Story of the Frozen Foods Industry ... and the Magazine That Grew Up With It published as a brochure by QUICK FROZEN FOODS.

Ben E. Keith Ben E. Keith is the 9th largest broad line foodservice distributor in the United States.  Company, distributor from Fort Worth, Tex., takes quarter page ad in QUICK FROZEN FOODS reading: "Exceptional Opportunity for distribution of Quality Institutional Lines of Frozen Foods. Correspondence solicited from quality packers. Largest distributors of fresh and frozen fruits and vegetables in the Southwest."

July

First 1945 Pocket Directory of Frozen Food Packers published by QUICK FROZEN FOODS, containing 256 pages and priced at $2.00.

Frozen pie crust developed by Mrs. Mason's Original Frosted Pie Crust, New York City. It is sold in a roll like a salami and must be thawed, rolled, placed in a pie tin and baked. It retails for 34 cents and there is also a one-pound institutional package.

September

Frozen meat pies, frozen dinners, frozen fruit pies offered by the Cease Commissary COMMISSARY. An officer whose principal duties are to supply the army with provisions.
     2. The Act of April 14, 1818, s. 6, requires that the president, by and with the consent of the senate, shall appoint a commissary general with the rank, pay, and emoluments
 Service, Dunkirk, N. Y.

Dehydration "boom" collapses and QFF drops section.

October

Frozen Food Store special section inaugurated.

"Yellow" Section of News, Markets, Prices and People inaugurated.

QFF now has 7,800 readers, of whom 5,200 are paid subscribers.

Smedley head to visit U. S. from England to buy freezing equipment.

All War controls off freezing equipment as of October 1, 1945. Scramble for available material.

November

An industry convention. QUICK FROZEN FOODS editorializes that the frozen food people should have a separate convention, not connected with the canners, and that it be sponsored by the National Association of Frozen Food Packers.

Snowcrop Marketers, Inc., formed in Los Angeles, headed by J. I. Moone, former division manager of Birds Eye-Snider. Will market complete retail line of frozen fruits and vegetables.

Long Island Duck Packing Corp. to building a freezing plant with a 75 million pound a year capacity.

December

Clarence Birdseye tries to save the disappearing dehydration industry with a new process producing flavors superior to anything yet seen, but after testing the products QFF concluded: "They represent the greatest improvement yet made on preservation by dehydration ... but to frozen foods, no threat."

No improvement in the quality of frozen foods for the past five years, QFF asserts, and predicts that if new research is not forthcoming the industry will have a disaster.

J. G. Woodroof, chief food technologist of the Georgia Agricultural Experiment Station, joins QFF staff as Technical Editor.

Rich Products Corp., Buffalo, N.Y., has developed a nondairy non·dair·y  
adj.
Containing no milk or dairy products: nondairy coffee creamer. 
 product called "Whip Topping" as an alternative for war-short whipped cream. The product has a soy base and its first promotion is a quarter-page advertisement in QFF seeking distributors. The product is packed in a tapered ta·per  
n.
1. A small or very slender candle.

2. A long wax-coated wick used to light candles or gas lamps.

3. A source of feeble light.

4.
a.
 milk-type container.

Advertising Club. QFF, on December 20, 1945, assembled hundreds of leading advertising agency men at the Advertising Club of New York to eat an all-frozen-food luncheon and listen to Clarence Birdseye speak.

Orange juice concentrate. Freezing was begun by Florida Frozen Fruits, Inc., in March 1945. Among executives is Charles M. Henderson.

1946

February

First postwar convention of frozen food packers Feb. 2-7, 1946, attended by 900.

National Wholesale Frozen Food Distributors, Inc., newly-formed organization today known as the National Frozen Food Association, represented by its second vice-president, William M. Walsh at the packers' convention. He reported his association had 75 members and asked for the formation of a committee linking the two associations.

French fried potatoes. Maxson enters the field with the first retail package of french fries.

Pasco Packing Company to build largest orange concentrate freezing plant in Florida, expected to be in full operation in Dade City sometime in 1947.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Link between associations. Burton Prince, president of the new distributors' association, appoints William Walsh

For other people named William Walsh, see William Walsh (disambiguation).
William Walsh (1663 – 1708), English poet and critic, son of Joseph Walsh of Abberley Hall, Worcestershire.
 of Morrison & McCluan, Pittsburgh, as chairman of the advisory committee to confer with Verb 1. confer with - get or ask advice from; "Consult your local broker"; "They had to consult before arriving at a decision"
consult

ask, enquire, inquire - inquire about; "I asked about their special today"; "He had to ask directions several times"
 the packers' association on cooperative action.

Donald K. Tressler, Ph.D., outstanding food technologist who helped perfect the blanching
For the term used in coinage, see Blanching (coinage).
Blanching is a cooking term that describes a process of food preparation wherein the food substance, usually a vegetable or fruit, is plunged into boiling water, removed after a brief, timed interval
 process for frozen foods, opens his own food laboratory in Westport, Conn.

May

Jeno's Frozen Salad Vegetables with bean sprouts bean sprouts
pl.n.
The tender, edible seedlings of certain bean plants, especially those of the mung bean.
, 12-ounce package, out of Duluth, Minn., first frozen venture of Jeno Paulucci.

Southeastern Frozen Foods Association organized April 19, 1945 in Macon, Ga., with H. C. Bateman of Bateman Frozen Foods as its president.

Bumble bum·ble 1  
v. bum·bled, bum·bling, bum·bles

v.intr.
1. To speak in a faltering manner.

2. To move, act, or proceed clumsily. See Synonyms at blunder.

v.tr.
 Bee brand quick frozen fish fillets in five-pound institutional pack available from Columbia River Columbia River

River, southwestern Canada and northwestern U.S. Rising in the Canadian Rockies, it flows through Washington state, entering the Pacific Ocean at Astoria, Ore.; it has a total length of 1,240 mi (2,000 km).
 Packers Association.

June

The Frozen Food Critic The terms food critic, food writer, and restaurant critic can all be used to describe a writer who analyses food or restaurants and then publishes the results of their findings.  by Laura Track begins this month. It would run until her death in 1972. She bought retail products at random and prepared them according to instructions and, as a trained home economist, told things the way she saw them. For the first time in history frozen french fries were tested. She said the taste was good but that heating instructions were too short, a crisper crisp·er  
n.
One that crisps, especially a compartment in a refrigerator used for storing vegetables and keeping them fresh.
 product would result in a slightly better flavor with longer heating.

Birdseye boil-in-bag. Clarence Birdseye says he has tested scores of prodducts since 1932, and freezing them in a plastic pouch produced a superior product and made it possible to heat them in boiling water.

Aluminum. Dr. T. M. Hill of the Foil Division of the Aluminum Company of America suggests that there might be a wider future for aluminum in frozen foods packaging. At present there are foil laminated boxes and foil wrappers In data mining and treatment learning, wrappers were used by Ron Kohavi and George John. Their idea was to wrap their treatments learners in a preprocessor that would search to make subsets from the current set of attributes.  but no foil containers.

C. A. Swanson & Sons, Omaha, has gone into frozen chicken a la king, chicken fricassee fric·as·see  
n.
Poultry or meat cut into pieces and stewed in gravy.

tr.v. fric·as·seed, fric·as·see·ing, fric·as·sees
To prepare (poultry or meat) by cutting into pieces and stewing in gravy.
, chicken salad and chicken chow mein in addition to its line of raw frozen poultry products.

Southern fried chicken Fried chicken is chicken which is dipped in a breading mixture and then deep fried, pan fried or pressure fried. The breading seals in the juices but also absorbs the fat of the fryer, which is sometimes seen as unhealthy.  is being produced by K. C. Food Products, Newark, N.J., along with a wide line of other cooked products including french fries to go with the chicken.

Hot hors d'oeuvres in frozen form marketed by Kathleen Watson Kelley, New York, as well as cold hors d'oeuvres.

Bridgeford Company, San Diego, Calif., is producing corned beef hash Noun 1. corned beef hash - hash made with corned beef
hash - chopped meat mixed with potatoes and browned
 as well as a line of frozen fruits and vegetables.

Prepared foods. So many packers are entering the frozen prepared foods business that QUICK FROZEN FOODS has a special section titled "Cooked and Prepared Foods," mentioning as many as 20 new companies per issue.

J. R. Simplot John Richard "Jack" Simplot (born January 4 1909) is the founder of the J. R. Simplot Company, an agricultural supplier specializing in potato products. In 2007 he was estimated to be the 214th richest person in America, with $3.6 billion.  plans to freeze potatoes in Nampa, Idaho Nampa (IPA: [næm pə]) is the largest city in Canyon County, Idaho, United States, and the second largest in the state. Only the capital city, Boise, is larger. .

Foil package made from thin aluminum sheet has been developed by Bjorksten Laboratories, Chicago. It can pack almost any solid or liquid food product with maximum protection, offering rigidity, and can be used to reheat Re`heat´   

v. t. 1. To heat again.
2. To revive; to cheer; to cherish.

Verb 1. reheat - heat again; "Please reheat the food from last night"
 product. Does not transmit any odor to product.

August

Frozen retail dinners, produced by Maxson, to be sold to the public for the first time starting September 20, 1946, at L. Bamberger & Co., New Jersey's largest department store, in Newark, N. J. Ten different meals will be offered, each with a main course and two vegetables in a three-compartmented platter. They will be called "Strato-Meals."

Minute Maid Minute Maid is a product line of beverages, usually associated with orange juice, but now extends to soft drinks of many kinds, including Hi-C.

Minute Maid was the first company to market orange juice concentrate, allowing it to be distributed nationwide and served
 introduced institutional sizes of frozen orange concentrate May 1, 1946.

Snow Crop introduces first retail package of frozen orange concentrate in a 6-ounce tin in New York and Philadelphia in July 1946.

September

Mobile frozen food stores. The first of what would become hundreds of stores on wheels, usually converted buses, is inaugurated by Capt. Bud Mayer whose "Frostmobile" in Arlington, Va., carried frozen foods door-to-door. The housewife could walk into the bus and select frozen foods out of the cabinets. A gasoline-powered compressor maintains temperature in the cabinets. It cost him $9,000-10,000 to start the business.

Price controls removed from all frozen products but meats, as of August 31, 1946. Packers, distributors, retailers can charge anything they can get.

Frozen Food Council of California was formed to make arrangements for a large-scale frozen food show to be held the week of October 7th in the State Exposition Building in Los Angeles. The mayor declared it "Frozen Food Week."

Frozen shrimp cocktails introduced by McKay-Davis Co., Dade City, Fla. Shipments being sent to New York City by air.

October

Maxson's dinners score initial success at Bamberger's. Prices range from 98 cents for beef goulash Noun 1. beef goulash - meat is browned before stewing
goulash, gulyas, Hungarian goulash - a rich meat stew highly seasoned with paprika
 with simmered gravy, garden peas, butter sauce and a potato patty to $1.98 for chicken paprika Noun 1. chicken paprika - chicken simmered in broth with onions and paprika then mixed with sour cream
chicken paprikash

dish - a particular item of prepared food; "she prepared a special dish for dinner"
 with French beans French beans
Noun, pl

green beans, the pods of which are eaten
 and a potato patty. The tray is heat-resistant paper fiber with a foil-lined cover capable of heating at 400 degrees F. The weights are 11-12 ounces.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Processors. QUICK FROZEN FOODS showed there were now 737 frozen food companies in its second directory of frozen food processors, up from 516 in 1945. Biggest percentage jump was in cooked and prepared foods, from 34 to 100, though great numbers were added in meat and seafoods.

Southland Products Co., already operating four freezing plants in New York, Florida, Illinois and Tennessee, planning a million-dollar expansion to keep up with demand.

November

Movement. Frozen food prices are up 50-100% and QFF again cautions, "Prices on many items are out of line, industrywise and competitively." Slowing down of sales already noted.

Maxson frozen potato plant established in Washburn, Me.

Frigidinner brand name of line of frozen dinners out of Philadelphia, first to use foil tray and foil cover.

December

Slowdown. Inventories of frozen foods begin to pile up in warehouses, almost a billion pounds. Not only are prices too high but quality is poor. Even lifting of price controls on meat fails to help; in fact it is seriously hurting. "Everyone knows the seller's market in frozen foods is over," QFF writes. "Emphasis must be on merchandising, selling and advertising, rather than on production, although quality production is a must which will make smart merchandising successful."

Boilable pouches. The Singer Food Process Corporation, operating out of the kitchen of Hotel Gramatan, in Bronxville, N.Y., is producing from 5,000 to 8,000 packages a day of oyster stew Noun 1. oyster stew - oysters in cream
stew - food prepared by stewing especially meat or fish with vegetables
, lobster bisque bisque 1  
n.
1.
a. A rich, creamy soup made from meat, fish, or shellfish.

b. A thick cream soup made of puréed vegetables.

2. Ice cream mixed with crushed macaroons or nuts.
, onion soup, minestrone, seafood Newburg Noun 1. seafood Newburg - seafood in Newburg sauce served on toast or rice
dish - a particular item of prepared food; "she prepared a special dish for dinner"
, curried shrimp and similar products packed in moisture-proof bags to be reheated in the bag in boiling water.

Sandwiches. Open-faced sandwiches topped with cheddar cheese and bacon to be heated in an oven like a pizza are marketed by Edith T. Latimer Co., New York.

1947

January

Southland Frozen Foods is the new name of Southland Products Co., with Philip Rizzuto and Theodore Delson, former partners, principal stockholders under new incorporation.

J. D. Jewell, of Gainesville, Ga., who began freezing chicken late in 1945, is now adding the freezing of cut up chicken to the regular line of eviscerated frozen chickens.

February

Bankers and frozen foods. Because of slump in frozen foods, the danger of loans being withdrawn and refused is imminent. QUICK FROZEN FOODS arranges a meeting between 30 of the leading bankers and the top frozen food packers and association heads on January 28, 1947, at the Wall Street Club in New York. Banker confidence was renewed and the frozen food industry was saved what might have been a stunning setback to postwar expansion plans.

School Lunch Program. Pasco's new Florida plant has received a contract from the Federal government for $450,000 of frozen concentrated juice to be distributed as part of the School Lunch Program.

March

Open frozen food cabinets, announced as forthcoming by Hussman as early as September 1945, are now in stores and beginning to work out. No sliding glass thermopane top--the customer reaches in and selects product. Price is $1,300 and waiting time could be a year or more for delivery.

Convention issue. A 290-page number of QFF is prepared for the joint convention of the packers and distributors associations held in San Francisco, Mar. 18-20, 1947. There is a registration of 7,000 and there are 102 frozen food exhibitors. C. Courtney Seabrook of Seabrook Farms is elected president of the packer's group. Board votes to permit every type of freezer to join, not just those processing fruits and vegetables, with associate membership for suppliers. The affair is recognized as the official national convention by the entire industry.

IQF freezer developed by Clarence Birdseye--called "Gravity Froster," because products enter on moving belt through blast tunnel, passing downward through a series of belts and emerge from the bottom--is now being manufactured by Cleaver-Brooks Company, Milwaukee. The equipment is completely automatic, easy to defrost de·frost  
v. de·frost·ed, de·frost·ing, de·frosts

v.tr.
1. To remove ice or frost from: defrosted the windshield.

2. To cause to thaw.

v.
 and clean. Initial models produce 1,000-1,200 pounds per hour.

Consumer survey, conducted by DuPont, found that only 29.3% of frozen food buyers planned their purchases, underscoring the importance of impulse in sales.

Tyler accepting orders for open cabinets.

April

Prices plummet. Widespread dumping of all types of frozen foods at any price in order to clear inventories as industry panics.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Frozen lemonade. Techniques of preparing it perfected by scientific team headed by W. V. Cruess of the University of California The University of California has a combined student body of more than 191,000 students, over 1,340,000 living alumni, and a combined systemwide and campus endowment of just over $7.3 billion (8th largest in the United States). , who asserts it is a "natural" for the frozen food industry.

Mrs. Paul's Kitchens, a small Philadelphia company which recently entered the business with devilled crabs and fried oysters, is taking a crack at producing french fried potatoes.

June

Microwave ovens. Speed cooking through Raytheon electronic ovens offers great potential in conjunction with frozen foods.

July

Temple Frosted Foods, Brooklyn, is freezing Chinese foods, including egg rolls, fried rice and chow mein.

Victor F. Weaver, Inc., New Holland Pa., now marketing frozen chicken patties, turkey patties, chicken cutlets, turkey cutlets, fried chicken, jellied jel·lied  
adj.
1. Chilled or otherwise congealed into jelly.

2. Coated with jelly.

3. Prepared or cooked in or with jelly.
 chicken, boned chicken and boned turkey, all in frozen form.

August

Awrey Bakeries, Detroit, is freezing its own line of baked goods, including a dozen different types of rolls, bran muffins, cookies and fruit pies.

W. L. Maxson dies. The founder of the company bearing his name, which introduced retail frozen dinners, french fries and other products, died July 15, 1947.

Alford Refrigerated Warehouses announces it will spend $5,250,000 on the largest refrigerated warehouse in the world. It will have 9.5 million cubic feet, as well as 8 million cubic feet of dry space, plus offices. The project covers a 60-acre site in Dallas.

October

Snow Flake Canning Co., owned by H. C. Baxter & Bro., went into the production of frozen french fried potatoes early this year at Corinna, Me. All production is supplied to Birds Eye-Snider. In May 1946 they had operated a pilot plant.

November

Minute Maid begins distribution of its retail 6-ounce can of frozen orange concentrate in New York, Pennsylvania and Maryland.

December

R. H. Macy, New York, expanded its food department with four C. V. Hill self-service frozen food cabinets. They will be selling the Fruitidor as well as the Lily White label of companion store, Bamberger's.

Fish and Chips fish and chips
pl.n.
Fried fillets of fish and French-fried potatoes.

Noun 1. fish and chips - fried fish and french-fried potatoes
dish - a particular item of prepared food; "she prepared a special dish for dinner"
 in a one-pound package for 59 cents is introduced by Chicago Frozen Foods.

Gretchen Grant Kitchens, Jersey City, N.J., which entered freezing a few months ago with pie crust, is also freezing liver canapes, cheese bagels and cocktail cookies. Proprietor is Louis Midler.

Milady Food Products, Brooklyn, N. Y., under ownership of Hy Epstein and Mac Levine, is producing a line of frozen blintzes in a variety of flavors selling for 45 cents.

Florida Citrus Canners Cooperative, Lake Wales Wales, Welsh Cymru, western peninsula and political division (principality) of Great Britain (1991 pop. 2,798,200), 8,016 sq mi (20,761 sq km), west of England; politically united with England since 1536. The capital is Cardiff. , Fla., plans to be in frozen concentrated orange juice in January.

1948

January

Two Frez-O-Mats, self-service freezer cabinets containing standard-size FF packages in drawers showing the label in the front, were installed in the side walls in an American Store in Philadelphia; they are said to have increased FF sales by 25 to 33% by saving the customer from having to dig into Verb 1. dig into - examine physically with or as if with a probe; "probe an anthill"
poke into, probe

penetrate, perforate - pass into or through, often by overcoming resistance; "The bullet penetrated her chest"
 the usual coffin freezers to hunt out her preferred items.

Advertising its own brand of frozen vegetables in the newspapers, Snowbird snowbird: see junco.  Frosted Foods, a Philadelphia distributor, sent penny post a post carrying a letter for a penny; also, a mail carrier.

See also: Penny
 cards to alert its retailers to tie in their displays with the specials advertised.

February

The Frozen Food Cook Book, the first cook book devoted entirely to home preparation of FF, prepared by Frozen Food Products, Inc., New York, N.Y., with the aid of the Frozen Food Foundation, Syracuse, N.Y., is announced for publication by Simon & Schuster Simon & Schuster

U.S. publishing company. It was founded in 1924 by Richard L. Simon (1899–1960) and M. Lincoln Schuster (1897–1970), whose initial project, the original crossword-puzzle book, was a best-seller.
 in April.

Microwave heating was first associated with frozen foods in an article about a research project by food technologists at the State College of Washington, concerned with the use of high frequency radio power, supplied by radar equipment developed during the War, in the food industry. Initial work was with scalding scalding

plunging of pig or poultry carcasses into very hot water to facilitate scraping and dehairing and plucking. Chicken scalding water is 130°F for broilers (larger birds higher) applied for 1 to 2 minutes. Modern pig abattoirs use steam at 144 to 147°F for about 3 minutes.
 of fruits and vegetables prior to freezing, rather than reheating Reheating

The addition of heat to steam of reduced pressure after the steam has given up some of its energy by expansion through the high-pressure stages of a turbine.
 FF.

March

QUICK FROZEN FOODS incorporated Food Freezing magazine, effective this issue.

An estimated five to seven million cans of frozen citrus concentrates had been packed since first appearing in the 1946-47 season. Standardized for retail in six-ounce cans, FCOJ FCOJ Frozen Concentrate Orange Juice (usually 65 percent sugar solids)  prices ranged from 27 cents to 32 cents a can, averaging 29 cents.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Frozen Foods Week, initiated locally the year before by the Quick Frozen Foods Association of Chicago and spearheaded by them this year, scheduled for national celebration March 14-20.

United Airlines testing the use of frozen foods, precooked and stored in freezers aboard planes, for service on their Stratocruisers.

Foil pouches with individual entree portions hermetically her·met·ic   also her·met·i·cal
adj.
1. Completely sealed, especially against the escape or entry of air.

2. Impervious to outside interference or influence:
 sealed in, called Wife-Savers, are demonstrated by Maxson Food Systems, New York, N.Y., at Bloomingdale's, New York department store.

April, 1948

Alford Refrigerated Warehouses is constructing a new refrigerated warehouse in Dallas, Tex., with about 7.5 million cubic feet of storage space, with special attention to be given to palletized operation, and cold storage doors to be mechanically operated to speed up movement of traffic.

May

The estimated number of frozen food packers is now 909, compared to 737 listed in the QFF Directory of Processors a year earlier.

June

Dry milk, frozen, concentrated and reconstituted twice, being tested by government agencies. The frozen milk is said to reconstitute re·con·sti·tute  
tr.v. re·con·sti·tut·ed, re·con·sti·tut·ing, re·con·sti·tutes
1. To provide with a new structure: The parks commission has been reconstituted.

2.
 very well and to offer a real saving in bulk, but price "still somewhat out of line."

A frozen dinner package, designed by Sylvania Div., American Viscose vis·cose  
n.
1. A thick, golden-brown viscous solution of cellulose xanthate, used in the manufacture of rayon and cellophane.

2. Viscose rayon.

adj.
1. Viscous.

2.
 Corp., New York, N.Y., holds an entire meal for four. The items--such as corned beef hash, green peas and peaches--are separately packed in the carton.

July

Frozen food distributors surveyed; 87% see profits in home cabinet sales through cooperation with appliance dealers. Food and cabinet combination sales show good results.

QFF offers to check brand names against a file of 1,500 to help companies avoid duplication.

Certified Grocers of California, a cooperative buying group for over 1,300 super markets in southern California Southern California, also colloquially known as SoCal, is the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Centered on the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego, Southern California is home to nearly 24 million people and is the nation's second most populated region, , is buying direct from packers, and also completing a 15,000-square-foot freezer warehouse.

September

Safeway Stoes, the only major super market chain not generally handling frozen foods, announces its intention to experiment in the stocking and selling of certain frozen foods, including ice cream.

October

Packers and distributors associations agree to hold a united industry convention the next March, following a decision made at a special meeting of the National Wholesale Frozen Food Distributors Association to accept the proposal to merge conventions made by the National Association of Frozen Food Packers.

Minute Maid concentrated, frozen orange juice Noun 1. frozen orange juice - orange juice that has been concentrated and frozen
orange-juice concentrate

concentrate - a concentrated form of a foodstuff; the bulk is reduced by removing water

orange juice - bottled or freshly squeezed juice of oranges
 is to be promoted on a new series of daytime radio programs to be launched in the fall by Bing Crosby, who was recently elected director of Vacuum Foods Corp., New York City, processors of the orange juice.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

November

Leo Leo, in astronomy
Leo [Lat.,=the lion], northern constellation lying S of Ursa Major and on the ecliptic (apparent path of the sun through the heavens) between Cancer and Virgo; it is one of the constellations of the zodiac.
 Young, formerly with International Fisheries Corp., started his own company, Leo Young and Co., as of Oct. 27, 1948.

December

Grand Union, New York re>
</noinclude> Union is a town in Broome County, New York, United States. As of the 2000 census, the town had a total population of 56,298. The name is derived from this location having served as a rendezvous for the Sullivan Expedition.
 chain operating over 300 stores, 118 in the metropolitan area, and which had been handling frozen foods since 1935, showed a 59% increase in the FF sales in the first nine months of 1948 over the same period in 1947.

Deerfield Packing Corp., Bridgeton, N.J., changed its name to Seabrook Farms Co., for closer identification with its brand.

1949

January

Orange juice replaces strawberries in FF best-seller spot for first time in some cities.

Truck transportation of FF showed continued increases as proposed rail rates threatened to prce railroads out of the market, according to a QFF survey.

QFF acquired Frozen Food Industry & Locker Plant Journal from Food Publications, Inc., New York, N.Y., and incorporated it with QFF effective with this issue.

February

Canners showed apprehension at inroads inroads
Noun, pl

make inroads into to start affecting or reducing: my gambling has made great inroads into my savings

inroads npl to make inroads into [+
 of frozen foods at their recent convention, and made substantial promotional plans for 1949. Meanwhile, fewer freezers were in attendance at the canners' convention.

March

A proposed law in Massachusetts that each package of FF would have to bear the exact date the article was processed meets stiff opposition from FF interests in the state and from the National Wholesale Frozen Food Distributors Association.

April

Distributors show increasing disturbance at direct selling Direct selling is the marketing of products or services to consumers through sales tactics including presentations, demonstrations, and phone calls. It is sometimes also considered to be a sale that does not utilize a "middle man" such as a retail outlets, distributors or brokers.  to super market chains by some packers.

The merger of Foremost Dairies, Inc., Jacksonville, Fla., with Maxson Food Systems, Inc. under the name of Foremost Dairies, was announced.

May

Institutional distributors indicated an expanding market for frozen foods in this field, with sales for 1949 running well ahead of the same period a year earlier.

Welch Grape Juice Company, Westfield, N.Y., enters field with grape juice concentrate, currently marketed in the New York and New Jersey areas.

Marketing tests for FF by Safeway Stores, Inc., according to Lingan A. Warren, president, "appear to justify the installation of equipment in a substantial number of stores."

June

The annual packaging review shows "a 100 % improvement in the design and color of all new packages. Gone, or fast disappearing, are the igloos, the Eskimos, the huskies and the ice-capped mountains, and in their place has come the lifelike colored vignette Vignette

A symbol or pictorial representation of the corporation on a stock certificate. Usually a complicated and artistic design, it is meant to make the counterfeiting of stock certificates as difficult as possible.
 that shows the foods themselves."

Lamb chops, lima beans and carrots are packed together by Hygrade Food Products Corp., New York, N.Y., as a complete dinner in a cellophane over-wrap open carton.

July

A new container for Rich Products Corp., Buffalo, N.Y., Whip Topping dispenses the topping ready to use, no beating or whipping being required. The new container, sealed under pressure, spouted a continuous stream of the whipped vegetable-base topping as long as the nozzle was pressed. Only about an hour at room temperature was required for the frozen product to defrost for use.

FF package dating bill defeated in the Massachusetts legislature.

August

The Southern Frozen Food Distributors Association was organized following a two-day meeting in Atlanta, Ga. The group at that time numbered 22 FF distributors and 7 associate members.

September

Frozen coffee concentrate test marketed in six Eastern city areas by Snow Crop Marketers, Inc., New York, N.Y.

November

Minute Maid Corp. is the new name for Vacuum Foods Corp., New York, N.Y.

Carl A. Swanson, president, C. A. Swanson & Sons, Omaha, Neb., frozen poultry processing company, died at the age of 70 while he was in Chicago attending the annual meeting of the National Poultry, Butter and Egg Association.

December

Snow Crop Marketers, Inc., New York, N.Y., announced that it would discontinue direct selling and other operations bypassing distributors, in an address to a meeting of the National Wholesale Frozen Food Distributors Association.

Cranberry juice Noun 1. cranberry juice - the juice of cranberries (always diluted and sweetened)
fruit crush, fruit juice - drink produced by squeezing or crushing fruit
 concentrate added to the Ocean Spray line, according to the National Cranberry cranberry, low creeping evergreen bog plant of the genus Oxycoccus of the family Ericaceae (heath family). Cranberries are considered by some botanists to belong to the blueberry genus Vaccinium.  Association, Hanson, Mass.

1950

January

Florida juice concentrates anticipated to reach a pack of over 25 million gallons in 1950, according to QFF survey, roughly 2 1/2 times 1949 production.

February

Fantail fantail

a horse's tail cut and pulled so that it protrudes only a few inches beyond the end of the butt.
 breaded shrimp, a new frozen product introduced less than a year earlier by Trade Winds Company and its national sales agents, E. L. Cook Co., Atlanta, Ga., is now distributed in 36 states.

March

Rising grove prices of Florida oranges led to fears that FCOJ prices might rise from the 31 cents-33 cents range to 35 cents a 6-ounce can; the National Wholesale Frozen Food Distributors Association took a page ad in Florida papers calling on citrus growers not to injure the concentrate market by pricing juices out of the market.

April

Lemonade concentrate, making one quart from a 5 1/2-ounce can, introduced by Snow Crop Marketers, Inc.

A breading combination for use by manufacturers of frozen seafoods and meats is offered by Modern Maid Food Products, Brooklyn, N.Y. It consists of the company's Redi Breader and its newest product, All-Purpose Batter Dip.

May

Minute Maid lemonade concentrate made at Sunkist plant in Ontario, Calif.

June

Supporting the A&P in its fight against monopoly charges, the National Association of Frozen Food Packers issue a resolution calling any dissolution of the food chain's operations a threat to the economy and welfare of the country.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

July

Heating of frozen foods by microwaves in Raytheon Radarange Electronic Oven discussed in an article.

August

Pan American World Airways Pan American World Airways, commonly known as Pan Am, was the principal international airline of the United States from the 1930s until its collapse in 1991. Founded as a seaplane service out of Key West, Florida, the airline became a major company credited with many  is doing its own freezing of foods served on flights. Special ovens for preparing the food in transit are being installed on the planes.

A survey of more than 1,000 hospitals made by Modern Hospital magazine showed that 60% had frozen food storage at the beginning of 1950, compared to 35% in 1948.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

September

E. W. Williams, publisher of QFF, starts his first reporting tour of Europe.

FF cabinet deals are made by 70% of distributors responding to QFF survey; most involve direct sale of cabinets to retailers. A frequent objection is that the distributor did not get exclusive FF rights in filling the cabinet.

New Kate Smith Noun 1. Kate Smith - United States singer noted for her rendition of patriotic songs (1909-1986)
Kathryn Elizabeth Smith, Smith
 Show scheduled to be sponsored by Minute Maid Corporation on NBC NBC
 in full National Broadcasting Co.

Major U.S. commercial broadcasting company. It was formed in 1926 by RCA Corp., General Electric Co. (GE), and Westinghouse and was the first U.S. company to operate a broadcast network.
 TV.

October

The Eastern Oregon Eastern Oregon is a geographical term that is generally taken to mean the area of the state of Oregon east of the Cascade Range, save the region around The Dalles and sometimes Klamath County. The area around Bend is considered to be Central Oregon rather than Eastern Oregon.  Canning Co., Weston, Ore., recently purchased by F. G. Lamb Co., Freewater, Ore., will be operated under the name Lamb-Weston, Inc., as a subsidiary of the F. G. Lamb Co.

A ready-baked frozen waffle See WAFL.  introduced by the Waffle Corporation of America, Philadelphia, Pa., under the brand name Downyflake Frozen One-Minute Waffle.

California Fruit Growers Exchange purchases the "Sunkist" trademark from the California Packing Corporation for $1.25 million. The exchange had been using the brand on its fresh citrus fruit since 1908, but the previous owner also used the brand name on canned and dried fruits.

November

FF cabinet production dwindling dwin·dle  
v. dwin·dled, dwin·dling, dwin·dles

v.intr.
To become gradually less until little remains.

v.tr.
To cause to dwindle. See Synonyms at decrease.
, due to materials shortages since the outbreak of the Korean War Korean War, conflict between Communist and non-Communist forces in Korea from June 25, 1950, to July 27, 1953. At the end of World War II, Korea was divided at the 38th parallel into Soviet (North Korean) and U.S. (South Korean) zones of occupation. , and is threatened by cutback cut·back  
n.
1. A decrease; a curtailment: "The political effects of food cutbacks could be devastating" New York Times.

2.
 orders on strategic materials.

1951

January

Former Georgia Governor Ellis Arnall Ellis Gibbs Arnall (March 20 1907, Newnan, Georgia – December 13 1992) was an American politician who served as the Governor of the U.S. state of Georgia from 1943 to 1947.

Arnall attended the Mercer University before transferring to the University of the South.
, senior partner of Arnall, Golden and Gregory, Atlanta, Ga., is appointed with his firm as chief legal counsel for the National Wholesale Frozen Food Distributors Association.

February

Frozen specialty packers in the New York City area chose a name for their recently formed organization: the Prepared Frozen Foods Processors Association.

General Foods Corporation, Birds Eye Foods processor, takes an option on a White Plains, N.Y., site for the construction of a general office building. (Its offices were located in New York City.)

The Green Giant Company, Le Sueur Le Sueur may refer to:
  • Le Sueur, Minnesota, a city
  • Le Sueur County, Minnesota
  • Le Sueur River, a river in Minnesota
  • Hubert Le Sueur, a French sculptor
  • Jean Le Sueur, a French priest
  • Meridel Le Sueur, an American writer
, Minn., known for its canned vegetable products, is market testing its frozen peas under the Green Giant label in Fort Wayne Fort Wayne, city (1990 pop. 173,072), seat of Allen co., NE Ind., where the St. Joseph and St. Marys rivers join to form the Maumee River; inc. 1840. It is the second largest city in the state, a major railroad and shipping point, a wholesale and distribution hub, , Ind., and Minneapolis, Minn.

March

Morton Packing Company, Louisville, Ky., prepared food processor, elected George E. Egger president, following the retirement of L. Owsley Haskins. Egger was a director of Minute Maid Corp., New York, N.Y., and Merchants Ice & Cold Storage, among other firms.

April

Frozen precooked dinner, called FrigiDinners, packed by FrigiDinners, Inc., Philadelphia, Pa., consisting of meat and vegetables wrapped in foil and packed in an aluminum platter, are sold with other self-service items in a chain of automatic launderettes operated by Telecoin Corporation, New York, N.Y.

May

The Buitoni Macaroni macaroni: see pasta.  Corp., New York, N.Y., brings out a frozen stuffed lasagne and a shell macaroni au gratin au gra·tin  
adj.
Covered with bread crumbs and sometimes butter and grated cheese, and then browned in an oven: potatoes au gratin.
.

The Borden Co. is planning a line of 15 frozen fruits and vegetables under the Borden label.

June

A new distribution policy announced by Birds Eye Division of General Foods Corp., New York; it will enter into no exclusive or restrictive selling agreements with any customer.

July

The new 20-volume Collier's Encyclopedia Collier's Encyclopedia (full title Collier's Encyclopedia with Bibliography and Index) was a U.S.-based general encyclopedia. Self-described in its preface as "a scholarly, systematic, continuously revised summary of the knowledge that is most significant to  is the first recognized and authoritative reference work of its kind to include a special section on the history and development of the frozen foods industry and its products.

August

The old Polar label, used until 1947 by the Polar Frosted Food Co., is revived for a standard (or B) grade line by Cedergreen Packing Corp., which bought Polar four years earlier.

September

The Shrimp Ahoy frozen cocktail and cooked shrimp brand line purchased by SeaPak Corp., St. Simons Island, Ga., from the Miami Packing Co., Hackensack, N.J.

October

Retail B brands found disfavor among a majority of distributors surveyed; although only 52% expressed opposition to the concept, 73% did not handle B brands and, of these, 67% did not plan to. Even among those handling them, 30% opposed the idea but handled them under pressure from retailers who wanted them.

Grilled cheese sandwiches A grilled cheese sandwich, (also known as cheese toasty or toasted cheese sandwich) is a form of toasted sandwich that consists of two slices of bread and at least one slice of cheese melted in between.  added to the Mae Rich line of Nomar Foods, Inc., New York. The waffled sandwiches are ready to heat in a toaster See intranet toaster and Video Toaster.

(jargon) toaster - 1. The archetypal really stupid application for an embedded microprocessor controller; often used in comments that imply that a scheme is inappropriate technology (but see elevator controller).
.

Popcorn, prepared for home popping, brought out by Popcorn Products, Inc., Milwaukee, Wis., under the name Three-Minute Paddycorn.

Cooking in a plastic bag, a method said to make roasting turkey and other kinds of frozen poultry as simple as boiling water, described by Bradley Dewey, president, Dewey and Almy Chemical Co.

November

New, double-deck FF cases ("Twin-Dex" cabinets) were installed in a Clark Market in Los Angeles, resulting in an increase of FF sales to 4% of total volume.

Beatrice shelves frozen milk and its chocolate milk-base concentrate because of restrictions on civilian use of tin. Clinton H. Haskell, president of Beatrice Foods Co., said, "We didn't feel this was any time to bring out a new product requiring a tin container."

December

The campaign to persuade Florida juice concentrators to label their product as of Florida origin gains headway as Snow Crop, Pasco and Fosgate signified their intention to go along with it. Sealdsweet has already designed a label with the word "Florida" superimposed su·per·im·pose  
tr.v. su·per·im·posed, su·per·im·pos·ing, su·per·im·pos·es
1. To lay or place (something) on or over something else.

2.
 on a juice-dripping orange. Minute Maid, however, hesitates to put "Florida" on cans going to California.

1952

February

Three citrus associations consolidate, merging their activities. The Florida Canners Association took over the information services See Information Systems.  of the Canners League of Florida as well as administration of the program of the Citrus Processors Association, which represented pulp and molasses molasses, sugar byproduct, the brownish liquid residue left after heat crystallization of sucrose (commercial sugar) in the process of refining. Molasses contains chiefly the uncrystallizable sugars as well as some remnant sucrose.  producers.

Introduction of a frozen version of the previously refrigerated Sara Lee
For the musician, see Sara Lee (musician). For the band, see SaraLee (band).


Sara Lee Corporation (NYSE: SLE) is a global consumer-goods company based in Downers Grove, Illinois, USA.
 Cream Cheesecake for national distribution by the Kitchens of Sara Lee In 1935, Charles Lubin, then age 35, and his brother-in-law bought a small chain of Chicago neighborhood bakeries called Community Bake Shops. Working together, the businessmen grew their original three stores into a chain of seven bakeries. , Chicago, marks the first appearance of this brand in the FF cabinet. The item was processed by Gottfried Baking Co., New York, N.Y.

March

Consumer survey made with support of Crowell-Collier Publishing Co. Research Dept. presenting comparable results of a similar survey made three years earlier (April 1949), shows 11% increase in families buying FF (from 76% to 84%); 56% of buyers now serve FF more than once a week, compared to 39% in 1949; there was a 220% increase in FF buyers serving juice concentrates.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The first QFF "Almanac almanac, originally, a calendar with notations of astronomical and other data. Almanacs have been known in simple form almost since the invention of writing, for they served to record religious feasts, seasonal changes, and the like.  of the Frozen Foods Industry" appears in this issue. The 20-page section includes not only statistics and tables of prices but maps and charts and a summary of OPS Ops (ŏps), in Roman religion, goddess of harvests. She was the wife of Saturn, by whom she bore Jupiter and Juno. At her festivals, the Opiconsivia and the Opalia, held in August and December, respectively, she was worshiped as a goddess of sowing  (Office of Price Stabilization price stabilization

See peg, PROBLEM">[removed].
) regulations and other miscellaneous data.

April

Plans for providing the home freezer owner with regular supplies of FF, later dubbed "food clubs," are springing up all over the country, most tied in with the sale of a freezer. Some plans are sound, others are strictly promotional, but most circumvent the retailer. QFF advocates case lot sales from retailers at 10-to -15% discounts, on some sort of distributor-retailer participation plan.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

May

Pocket edition of QFF announced for launching in June; it will carry material different from that in issues of the "Master Edition," in a 4-inch by 6-inch format like Quick magazine.

June

The consumer never had it so good: concentrates were selling at two for 25 cents; two 8-ounce packages of peas for 29 cents; a 12-ounce package of strawberries at 29 cents. But a QFF editorial notes that while the trend to price-cutting is attracting thousands, perhaps millions, of new FF users monthly, it is threatening to pauperize pau·per·ize  
tr.v. pau·per·ized, pau·per·iz·ing, pau·per·iz·es
To make a pauper of; impoverish.



pau
 the industry, and the line between A and B brands is becoming indistinct in·dis·tinct  
adj.
1. Not clearly or sharply delineated: an indistinct pattern; indistinct shapes in the gloom.

2. Faint; dim: indistinct stars.

3.
.

July

Separation in reconstitued orange juice was prevented through a new and secret process developed by Birds Eye Division of General Foods, according to James P. Delafield, product manager for Birds Eye concentrates.

Sale of Welch Grape Juice Co. properties to its growers for $15 million arranged; affected were the 4,000 grower members of the National Grape Cooperative Association scattered through most grape-growing areas of the country.

September

"The Locker Plant," part of the title of the magazine from April 1941 (QUICK FROZEN FOODS and THE LOCKER PLANT), dropped from the cover. From September 1942, it had its own section in the rear of the magazine, with its own section cover which, from June 1949, gave it the title "The 'Grade A' Locker Plant." With this issue the section was retitled "The Food Club and the Locker Plant," and included home freezer news as well.

The Quick Frozen Foods Association, Chicago, announced its intention to expand to include members from the Middle Western states. Its new name would be Central States Frozen Food Association. Charles Peterson, of E. A. Aaron & Bros BROS Brothers
BROS Benefits and Retirement Operations Section (King County, Washington)
BROS Barnes and Richmond Operatic Society (London, UK) 
., was president of the group.

October

General Foods left the shrimp industry with the sale of its subsidiary, General Seafoods, Inc., to J. Lawrence Alphen and Associates, following the recent purchase of its shrimp interests in Mexico by Booth Fisheries. General Foods' Shrimp and Oyster Division will continue to handle oysters and clams, but it is expected that the name would be changed.

1953

January

A booklet on how to handle frozen foods, entitled Protecting Frozen Foods, has been published by the National Association of Frozen Food Packers, and is expected to have wide distribution throughout the trade.

Stokely's Honor Brand, the frozen food division of Stokely-Van Camp, Inc., has redesigned its labels and is progressively changing over its entire line of frozen foods to the new packages, which stress the Stokely rather than the Honor Brand name.

Pot pies are shaping up to be a bigger factor in the FF cabinet than they have in the past, thanks largely to a Birds Eye promotion begun in the fall, together with a refund offer by Swanson. Morton is adding an 8-ounce pie to its present 6 1/2-ounce and 11-ounce offerings. Other companies coming out with pot pies or weighing their changes are J. D. Jewell, Honor Brand, Fox DeLuxe Foods, and Libby, McNeill & Libby. A Seabrook Farms spokesman denied rumors of that company's considering entering the field.

February

Aluminum foil Noun 1. aluminum foil - foil made of aluminum
aluminium foil, tin foil

foil - a piece of thin and flexible sheet metal; "the photographic film was wrapped in foil"
 freezing, baking and serving dishes for frozen food packers were in the offing coming; arriving in the foreseeable future.
visible but not nearby.

See also: Offing Offing
 from Ekco Products Co., according to a spokesman, following a line for consumer outlets shown at the National Housewares house·wares  
pl.n.
Cooking utensils, dishes, and other small articles used in a household, especially in the kitchen.
 Show in Chicago.

March

Frozen foods accounted for 4.8% of the chains' total food dollar volume, according to information supplied by 131 chain store buyers, a figure which is higher than any previously reported from national studies. The study was undertaken by a joint effort of QFF with Quick magazine.

Frozen Dinner was the brand name of the heat-and-eat meal on a three-way divided aluminum platter advertised by Quaker State Quaker State may refer to:
  • The United States Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, which is colloquially known as the Quaker State; or
  • The Quaker State Corporation
 Foods Corp., Pittsburgh, Pa.

April

FF heads the list of rapidly growing food industries, according to a survey by the U.S. Department of Commerce's Office of Business Economics, which defined rapid growth as an average annual growth rate of 7 1/2% or more between 1940 and 1951. Frozen foods had a rate of growth of 17 1/2%, followed by canned fruit juices with a 12% rate of growth.

John M. Fox, president of the Minute Maid Corp., elected to the board of directors of the Morton Packing Co., Louisville, Ky., packer of frozen meat pies, it is announced by George E. Egger, Morton president.

May

"Prepared frozen foods, in a scant three years, have turned from the industry's stepchild step·child  
n.
1. A child of one's spouse by a previous union.

2. Something that does not receive appropriate care, respect, or attention: "Demography has a reputation for being the stepchild of . . .
 into its golden-haired boy. Many distributors report specialties now constitute up to 40% of total volume. The trend, as QFF has predicted for years, is now shaping up in the direction of main course dishes, featuring meats, chicken or seafoods. Even complete meals are coming back rapidly."

June

Food clubs are through, according to John Bess, head of the Freezer Owners Association and one of the chief food club plans' proponents. The trouble was, he said, that most food clubs deviated from the original idea, which was to sell wholesale. "They merely attempted to replace one type of retailing with another and, consequently, they could not deliver the savings they had promised."

Juice concentrates are available in more than 150 different labels; QFF's special packaging section illustrates 47 6-ounce FCOJ cans alone, including one from Tropicana and several chain and wholesale grocery labels. Four frozen coffee concentrates are available in glass jars with screw tops. Three 6-ounce tins of concentrated tomato juice are also shown.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

July

First Southwestern Frozen Food Association convention is held at the Shamrock Hotel Coordinates:  The Shamrock was a hotel constructed between 1946 and 1949 by wildcatter Glenn McCarthy southwest of downtown Houston, Texas next to the Texas Medical Center. , Houston, Tex.

Horse meat packers anticipate curtailment of their expanding industry as authorities estimate dwindling supply of horses for processing into pet foods will last from 7 to 10 years. Some are considering making a changeover to the solitary packing and canning of relatively cheaper beef, both for human consumption and animal foods.

August

Potato patties and other products, including french fries and diced potatoes, are now under production by the recently formed Ore-Ida Potato Products, Inc., Ontario, Ore., an affiliate of Oregon Frozen Foods being run as a separate operation, according to F. Nephi Grigg, president and sales manager sales manager ngerente m/f de ventas

sales manager ndirecteur commercial

sales manager sale n
.

Franchises for its new frozen raw doughnuts are offered on a nationwide scale by Dix Minit Donut Corp., Skokie, Ill.

Frozen fried fish Fried fish refers to any fish that has been prepared by frying. Often, the fish is covered in batter, or flour, or herbs and spices before being fried.

Fish is fried in many parts of the world, and fried fish is an important dish in many cuisines.
 sticks, packed in any real volume only in the last six months, have grown to capture a fair share of the market according to industry reports.

October

The Tyler Fixture Corporation, Niles, Mich., manufacturer of refrigerated food store equipment, has changed its name to Tyler Refrigeration Corporation, according to Robert L. Tyler, president.

November

C. A. Swanson & Sons, Omaha, Neb., is the first nationally known name to join the growing ranks of frozen multiple-item dinners with a turkey dinner consisting of sliced turkey, dressing, giblet gravy, sweet potato and green beans green beans
Noun, pl

long narrow green beans that are cooked and eaten as a vegetable
 in a divided aluminum tray. An aluminum foil covering is said to cut preparation time in half. Retail price was reported to be around $1.

December

An intensive promotion drive in the New York metropolitan area New York–Northern New Jersey–Long Island is the most populous metropolitan area in the United States and the third most populous in the world, after Tokyo and Mexico City.  will spearhead a national sales campaign Noun 1. sales campaign - an advertising campaign intended to promote sales
ad blitz, ad campaign, advertising campaign - an organized program of advertisements

sales campaign ncampaña de venta 
 backing the new Chinese-style frozen food line of Chun King Sales Co., Duluth, Minn. The company is packing chicken, beef and meatless chow meins as its first three frozen items.

1954

January

The public cold storage warehouse is growing in importance, and, according to an editorial in the Frozen Foods Forum, it may hold the key to the future of distribution. This has come about through the establishment of more drayage Drayage

A trucking company freight charge for the pick up or delivery of an ocean container.
 or trucking operations working directly from warehouse to retailer. The perfect tie-up of the future may be the frozen food distributor and the local warehouse.

No more orange groves within 50 miles of Los Angeles 25 years from now is the prediction of Harold Ryan, Agricultural Commissioner for the city. Inasmuch as in·as·much as  
conj.
1. Because of the fact that; since.

2. To the extent that; insofar as.


inasmuch as
conj

1. since; because

2.
 12,000 acres of orange trees have been uprooted to make room for real estate, he said, "in 25 years or so all our oranges may be coming from Florida."

Swanson's "TV Dinner" is introduced to 50 principal cities. The 12-ounce turkey dinner, retailing in the first chains to handle it at 89 cents, has an outer wrap of six-color printed MSAT MSAT Mobile Satellite
MSAT Microsoft Security Assessment Tool
MSAT Mobile Source Air Toxics
MSAT Medical School Admissions Test
MSAT Multiple Subjects Assessment for Teachers
MSAT Marin School of Arts and Technology
MSAT Mathematics, Science, and Technology Education
 cellophane laminated to tissue parchment parchment, untanned skins of animals, especially of the sheep, calf, and goat, prepared for use as a writing material. The name is a corruption of Pergamum, the ancient city of Asia Minor where preparation of parchment suitable for use on both sides was achieved in .

March

Campbell Soup Co., Camden, N.J., has joined the FF ranks with the test marketing of four frozen soups in the Philadelphia area. They are: green pea with ham, chicken and vegetable, oyster stew and cream of shrimp.

Star-Kist Foods, Terminal Island, Calif., is the first major canned fish packer to introduce frozen tuna pie under its own label, with Van Camp Sea Food, also of Terminal Island, to follow suit shortly, marketing tuna pie under its Chicken of the Sea label.

Lykes Bros. now owns a dominant portion of Pasco Packing Co., Dade City, Fla., but no change in the Pasco management or operation is considered at present, according to Joseph T. Lykes, president of both firms. Lykes purchased 20% of Pasco's stock in 1949.

April

Howard C. Boerner appointed director of marketing of Seabrook Farms Co., Bridgeton, N.J., following his resignation as national sales manager of Minute Maid Corp. At the same time, Boerner announced the formation of H. C. Boerner Co., located at New York City, to provide a consulting and sales service to the food industry.

May

QFF introduces its first Institutional Section devoted to FF for the institutional/food service field.

June

Whale meat is being used by one packer for frozen pet food, in the face of decreasing availability of horse meat. Frozen pet foods are about 6% of prepared pet food sales.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Seabrook Farms Co., Bridgeton, N.J., elects John M. Seabrook president, succeeding his father, Charles F. Seabrook, who becomes chairman of the board. At the same time, C. Courtney Seabrook, previously vice president in charge of sales, is named senior vice president of the company.

July

Snake River Snake River

River, northwestern U.S. It is the largest tributary of the Columbia River and one of the most important streams in the Pacific Northwest. It rises in the mountains of Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming and flows south and west through Idaho, turning north at
 Trout Co., Buhl, Idaho Buhl is a city located on the old Oregon Trail in the western half of Twin Falls County, Idaho, United States. Historic U.S. Route 30 goes right through Buhl along the scenic Thousand Springs Scenic Byway from Twin Falls to Bliss. , marks its 25th anniversary as producer of Tingey's 1,000 Springs brand with plans to up its frozen pack to 500,000 pounds, according to Robert A. Erkins, president and general manager.

Stouffer Restaurants, Cleveland, Ohio "Cleveland" redirects here. For the Cleveland metropolitan area, see . For other uses, see Cleveland (disambiguation).
Cleveland is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Cuyahoga County, the most populous county in the state.
, has advanced its plans to market a line of frozen prepared dishes under its own label when the restaurant chain opened a new freezing plant. The company has for several years packaged and sold frozen dishes from its Shaker Shaker

Member of the United Society of Believers in Christ's Second Appearing, a celibate millenarian sect. Derived from a branch of the radical English Quakers (see Society of Friends), the movement was brought to the U.S.
 Stouffer Restaurant in Cleveland, but last year began test marketing several items in local retail stores.

Stokely-Van Camp, Oakland, Calif., buys the controlling interest controlling interest

The ownership of a quantity of outstanding corporate stock sufficient to control the actions of the firm. Controlling interest often involves ownership of significantly less than 51% of a firm's outstanding stock because many owners fail
 in PictSweet Foods, Mt. Vernon, Wash.; a spokesman said both the Stokely Honor Brand and the PictSweet labels will be continued and merchandised vigorously.

A joint convention is planned by the Southern Frozen Food Distributors Association and the Southwestern Frozen Food Association for Sept. 30-Oct. 2 in New Orleans New Orleans (ôr`lēənz –lənz, ôrlēnz`), city (2006 pop. 187,525), coextensive with Orleans parish, SE La., between the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain, 107 mi (172 km) by water from the river mouth; founded .

August

Large size polyethylene bags are becoming increasingly popular in the FF industry. For instance, Minute Maid is packaging three cans of orange juice in a poly bag poly bag n (BRIT) (col) → bolsa de plástico

poly bag n (Brit) (inf) → sac m en plastique

poly bag (
 for multiple unit sales unit sales

Sales measured in terms of physical units rather than dollars. Unit sales data are often used by financial analysts when evaluating the health of a company.
. It is possible that the time will come when a 10-ounce poly bag, attractively printed, may be used for the retail sale of frozen vegetables and fruits by packers who want to be competitive from a price basis.

September

The Birds Eye Story, a 25th anniversary tribute to the organization which in large part pioneered the frozen food industry, comprises a 62-page section in this issue.

Aunt Jemima Aunt Jemima is a trademark for pancake flour, syrup, and other breakfast foods. The trademark dates to 1893, although Aunt Jemima pancake mix debuted in 1889. The phrase "Aunt Jemima" is sometimes used as a female version of "Uncle Tom" to refer to a black woman who is perceived as  pancakes introduced by Quaker Oats Co., Chicago, Ill., marking that company's debut in the frozen foods field--and the probable debut of frozen pancakes, though they have been the subject of considerable experimentation since the success of frozen waffles. Mrs. Burke's Foods, Philadelphia, Pa., also introduced a line of frozen pancakes throughout the Middle Atlantic states Middle Atlantic States also Mid-At·lan·tic States  

The U.S. states of New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and usually Delaware and Maryland.
. Quaker Oats' pancakes are initially limited to the Canton, Ohio Canton is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Stark CountyGR6. The municipality is located in northeastern Ohio and is situated on the Nimishillen Creek, approximately 24 miles (38 km) south of Akron[4] , market area.

FrigiDinner, Inc., Philadelphia, Pa., manufacturer of precooked frozen meals, is granted a patent for aluminum platters covered with aluminum foil used in the processing of the meals. According to Jacob Fisher, president, all styles and shapes of aluminum platters with foil covers and their multiple uses are included in the patent.

October

TV Dinner brand is registered with the Patent Office by C. A. Swanson & Sons, Omaha, Neb., filed as of Aug. 6, 1953, with use claimed since July 23, 1953, for frozen turkey dinner. Appearance in the Official Gazette A compilation published weekly by the Patent and Trademark Office listing all the Patents and Trademarks issued and registered, thereby providing notice to all interested parties.  of the U.S. Patent Office is often a year or more after filing. Ranch Hand brand is also filed for by Chip Steak Company, Oakland, Calif., Aug. 25, 1953, for a number of frozen meat products, with claim for use since November 1948.

Specialty packers form a national body as the National Prepared Frozen Food Processors Association is chartered in New York, with members of Philadelphia and New York organizations forming its first chapters.

Kitchens of Sara Lee, Chicago, Ill., continuing its sales expansion, is now in 17 states, mainly in the Middle West. It has appointed Beatrice Foods Co. as distributor in Cleveland and Akron, Ohio Akron is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Summit County.GR6 The municipality is located in northeastern Ohio on the Cuyahoga River between Cleveland to the north and Canton to the south, approximately 60 miles (96 km) west of , for its butter coffee cake, butter pound cake and cream cheese cake. The cakes are distributed as frozen baked goods beyond a 300-mile radius of the company's Chicago bakery.

British Columbia Packers Ltd., Vancouver, B.C., announced the purchase of Freeman Certi-Fresh Foods, Los Angeles, Calif. Arthur and Max Freeman, former principals of CertiFresh, will remain with the company during the transition period.

November

Special section on Seabrook Farms, which now has its own post office, Seabrook, N.J., with 50,000 acres of crops "comprising the world's largest farming-freezing operation."

Trading on the popularity of fish sticks, meat and poultry packers launch stick varieties including ham sticks from Geo. A Hormel, beef sticks by Goren Packing Co., chicken sticks from J.D. Jewell, while C. A. Swanson & Sons is offering precooked sticks made of chicken and turkey meat combined. Another company, Frozen Farm Products, Inc., is manufacturing Chik-Stik, a breaded chicken product on a wooden stick, under the Roseport brand.

December

A $100 prize is offered by QFF for the best design of a new FF cabinet which will create more footage in no more floor space: "... a multi-tier case which will enable the retailer to display a bigger variety of frozen foods by utilizing the only space left in his store; a cabinet which will make sales by displaying frozen foods vertically as well as horizontally."

Snow Crop Division of Clinton Foods is purchased by Minute Maid Corporation for nearly $40 million. The merger is seen by the citrus industry as having a stabilizing effect on the market.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Frozen Food Digest, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Title Annotation:1938-1954
Publication:Frozen Food Digest
Date:Oct 1, 2007
Words:14150
Previous Article:The starting point.
Next Article:Long ago and far away ...(1955-February, 1983)
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