Provisioner logo
Provisioner logo
search
cart
facebook twitter linkedin youtube
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
Provisioner logo
Provisioner logo
  • NEWS
    • Industry News
    • Supplier News
    • Case Studies
    • Recalls
    • Regulations
    • New Consumer Products
  • EXCLUSIVES
    • Newsletters
    • Source Book
    • Sponsored Insights
    • Events
    • Webinars
    • Classifieds
    • White Papers
    • Provisioner Store
    • Market Research
  • MEAT PROCESSING
    • SUSTAINABILITY
    • Processing
    • Packaging
    • Ingredients
    • Formulation
    • Food Safety
    • Special Reports
    • Commentary
  • PROFILES
    • Processor Profiles
    • Processor of the Year
    • Top 100 Processors
  • MEDIA
    • Videos
    • Podcasts
  • DIRECTORY
  • MIHOF
  • INDEPENDENT PROCESSOR
  • EMAG
    • eMagazine
    • ARCHIVE ISSUES
    • Contact
    • Advertise
  • JOIN!

Injection and Marination

July 1, 2004

Injection and Marination

by Allison Bardic, Senior Editor
Whether they’re injected, massaged, or vacuum tumbled, marinated products are becoming more prevalent in meat cases everywhere. Consumer benefits range from the tender, moist, characteristics associated with enhanced meats to the convenience of marinated products that are ready to cook, easy to prepare, and packed with flavor.
“We’ve found there is a significant preference for enhanced products versus non-enhanced products,” notes Dan Emery, vice president of marketing for poultry processor Pilgrim's Pride Corporation, Pittsburg, TX. “Consumers may not like the idea of enhancement, but when you show them enhanced product side by side with non-enhanced product and ask them to taste it, they clearly prefer it.”
The injection debate
For about a year Pilgrim’s Pride has offered a complete line of exact-weight and non-exact-weight enhanced poultry products, generally defined by the industry as fresh, whole-muscle meat that has been injected with a solution of water and other ingredients that may include salt, phosphates, seasonings, and flavorings to enhance its texture, flavor, and consistency.
Among the major forces driving poultry enhancement, Emery points to enhanced products’ ability to retain moisture, even when overcooked, resulting in consistent product tenderness. “When you cook enhanced chicken, it doesn’t dry out. It’s a lot more forgiving than non-enhanced varieties,” says Emery. “It’s definitely juicier and more tender. The only real negative is that you can’t say it’s ‘all-natural.’”
Similarly, a study focusing on moisture retention, completed last year by the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association Center for Research & Knowledge Management and led by Kansas State University’s Jim Marsden, noted that, “Beef cuts injected with solutions designed to keep the cut tender and juicy even at higher cooked temperatures might lead to more consistently good eating experiences … Needle injected or enhanced beef products may be one method that affords the consumer a more consistent eating experience.”
Most consumers don’t realize they’re buying enhanced products when they do, however. Emery observes that his company’s Butterball brand of turkey is hugely popular with consumers who have no idea it is enhanced. “No one reads the label, and if you have a superior product, consumers will buy it,” he says.
Opponents of enhanced products, however, counter that they are just another way for manufacturers to generate more profits by selling meat that’s pumped full of water.
Laurel, MS-based Sanderson Farms this year launched a consumer education initiative designed to shed light on enhanced chicken, for example. “By purchasing this altered chicken, many shoppers are paying for more than they realize – and it's turning out to be extra water, salt, and phosphates,” the company contends. “Labeled ‘enhanced with chicken broth,’ this processed poultry absorbs the liquid, which accounts for up to fifteen percent of the product’s weight, and could cost consumers, if all chicken were enhanced in this manner, an extra $2.9 billion each year.”
Sanderson Farms, dedicated to producing 100-percent chicken naturally, emphasizes that it does not add water, salt, and phosphates to increase the weight of its Sanderson Farms brand of fresh chicken. “Consumers need to be made aware that some of the chicken on the market contains extra water, salt, and phosphates,” stresses Bill Sanderson, director of marketing for Sanderson Farms. “We urge shoppers to take an extra second to check the label on the front of the package, read the fine print on the back, and look for words like ‘enhanced,’ ‘chicken broth,’ or ‘solution.’ ”
Sanderson Farms’ initiative was followed up with a public awareness campaign led by the Modesto, CA-based California Poultry Federation (CPF) that also strongly urged consumers to read product labels. “Some markets across the Western United States offer only enhanced chicken in their fresh meat case, which at first glance appears to be fresh but isn’t… We want to assure consumers that if they are buying fresh California chicken, they are not paying for water and salt,” says CPF President Bill Mattson. “We are not saying there is anything wrong with enhanced chicken, but we do believe that consumers need to be made aware of the issue and should be educated that they have a choice when selecting chicken products from the fresh meat case.”
Emery stresses that Pilgrim’s Pride’s enhanced poultry solution includes a binding agent to help maintain chicken’s moisture. “A lot of companies use sodium as a binding ingredient, causing their products’ sodium levels to go through the roof, but we use something else,” he says, adding that for those consumers who prefer non-enhanced products, the company continues to offer that alternative as well. “Our corporate stance is that we are going to offer both products. Both have a benefit.”
Rubs and marinades
An endless variety of marinades also are at processors’ fingertips, giving them the ability to build multi-levels of flavor. While the main purpose of marinating is to allow food to absorb flavors of the marinade or, as in the case of tough meat, to tenderize it, rubs typically consist of a blend of dry spices and herbs applied directly to the surface of meat or poultry.
For its part, Smithfield, VA-based Smithfield Packing Co.’s marination techniques combine a pump, then an application of hand-coated rubs. “We believe the benefit is uniform application of rub, and our pump levels are as low or lower than most competitors’,” says Jim Schloss, vice president of marketing, Smithfield Foods.
Among the chief advantages of Smithfield’s marinated products, Schloss points to their response to the consumer's need for taste, convenience, and variety. Today’s trade need to feature items that appeal to consumers who can pick up such products as Smithfield marinated pork, beef, or turkey and have a dinner on the table in 45 minutes or less, he assesses. Other factors include the growing number of children and men who cook, and marinated products’ optimal format for grilling which, as Schloss notes, has “become an American pastime.”
Smithfield Packing’s marinated products encompass pork, beef, and turkey. Marinated pork varieties include tenderloins, loin filets, center cut loin roasts, center cut boneless chops (regular and thick cut), boneless sirloins, St. Louis ribs, and Chef's Prime roasts, of which Teriyaki, Peppercorn, and Italian Garlic and Herb flavors are consumer favorites.
Smithfield’s marinated St. Louis rib flavors are Sweet and Sassy and Burgundy Peppercorn, while the marinated beef is a USDA Choice shoulder tender available in Herb Rubbed, Southern Basted, and Oven Roasted flavors. Turkey tenderloins come in Teriyaki, Southern Basted, and Lemon Pepper varieties.
“The latest meat and poultry marination trends are the use of more cuts such as St. Louis ribs; the move to extend the number of proteins a company markets; and different flavors to appeal to trends such as Pan Asian, various Hispanic cultures, and South American flavors,” Schloss adds, noting that Smithfield’s only significant production challenge related to the marination process deals with product changeovers. “We constantly search for the flavors that will appeal to the masses and thus enable us to have larger production runs.”
Among its marinated products, Excel Corporation, a Wichita, KS-based Cargill Meat Solutions company, offers Sterling Silver® premium beef, pork, turkey, or ham, Honeysuckle White turkey, Shady Brook Farms turkey, and Tender Choice beef. The company’s newest offerings include Sterling Silver Lemon Pepper Pork Loin filet, Home-style Pork Tenderloin and Pork Filets, Burgundy Peppercorn Pork Tenderloin, Sweet Ginger Teriyaki Pork Loin Filet, and Tenderloins; Tender Choice Onion Garlic Beef Rib eye, Steakhouse Beef Rib eye, and Lightly Seasoned Rib eye (These flavors are also available for strip loins). In addition, Honeysuckle White/Shady Brook Farms has introduced Lemon Garlic, Rotisserie, and Home-style Turkey Tenderloins.
“The focus [regarding marination] has been to create product lines that improve the consumer eating experience,” explains Norman Bessac, vice president of marketing for Cargill Meat Solutions. “We believe the work we have done in marinations and flavorings has allowed us to develop a complete line of products that offer consumers a great eating experience. Because consumers like the flavor and cooking performance, we have seen incremental sales for the category.”
Bessac notes that Excel’s most notable marination challenge has been to provide products with the correct level of seasoning to achieve an intense flavor without overwhelming the meat’s flavor. “Using the right flavorings that do not hurt shelf life has also been important,” he adds. “In the non-flavored pork items, making sure that we are adding the right level of marination to positively affect the cooking process without adding too much liquid or salt … We match up process flow and procedures with the finished product requirements/characteristics. In our experience, we have not found one process that fits all of our needs. Making sure the product exceeds consumer expectations is the key focus and includes flavor, purge, and cooking process.”

Share This Story

Looking for a reprint of this article?
From high-res PDFs to custom plaques, order your copy today!

Recommended Content

JOIN TODAY
to unlock your recommendations.

Already have an account? Sign In

  • Double Charburger

    Premiumization drives burger category

    Shoppers seek out premium meat offerings to fulfill...
    Ingredients
    By: Sammy Bredar
  • JJS Adult Pekin duck

    Poultry Report 2025: Convenience propels poultry at retail

    Despite continued economic pressures, the poultry...
    Turkey
    By: Sammy Bredar
You must login or register in order to post a comment.

Report Abusive Comment

Manage My Account
  • eMagazine Subscriptions
  • Manage My Preferences
  • Newsletters
  • Online Registration
  • Subscription Customer Service
  • Connect with The National Provisioner

More Videos

Sponsored Content

Sponsored Content is a special paid section where industry companies provide high quality, objective, non-commercial content around topics of interest to the The National Provisioner audience. All Sponsored Content is supplied by the advertising company and any opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily reflect the views of The National Provisioner or its parent company, BNP Media. Interested in participating in our Sponsored Content section? Contact your local rep!

close
  • A smiling man carrying a grocery basket is reaching down to pick up a package of meat in a grocery store.
    Sponsored byPIC

    The Green Light: New Data Shows 12-to-1 Support for Pork from PRRS-Resistant Pigs

  • Close up of a grocery cart full of groceries, a cropped image of a couple pushing the cart and a blurred background of the vegetable aisle.
    Sponsored byPIC

    New Market Research Finds Consumers in Eight Key Pork Markets Are Likely to Purchase Pork from Gene-Edited Pigs

  • Close up of a young pig with a blurred background.
    Sponsored byPIC

    New Research Forecasts Significant Economic and Market Impacts with PRRS-Resistant Pig Adoption

Popular Stories

Various new Primal snack sticks on a table amongst pencils, apples, a pair of glasses, lunch bags and a water bottle.

Protein demand drives snacking occasions

Spam Dog

Hormel rolls out Spam hot dog for foodservice applications

Several cuts of beef, pork and chicken on a wooden board, cast iron pan and salt.

Validated thermal lethality data and a new tool for ensuring safety of RTE meats

2026 Top 100 Meat & Poultry Processors Report

Events

January 1, 2030

Webinar Sponsorship Information

For webinar sponsorship information, visit www.bnpevents.com/webinars or email webinars@bnpmedia.com.

View All Submit An Event

Products

Food Crime: An Introduction to Deviance in the Food Industry

Food Crime: An Introduction to Deviance in the Food Industry

See More Products
From Fresh to Frozen in 3 Minutes Flat: Unlocking the Secrets to Temperature Control Webinar Sponsored by Air Products

Related Articles

  • GEA MultiJector 500 with pork

    GEA expands injection portfolio for small- to mid-capacity marination lines

    See More
  • The high-wire act

    See More
  • Filtering out problems

    See More

Related Products

See More Products
  • Handbook of Poultry Science and Technology, Volume 2, Secondary Processing

  • Poultry Meat Processing, Second Edition

See More Products

Related Directories

  • Pick Heaters Inc.

    Pick Heaters manufactures Direct Steam Injection Liquid Heating Systems. Pick Heaters are ideal for applications such as tank fill, belt washing, scalding, CIP, and product washing. Variable Flow Heaters are for start/stop applications such as hose stations.
×

Stay ahead of the curve. Unlock a dose of cutting-edge insights.

Receive our premium content directly to your inbox.

SIGN-UP TODAY
  • RESOURCES
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    • Directories
    • Store
    • Want More
  • SIGN UP TODAY
    • Create Account
    • eMagazine
    • Newsletter
    • Customer Service
    • Manage Preferences
  • SERVICES
    • Marketing Services
    • Reprints
    • Market Research
    • List Rental
    • Survey/Respondent Access
  • STAY CONNECTED
    • LinkedIn
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • X (Twitter)
  • PRIVACY
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • TERMS & CONDITIONS
    • DO NOT SELL MY PERSONAL INFORMATION
    • PRIVACY REQUEST
    • ACCESSIBILITY

Copyright ©2026. All Rights Reserved BNP Media, Inc. and BNP Media II, LLC.

Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing