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Perdue

October 6, 2021

Perdue Is Putting Birds Out to Pasture With Solar-Powered Mobile Chicken Coops

With more than $7 billion in annual sales, it would be easy for Salisbury, MD-based Perdue Farms, a top 10 domestic poultry producer, to focus on business as usual. Instead, the company looks to the future and understands its vision must go beyond simply putting broilers, wings, and chicken breasts in supermarkets and then on consumers’ dinner plates.

In launching its expanded pasture-raised program, Perdue is putting into play a clever piece of technology that benefits consumers, the environment, and, of course, its birds. At its 6th Annual Perdue Farms Animal Care Summit, the company unveiled its solar-powered mobile chicken coops, which it believes will play a key role in its future.

Ryan Perdue, VP, and GM of Perdue’s pasture business explained how the solar-powered mobile chicken coops operate and how they will lead to more sustainable farmland and a healthier product for consumers. Perdue’s commitment to the pasture-raised part of the business was further fueled by its December 2019 purchase of California-based Pasturebird, a firm whose mobile chicken coop took the pasture-raised process to a new level. The acquisition made Perdue the largest producer of pasture-raised chickens in the United States.

While a seemingly subtle distinction, the change in location yields significant benefits. As Perdue explained in an interview with The Spoon in advance of the announcement, a mobile, solar-powered chicken coop houses 6,000 birds which is 75% less than a typical bird house. It is a floorless building, 150 feet by 50 feet in size, and via a solar-powered engine, it moves 50 feet per day.

Perdue says the chickens are offered a new, fresh bounty of grass, insects, flowers, and grains at each new pasture location. While the chickens are not labeled organic, there is a significant increase in the organic matter they eat when presented in a new feeding area each day.

Perdue says that rotating the pasture areas creates a “virtuous cycle” where there is less erosion from rain, and by having the land rest, grass and flowers grow back even more bountiful than before.

While much of the process is automated, farmers will be hands-on overseeing the movement of the mobile coops.

“There are major benefits to the consumer,” Perdue adds. “A pasture-raised bird has less saturated fat, is more nutrient-dense, and higher in Omega-3.”

Perdue Farms is not disclosing how many solar-powered mobile coops it currently deploys or a schedule as to when its poultry-raised product will be widely available on supermarket shelves. Because it is a premium product, pasture-raised chicken commands a higher price; however, Perdue reports, “as the company finalizes price points, Perdue will not sell its pasture-raised chicken at a profit.”

At the time of Perdue’s purchase of Pasturebird, several smaller producers of pasture-raised poultry, primarily sold at farmers’ markets and specialty grocery stores, feared that the deal would put pasture-raised poultry out of the hands of independent farms. Based on Perdue’s acquisition of Coleman Natural Meats in 2011 and Niman Ranch in 2015, the company has grown more than in revenue and product lines.

In an interview with The Counter.org, Lauri Torgerson-White, senior animal welfare specialist with Mercy for Animals, suggests Perdue has learned a lot from companies like Niman Ranch, a pioneer in progressive farming. “Most companies, like Tyson, blow us off. We’ve done multiple investigations of their farms, and they refuse to talk to us,” she says. “But when Perdue learned what was going on, they reached out to talk to us, and since then, we’ve had a really positive relationship with them. Every year they’re doing more to improve the welfare standards on their farms. It’s been a very, very good, cooperative, productive relationship.

September 8, 2019

We Tried Perdue’s Chicken Plus Tenders Blended Meat + Veggies, and They Fooled My 8-Year-Old

As a child of the 70s, I grew up watching commercials with Frank Perdue talking about his name brand of chickens. I don’t know if my mom ever bought Perdue chicken, but I know I haven’t since becoming an adult. So it was a little strange to rip open the bag of frozen Perdue Chicken Plus chicken breast and vegetable patties and tenders the company sent me to test out.

The Chicken Plus product hit store shelves this month and the hook is that vegetables are blended in with the chicken, so it’s a sneaky way to get your kids to eat their veggies. Perdue’s June press release announcing Chicken Plus describes the product as such:

…PERDUE CHICKEN PLUS blends cauliflower, chickpeas and plant protein to create the next generation of frozen chicken nuggets, tenders and patties, and each serving is complete with one-quarter cup (half a serving of vegetables) and is made with 100 percent all-natural ingredients and no antibiotics ever white meat chicken.

Like so many other traditional meat companies, Perdue is seeing the writing on the wall as sales of plant-based proteins from the likes of Beyond Meat and Impossible skyrocket. The Food Marketing Institute’s “Power of Meat 2019” report found that “plant-based meat alternatives sales increased 19.2% last year and account for $878 million in annual sales.”

And Perdue is by no means alone. The chicken company joins other high-profile traditional meat companies in jumping on the plant-based bandwagon. Just this week, Hormel launched its Happy Little Plants line of meatless meat, and the other chicken giant, Tyson, has invested in plant-based shrimp company New Wave Foods.

Tyson is actually the most apt comparison for Perdue. Not only are both companies in the chicken business, but in June, Tyson launched its Raised & Rooted line of chicken products, which also feature a blend of chicken and vegetable protein. My colleague Catherine Lamb explained why blended protein is becoming big in her (excellent) Future Food newsletter this summer when she asked Are Blended Meats the Future of Flexitarian Dining?:

Perdue and Tyson are smart to take baby steps into the alternative protein space, though at this point it’s clearly too big a market opportunity to ignore (except for Arby’s, apparently). By starting with blended products, major meat processing companies can grow their customer base into a new market, all while retaining their existing infrastructure.

It’s also a way for traditional meat companies to hang on and not alienate their existing meat-loving customer base.

For its part, Perdue is really leaning into the whole flexitarian lifestyle. The headline for its Chicken Plus press release was how the product could “meet demand for flexitarian families” and that the company was there “to help flexitarian families who are hungry for new ways to fill the vegetable void…” I’m a bit more of a skeptic and think Perdue didn’t want to play, errr, chicken with the oncoming wave of plant-based protein.

All of this business about flexitarianing is all well and good, but how do the Chicken Plus tenders and patties taste?

Pretty much like chicken tenders and patties. I air fried them both, and while they are a little mushier than a straight up chicken tender or patty, both still tasted like chicken. And by that I mean a processed chicken. Serving sizes pack plenty of salt: 480 mg (20 percent of your daily value) for a Chicken Plus patty and 460 mg in three tenders (19 percent of your daily value).

But it really doesn’t matter what I think. The tenders and such are more for kids. So what did my eight-year-old think? I asked him after school if he wanted chicken tenders for snack, neglecting to mention the veggie part, and he enthusiastically said yes. I cooked and plated them and he gobbled them up without saying a word.

“Did you like them?” I asked.

“Yeah,” was all I got back. Which, in this case was more than enough. He didn’t think there was anything odd or off about them, and he asked for more the next day after school. So Perdue should take that as a win.

I’m not a nutritionist, I can’t say how “healthy” the vegetable servings in Chicken Plus really are. In addition to the sodium count, the Chicken Plus tenders have 10g of protein and 21 g of carbs. Regular Perdue breaded chicken tenders have 10 g of protein, 420mg of sodium, and 16g of carbs. So it’s not like there’s a huge difference between the two.

Though a 22 oz. bag of Chicken Plus product is $6.99, I don’t think I’ll be purchasing any. My son is already pretty good about eating his vegetables, so I don’t need a clandestine delivery mechanism for them. And more important to me is whether the chicken is organic, which Chicken Plus is not, so there isn’t a reason for me to buy a bag of it.

I don’t even think Frank Perdue could convince me.

June 13, 2019

Future Food: Are Blended Meats the Future of Flexitarian Dining?

This is the web version of our weekly Future Food newsletter. The newsletter has exclusive additional content, so be sure to subscribe here so you don’t miss a beat!

Earlier today Tyson Foods announced Raised & Rooted, its long-awaited venture into the alternative protein space. Its first products aren’t strictly vegan; they include both animal products and plant-based ingredients. One is a vegetarian chicken nugget made with egg whites and plants and the other is a blended burger composed of Angus beef and pea protein.

Tyson isn’t the only Big Meat company diversifying into the alt-protein market. Just yesterday, Perdue — the fourth largest chicken producer in the U.S. (Tyson is the first) — announced it would also be releasing a line of blended chicken products. Interestingly, Perdue sourced some of its plant-based ingredients with help from Better Meat Co, the startup which makes vegan protein meant to be blended with meat to make it healthier and more sustainable.

Perdue and Tyson are smart to take baby steps into the alternative protein space, though at this point it’s clearly too big a market opportunity to ignore (except for Arby’s, apparently). By starting with blended products, major meat processing companies can grow their customer base into a new market, all while retaining its existing infrastructure.

But there will inevitably be some pushback by those claiming that blended burgers and nuggets are purely a marketing tactic from Big Meat. Which they, of course, are — and a smart one at that. By rolling out a line of (at least semi-) plant-based meats, companies like Tyson and Perdue are showing consumers that they are brands which have their finger on the pulse of what’s new and hip.

Vegetarians and vegans may see these products as a step in the wrong direction. But to those who get in a huff about blended meat, let me say this: it’s a step in the right direction. Sure, consumers who eat a Raised & Rooted burger are still eating meat — but they’re eating less meat than they would otherwise. It’s a good stop-gap until plant-based darlings like Beyond Meat and Impossible Foods perfect their products, or cell-based meat takes over.

Beyond Meat’s new Beyond Beef.

For those who prefer their burgers sans meat, this week Beyond Meat announced it’s now selling the long-awaited Beyond Beef in one specific Whole Foods in Boulder, CO. (Fun fact: That location was the first-ever to sell Beyond’s plant-based patties in the meat section.) The company is also dropping a new, meatier version of its plant-based burger patties with better fat marbling to give the patties a texture more akin to beef and apple extract to make the meat brown once cooked.

It’s no surprise that Beyond is firing on all cylinders, debuting new products and improving old ones at a rapid clip. Especially when Big Food companies — Tyson and Perdue, sure, but also Nestlé and Unilever — are all waking up to the potential of the plant-based protein market.

Beyond may have had a wildly successful IPO and enjoy a strong foothold in retail right now, but it’s got competition coming in — and not just from Impossible. No wonder it’s aiming for such an accelerated growth rate in its first year as a public company.

Photo: KFC

Protein new ’round the web

  • KFC in the U.K. is launching “The Imposter,” a vegan chicken burger made of Quorn (h/t The Independent). It probably won’t be long before KFC U.S. follows suit.
  • Dutch food giant Vivera is going to focus 100 percent on plant-based protein. It just sold the meat company in its portfolio, Enkco, this week.
  • Curious about how to grill up Beyond Meat’s burgers and sausages? We’ve got your guide.

That’s it from me this week! I was in San Francisco recently and somehow didn’t get an Impossible Whopper from Burger King. I’m not sure I’ll ever forgive myself.

Eat well,
Catherine

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