OEM Profile: MAP put Orics on the Map

Orics Industries was a pioneer in MAP just as it began to take off. Now it builds equipment for businesses, including everything from produce to meat to dairy to orthopedic implants.

Ori Cohen, president and founder of Orics Industries, is shown here in the firm’s 40,000 square foot manufacturing facility in Farmingdale, N.Y.
Ori Cohen, president and founder of Orics Industries, is shown here in the firm’s 40,000 square foot manufacturing facility in Farmingdale, N.Y.
Photo courtesy of Orics

Family-owned and operated since its founding in 1990, Orics Industries remains a key supplier of packaging machines for just about any product that is packaged in tubs, trays, or cups. De-nesters, fillers, and sealers are at the heart of the firm’s offerings, though in recent years horizontal form/fill/seal machines and robotic pick-and-place systems have been added to the mix. Also playing a central role in the firm’s origins and continued growth is modified atmosphere packaging (MAP) equipment.

Speaking of Orics’ origins, they were humble to be sure, says founder and president Ori Cohen. Fresh out of engineering studies in his native Israel and equipped with two years of experience in the sprinklers and irrigation industries, he got a student visa to further his studies at Farleigh Dickinson University and then Columbia University Graduate School of Engineering. Soon he found himself working in the Long Island town of New Hyde Park in the engineering department of Autoprod, a packaging machinery manufacturer that specialized in cup filling and sealing equipment. When that firm was acquired and relocated to Florida, Cohen chose not to go. Not entirely sure what his next move should be, he was approached in 1991 by a food manufacturer that had been working with Autoprod on equipment capable of producing the kind of MAP packages that were just then being introduced by firms like Nestle for refrigerated ready meals with extended shelf life. “I told them I have no machinery manufacturing capabilities whatsoever, but they wrote me a $20,000 check anyway and told me to make it happen,” he recalls. 

The Orics R-50 rotary cup filling system has dual filling stations for products like yogurt that also include a fruit puree on the bottom.The Orics R-50 rotary cup filling system has dual filling stations for products like yogurt that also include a fruit puree on the bottom.Photo courtesy of OricsWith no other compelling opportunities in sight, he decided to give it a go, and in short order—through the magic of an old-style search engine called The Yellow Pages--he found a machine shop in Flushing, N.Y., owned by two pairs of brothers, one pair Greek and the other Italian.

“They were essentially retired but continued to operate the shop largely as a place to cook and smoke and drink coffee and argue,” says Cohen. “After listening to me describe what it was I’d been asked to build, they made a space for me in their shop and said they’d make the machine parts I required. And that’s how I built my first MAP packaging machine. Part of the process was acquiring quantities of aluminum in Flushing at Davidson Aluminum and Metal, strapping it to a roof rack on my Chevy, and driving it back to the shop. ”

One huge advantage Cohen had going for him was that part of the engineering work he’d done in the past revolved around the distribution of fluids for sprinkler and irrigation systems. Some of the same principles apply when it comes to distributing gases in MAP systems, so he came to the task of building MAP systems with a leg up on whatever competition was out there. And there wasn’t very much since MAP was still quite new. In any event, the machine he designed and built for his very first customer used a special sprinkler to backflush the gas only at the head space of each individual package rather than in a large enclosed chamber. This approach meant that the system  was capable of eliminating residual oxygen levels so efficiently that ready meals got a 40-day refrigerated shelf life while Nestle with all of its millions of dollars in R&D wasn’t getting more than 14 days.

Depositing systems like these have long been a specialty at Orics Industries.Depositing systems like these have long been a specialty at Orics Industries.Photo courtesy of OricsSomehow, word of Orics’ impressive MAP breakthrough reached this reporter’s ears, so I visited an Orics installation in 1991 to cover it editorially. Shortly after the story appeared, the Orics' mailbox began receiving a steady supply of communications just as quaint as The Yellow Pages. Known colloquially as “bingo cards,” they were cards bound into trade magazines like Packaging World and used by readers to request more information from businesses who advertised or were mentioned editorially in that particular magazine issue. These days, of course, the bingo card is dead, as the primary delivery vehicle for such information is a web site.

By 1994 Orics Industries had grown to about 15 employees and it was time to move out of the Flushing machine shop to a bigger facility in College Point—still in Queens. It was around that time that supermarkets started carrying fresh refrigerated salad mixes from companies like Fresh Express and Tanimura & Antle. Once again the MAP machinery from Orics tended to be the best option when it came to efficiently extending the refrigerated shelf life of these backflushed trayed products with heat-sealed flexible film lidding. All of which led to the firm buying two buildings in Farmingdale, N.Y., and fitting them out for further growth. That was in 2008, and that’s where the firm resides to this day.

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