Case-ready meat, retail-ready meat, or pre-packaged meat refers to fresh meat that is processed and packaged at a central facility and delivered to the store ready to be put directly into the meat case.[1][2]
Background
Traditionally, most meat was shipped as primal cuts from the slaughterhouse to the butcher. Meat was then cut to commonly used cuts and packaged at the store or was custom cut for consumers.
Case-ready meat is cut and packaged at central regional facilities and sent to retail stores ready for placement in refrigerated display cases. Local butchering, cutting, trimming, and overwrapping the meat at retail stores is greatly reduced.
Advantages of the centralized master-packager preparation include: efficiency of centralized operations, tight quality control, close control of sanitization, specialized packaging, etc.[3]
Packaging
Centralized cutting and processing of meats has the potential of reducing the shelf life of the cuts. Specialized packaging is needed to regain and even extend that shelf life.
^Pelletier, Brian (30 April 2005). "Case-ready meat is hitting its stride". Multipacking/shrink bundling/banding. Packaging World. PMMI Media Group. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
^Petrak, Lynn (29 January 2016). "Case ready and steady". Food Business News. Sosland Publishing. Retrieved 15 October 2018.