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  • Nothing quite conveys America's need for quick culinary

  • convenience, like a TV dinner. Turkey and gravy with mashed potatoes

  • and peas all neatly portioned in an easy oven ready tray.

  • The TV dinner of the 1950s and sixties has changed a lot in the decades since.

  • Today, frozen foods are a booming category in supermarkets.

  • In 2023, modern home appliances and direct to consumer business

  • models are picking up where those TV dinners left off.

  • Technology is always going to be at the forefront

  • of what drives, I think, a lot of consumer innovation

  • and balancing that against the very traditional

  • and very recognizable experience of sharing a kitchen

  • to both prepare and enjoy a meal

  • is incredibly important to us, and I don't think that is ever going to go away.

  • Here's how TV dinners became

  • a thing to begin with and how they changed American cooking forever

  • as men were drafted to the front lines of World War II,

  • new opportunities opened up for women in the workforce.

  • More people working meant less time to cook.

  • Add in the rise of the television and you get the TV dinner.

  • However, the technology that allowed

  • TV dinners to exist in the first place wasn't the television.

  • It was the freezer, specifically the flash freezer.

  • For much of the 20th century, keeping foods fresh relied on slow,

  • freezing technology which sacrificed taste and texture for preservation.

  • Before flash freezing foods were frozen very slowly. During the slow freezing

  • large ice crystals form, which disrupts the cellular structure of the foods.

  • What this means is that once we thaw the foods, we have lost

  • a lot of the texture and high quality through that process.

  • This changed when American inventor Clarence Birdseye

  • traveled to Canada, where he became intrigued

  • with the preservation techniques of Inuit fishermen.

  • As fish were reeled out of the water.

  • They began to freeze instantly, maintaining the cellular structure within.

  • Upon his return to the States, Birdseye set out to replicate the flash

  • freeze strategy of the Inuit at a commercial scale.

  • By 1925, Birdseye's double built freezer reduced

  • freeze times from days to minutes, enabling the mass production of flash

  • frozen meats, fruits and vegetables.

  • Maxom Food Systems, adopted Birdseye's technology

  • methods in 1945 for their 'Strato-Plates'.

  • Ready made frozen meals designed to be sold on airlines.

  • In 1953, a grave miscalculation.

  • Over Thanksgiving, Turkey quantities left the Swanson Company with 260

  • tons of turkey sitting in ten train cars. While Swanson kept the meat refrigerated

  • by running the train back and forth between the East Coast and the Midwest.

  • They searched desperately for a better solution.

  • Appetizing meals are served to all on board.

  • Borrowing from the concept of the 'Strato-Plate',

  • Swanson salesman Gerry Thomas pitched an idea - preserve the turkey

  • through flash freezing and sell it to consumers as a meal in a box.

  • Voila. The TV dinner was born.

  • However, Turkey

  • alone wasn't much of a meal for Swanson to include sides with their dinner entree

  • they needed to solve the problem of cook times.

  • Synchronization as a concept in cooking of these multi-component meals

  • that lets us have all of the food cooked

  • to the proper temperature within the same time period.

  • A lot of this work was done back in the 1950s

  • by Betty Cronin, who was a bacteriologist at Swanson.

  • So what she did was experimentation with different types of foods

  • and seeing how you can cook them before adding them to the package

  • so that once you put them in the oven and have them cook

  • for the same time, they would all come out at the right temperature.

  • Swanson's TV dinner became an immediate success, selling over

  • 10 million TV dinner trays in the first year of production.

  • As its name indicates, the success of TV dinners

  • ran parallel with the rise in household televisions.

  • In 1950, only 9% of U.S.

  • households owned television sets.

  • But by 1955, the number rose to 64%

  • and again to 87% by 1960.

  • TV dinners were lauded for their speedy cook times of 25 minutes

  • a time that shrunk drastically with the advent of the microwave oven.

  • Introducing a new era in convenient cooking.

  • Campbells bought the Swanson TV dinner business.

  • There were other competitors, but Swanson was the biggest.

  • So we had the sales infrastructure.

  • We had the operational infrastructure.

  • What we had was a product that was starting to become a bit out of date

  • because people were wanting even more convenience, higher quality,

  • you know, microwavable.

  • So we just needed to be creative about how we did it.

  • They had had

  • an idea to do a more upscale frozen dinner,

  • and we came up with 'Le Menu' frozen dinners.

  • The candlelight, the music, the flowers, Le Menu.

  • The trick to the business at the time that we had to address

  • was to make the product duel-ovenable because at the time household penetration

  • was of microwaves was maybe 20%, but we knew it was coming.

  • So we wanted to make the product microwavable, but we had to address

  • the immediate issue that most households didn't have a microwave yet.

  • At a height of five feet, a weight of 750 pounds, and a cost of about $5,000,

  • the first microwave didn't resemble what we know today.

  • It would take decades before the technology became a kitchen staple.

  • The first domestic microwave oven came about in 1967

  • at a price point of $495.

  • By 1970, nearly 40,000 units were sold in the U.S..

  • Five years later, annual sales reached 1 million. As brands like

  • Campbell's, Pillsbury and Nestlé geared more products towards microwave cooking,

  • the device's popularity flourished.

  • By 1986, products designed for the microwave

  • had grown to be a $269 million a year business.

  • With the microwave becoming a fixture in over 80%

  • of American households by 1993.

  • Convenience foods are always going to be important for the consumer.

  • People are busier than ever. In the days when we launched these products,

  • particularly when it became microwavable, 5 minutes instead of a half an hour

  • and better quality food,

  • was amazingly an opportunity for people to enjoy this product.

  • Convenience is still a huge opportunity, huge need, just different ways

  • of addressing it.

  • Since the turn of the century, microwave

  • sales have staggered, while frozen food sales have exploded.

  • Frozen foods were among the fastest growing grocery category during the

  • COVID-19 pandemic, bringing in $72.2 billion in retail

  • sales in 2022 nearly a 34% increase compared to 2019.

  • Along with growing demand for frozen foods,

  • the emergence and uptake of new products like meal kits highlight

  • a shifting appetite in America towards other forms of convenient cooking.

  • Blue Apron is one of the original meal kit companies in the United States.

  • We've been around since 2012 and we ship boxes of delicious

  • fresh food items to people's homes to prepare for them and their families.

  • As with the television and the microwave,

  • technology has a hand in shaping consumer interests.

  • If you look at all of the technological innovation,

  • again, going back to Swanson turkey dinners, up to the creation of meal kits

  • There's been a huge move towards faster and easier cooking

  • but what had not yet been solved was an opportunity to have

  • all of those experiences exist but still have culinary discovery

  • as a part of it and still have ingredient quality

  • and wellness and health at the forefront of those considerations.

  • Home dining continues to be an evolving picture.

  • While meal kits cut down on time at the store, new pathways to convenience

  • are being forged with technology like smart kitchens and air fryers.

  • One of the biggest things for us has been making sure that we have

  • a supply chain that can actually meet where customers interests are.

  • And really their interests have coalesced around three things:

  • quality, convenience and variety.

  • Demand for variety has only increased

  • as the media landscape around food has continued to broaden.

  • That doesn't mean that every TikTok trend turns itself into a Blue Apron recipe,

  • but it does mean that if we see techniques that people are responding to on TikTok,

  • we might find a way to incorporate them into our recipes.

  • Still putting all of our Blue Apron signatures and approaches to the recipe,

  • but understanding that there are now different authorities that people

  • are turning to for food content and really for inspiration,

  • that we want to be able to engage with and stay relevant

  • in conversation.

Nothing quite conveys America's need for quick culinary

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