ABOUT US | CONTACT US | ADVERTISE | RSS
 
Progressive Grocer
Web
Subscribe
Newsletters  Magazine  Digital Edition
features - products

Save E-mail Print Most Popular RSS Reprints

It’s a Date

Oct 29, 2009


Couples can now prepare a hearty gourmet meal without all the fuss, now that Frisco, Smokehouse, Ltd. a Frisco, Texas-based provider of premium pit-smoked meats, has bowed its Dinner for Two line of fully cooked heat-and-serve meals. Portioned to accommodate the fastest-growing segment of the U.S. population -- one- and two-person households -- the refrigerated meals feature pit-smoked meats complemented by side dishes. Varieties of the line, which retails for a suggested $5.99 to $6.99 per 20-ounce package, are the company’s signature sliced beef brisket in a tangy barbecue sauce with home-style mashed potatoes; seasoned pork loin in a sweet barbecue sauce with white cheddar mashed potatoes; pit-smoked pork loin with an apple-cranberry glaze and red-skin garlic mashed potatoes; and sliced center-cut pork loin with au jus and a herbed rice blend. For more information, visit www.sadlerssmokehouse.com.


recent products
> Back to products Homepage
comments powered by Disqus
news
Advertisement
products
Celestial SeasoningsA Better-tasting Kombucha
It may have a history going back over 2,000 years in Russia, the Himalayas and the Far East, but most Americans have never heard of kombucha.

Pete & Gerry's EggsAn Egg-citing Development
Instead of spending time with messy coloring kits this Easter, consumers may wish to try some naturally blue eggs, courtesy of Monroe, N.H.-based Pete & Gerry’s Eggs — and if they do, there’s a good chance they’ll get hooked on the unique variety.

Advertisement
research & analysis
Produce OpsProgressive Grocer's 2009 Produce Operations Review
Against a trying backdrop of persistently weak economic conditions, fierce competition and financially wary shoppers, supermarket produce departments faced much harsher headwinds during the past 12- month period than they have in recent years, as evidenced by marginal comparable-sales gains and a tentative outlook for the balance of the year, according to results of Progressive Grocer's 2009 Annual Produce Operations Review.

CES Front PagePG's CES: Inside the Market Basket: Economical Choices Bring Grocery Gains
Total supermarket sales were $430.3 billion, up $13.2 billion from the $417.2 billion recorded in 2007 -- continuing the trend of slightly higher percentage increases in each of the past five years, according to Progressive Grocer's 62nd Annual Consumer Expenditures Study (CES), now greatly expanded from the eight-page print edition to 35 pages of research.

Advertisement
 
Convenience Store News Gourmet Retailer