Packing halva in trays requires the right combination of portioning, tray selection, and sealing to maintain freshness, prevent oil leakage, and ensure an attractive retail presentation. Here is a clear step-by-step process used in both small and industrial production:
Step-by-Step: How to Pack Halva in Trays
1. Prepare the Halva
Cut or portion halva into blocks, slices, or crumbled form
Ensure consistent weight (e.g., 100g, 200g, 500g per tray)
Control temperature (not too warm) to avoid oil separation
2. Choose the Right Tray
Use PP, PET, or laminated paper trays
Oil-resistant and food-grade material is important
Common shapes: rectangular or square shallow trays
3. Fill the Tray
4. Optional Additions
Add toppings (nuts, chocolate drizzle, pistachio)
Insert parchment or separator sheets if needed
5. Clean the Tray Rim
Very important step
Remove oil, crumbs, or residue from tray edges
Ensures strong sealing and no leakage
6. Sealing the Tray
Use a tray sealing machine:
Option A: Standard Heat Sealing
Apply plastic film or foil lid
Heat + pressure seals the tray
Suitable for short shelf life products
Option B: Vacuum or MAP Sealing (Recommended)
Removes air or injects gas (N₂/CO₂)
Extends shelf life and prevents oxidation
Best for export or retail distribution
7. Date Coding & Labeling
8. Secondary Packaging
⚙️ Typical Equipment Used
Tray denester (automatic lines)
Halva cutter / portioning system
Tray filling station
Tray sealing machine (standard or MAP)
Date coder and labeler
Packaging Line Layout
Tray Denester → Halva Cutting/Filling → Tray Sealer → Date Coding → Labeling → Cartoning
⚠️ Important Tips
Use oil-resistant sealing film (halva contains sesame oil)
Avoid overfilling trays (prevents sealing issues)
Keep product temperature stable
Use MAP sealing if long shelf life is required
Maintain hygiene to avoid contamination
Result
Properly packed halva trays will be: