Preserves & vegetables
Corn, peas, mixed vegetables, palm hearts and olives.
Preserves in a retort pouch replace the can with less weight and easy opening: corn, peas, mixed vegetables and palm hearts in sterilizable stand-up and sachet. A seal that withstands the retort is the central requirement.

- Corn
- Peas
- Mixed vegetables
- Palm hearts
- Olives
- Pickles

Standing bag with bottom gusset, no zipper. More economical for single portions or fast-moving products.

Stand-up in retort-grade laminate: withstands sterilization (cooked in-pack). Wet pet food, ready meals and preserves.

Larger three-side-seal retort pouch (170 × 230 mm): sterilizable aluminized laminate. Foodservice-portion meals and sauces.
The RT covers retort stand-up and sachet; the RD adds volume; the RV adds vacuum and gas flushing for barrier. Reinforced sealing ensures integrity after sterilization.
Leepack series that cover this application. Full specs — models, dimensions and BPM — on each series page.
The best-seller for standard pouches, in any industry.
Dual gripper for high throughput on small and medium pouches.
High-level vacuum packaging for sensitive products.
Four variables define the right series and configuration for your line:
Pouch size
Finished pouch width and height define the series and number of stations. Larger pouches need wider gripper opening; small pouches unlock high-cadence duplex and quadplex architectures.
Production speed
Target throughput (BPM) drives the architecture: simplex for entry, duplex and quadplex for volume. We size with headroom for peaks without compromising the seal.
Weighing and dosing
Granules and powders require a multi-head weigher or auger filler; liquids and viscous products, volumetric or pump dosing. The dosing system is part of the line design.
Filler and nozzle
Nozzle and filler vary with viscosity, presence of solids and splash tendency. Diving nozzle, anti-splash and other options are added according to the product.
Have a product to put in a pouch?
Tell us the product, intended format and target throughput. Engineering recommends format, series and dosing — before any quote.
