Bangkok Post

Amazon serves up meal kits

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NEW YORK: Amazon.com Inc has begun selling ready-to-cook meal packages for busy households in a bid to expand its groceries business.

Amazon-branded meal kits come with raw ingredient­s needed to prepare such meals as chicken tikka masala and falafel patties. They can help households save time; a kit for salmon with soba noodles can be prepared in just a half-hour, for instance. But at $16 to $20 for two servings, they can be more expensive than buying ingredient­s separately in larger quantities.

The developmen­t comes as Amazon is also buying the organic grocer Whole Foods Market Inc for $13.7 billion, a deal that would give the company a foothold in both groceries and brick-and-mortar retailing.

Amazon could ultimately use Whole Foods’ more than 400 locations as distributi­on centers for all food services, including meal kits.

For now, Amazon’s meal kits are sold only in selected markets.

The Associated Press was able to place an order in Seattle, Amazon’s headquarte­rs. A similar search for meal kits in New York generated items only from third-party vendors such as Martha & Marley Spoon and Tyson Tastemaker­s. Amazon didn’t respond to requests for additional informatio­n.

“Meal kits fall between regular groceries and deliveries of fully cooked meals and represent Amazon’s bid to expand its food business,’’ said Michael Pachter, an analyst at Wedbush Securities.

“I’m not sure any of this will work, but that’s where they are headed,’’ he said in an email.

The food industry consulting firm Pentallect says meal kits represent a “rounding error’’ of $2.2 billion in a $1.5 trillion US food industry, but the firm forecasts growth of 25 to 30% a year over the next five years.

Pentallect says that because relatively few households have yet to try meal kits, there’s a lot of room for growth.

Amazon meal kits are available only through the AmazonFres­h grocery-delivery programme, which costs $15 a month and requires a separate $99-a-year Prime membership. Delivery costs an additional $10 on orders of $40 or less, though free pickup options are available in Seattle.

Sales appeared to have begun in late June, based on customer reviews.

Earlier this month, Amazon applied for US trademark protection for the phrase “We do the prep. You be the chef.’’ For packaged food kits “ready for cooking and assembly as a meal.’’

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