Enid’s Advance Food Co. officials announced Wednesday they will acquire substantially all assets of Quik-to-Fix Foods from parent company Smithfield Foods. Inc. The acquisition includes facilities in Garland and Harlingen, Texas.
Company officials did not disclose the financial terms of the definitive purchase agreement.
“This acquisition is another step in our company’s efforts to bring the very best in value-added products to our customers,” said Advance President Greg Allen. “The Quik-to-Fix product lines are complementary to our existing products, creating a synergy that will help Advance Food Co. reach our goal of becoming the unconditional leader in our product categories.”
Quik-to-Fix product lines include value-added, fully cooked and ready-to-cook beef, pork and poultry products under the Quik-to-Fix, Chomps, HealthFULLS, Philly Freedom and Gorges brand names. The company’s products are available to both the retail food and food service industries. Its two locations in Texas have more than 450 employees.
Advance was founded in 1973 by Paul Allen and Dave McLaughlin in Enid and is a leading national manufacturer of value-added, center-of-the-plate meat products for the food service industry. It continues to grow its operations in Enid with recent multi-million-dollar facility expansions.
The company manufactures pre-portioned, ready-to-cook and fully cooked beef, pork, veal, lamb, chicken and turkey products. The majority of these products are breaded, and approximately half are fully cooked.
Among its most popular products are Country Fried Steaks, Steak-EZE Philly Steaks, SmartServe Charbroiled products, Kitchen Sensations homestyle meals in boilable bags and a new line of 54th Street Deli fully prepared sandwiches.
Advance products reach customers in restaurants, business and industry food service venues, schools and universities, military bases and health care facilities.
Local news
Advance Food Co. acquires Quik-to-Fix label
- Local news
-
- Silver Alert issued for 87-year-old man
-
To a good home: Animal control struggles to adopt out strays, abandoned pets
Enid Police Chief Brian O’Rourke said the five-person staff behind Enid's animal control facility is being inundated with calls of strays and pet owners no longer able to care for their animals — and with spring on the way, the problem will only get worse.
- Guilty plea for Center director
-
‘A million-dollar rain’: Recent precipitation vital to area’s wheat crop
Friday’s rain was much needed — and much welcomed — by the area’s wheat and other crops.
- Teen speaks on accident, aftermath with students at Chisholm High School
- Accused ruled not competent for murder trial
- Autry Tech to host open house Feb. 12
- Registered sex offender moves to Enid
- SNB service to be interrupted
- Three free CPR classes offered
- More Local news Headlines






