The bag-in-a-box solution is used for the storing, transporting and dispensing of many different products, among which of the most well-known are wine, liquid dairy products and liquid fruit products (such as fruit juice). Syrup for soft drink fountains is also often sold in bag-in-a-box packaging. In the food service industry (especially in fast food outlets), bag-in-a-box packaging is used to store and dispense bulk supplied condiments such as ketchup and mustard.
As mentioned above, William R. Scholle’s commercial bag-in-a-box system was created for battery acid. This usage is not a thing of the past and bag-in-a-box technology is still utilised to hold, transport and dispense sulphuric acid for filling lead-acid batteries in garages, dealerships and similar.
Bag-in-a-box technology is used extensively for the packaging of products that needs to be aseptic, i.e. free from potentially disease-causing micro-organisms such as pathogenic bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites.
Since virtually all modern bag-in-a-box solutions for wine comes with (an almost) air-tight tap, you can pour some of the wine out without exposing the remaining wine to a lot of air. This prevents oxidation of the remaining wine, which means that you can keep it in the container for quite a long time before it spoils compared to wine in an opened traditional wine bottle. Also, BiB wine is not subjected to cork taint.
It should be noted that some oxygen can transmit through the film and tap even before you have opened the tap for the first time. The rate of transmission depends largely on the type of plastic used. Because of this, many BiB wines have a shorter shelf-life than glass bottled wine. Consult the best-before date stamped on the BiB for more information. BiB wines are not intended for cellaring.
In 1965, the Australian winemaker Angove was granted a patent for their wine cask. The Angove wine cask, invented by Thomas Angove (1918-2010), consisted of a 1 gallon polyethylene bladder placed inside a corrugated box. This product was intended for sale to consumers.
With the early designs, the end-user had to manually cut a corner of the bladder inside the box, pour out the desired quantity of wine and then reseal the corner using a special peg.
In 1967, pouring wine from a bag-in-a-box became significantly more convenient as Charles Malpas and Penfolds Wines patented a plastic, air-tight tap welded into a metallised film bladder.
Today, virtually all bag-in-a-box wine products come with some type of plastic tap. Typically, the end-user will expose the tap by tearing away a perforated panel on the box.