if i recall correctly, the 90 min is a guideline...the consistency without additional water is the key. in the summer, the 90min may be 45-60min. in the winter time, it might be 120-150min...all depending on the mix. if temps get too high, the stuff will hydrate like crazy so hot weather batching by the plant will be a critical step. you should review aci 301 and 305 for additional help on setting the guidelines.
as far as only having one plant to choose from, then you might as well ask them to write the specs if the answer is that you must accept whatever they send. that's rubbish in my opinion and you might as well say you're willing to accept unacceptable results. i would presume that picking a competant supplier is the contractor's problem...not yours. however, if the supplier is willing to go the extra step and put some guarantees on their products, then it's worth trying. no reasonable engineer would expect such a situation to be perfect, but there's got to be limitations and the contractor/supplier must be responsible for the final product. even though i haven't had a lot of exposure to mobile plants, my vote would be for that since it'll be summer time. and i'll bet that hot weather batching procedures will be the silver bullett if mobile batching is not an option (if assuming the 2 hour time).
one other point: many of you probably read or were involved in my discussion about low cylinder breaks on a job where the contractor first failed to provide the onsite storage box/initial storage conditions then provided an insulated box and blamed me (testing firm). to help keep consistency in the cylinder results (which is different than the field strength), point out section 1.6.? (i think) of aci 301 where the contractor supplies/maintains initial curing conditions. while i'll maintain that the higher initial temps likely doesn't make that big of a deal at 28 days, it's often used as a "bargaining tool" by the contractor to explain low break concrete and try to avoid having to tear it out. while the initial curing temps may play with the break strengths at certain days, i feel it's overblown when the outside temps are only 90 deg (maybe even 100). in other words, have a preconstruction meeting and lay it on the contractor to provide the initial curing storage so that it doesn't get dumped in your lap to deal with.
here's the link to my thread.
the results (in my opinion based on all the test results) were that the mix just didn't perform...it was the cheapest mix the contractor was willing to pay for and didn't perform well in the weather (whether hot or mild).