1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a smart kitchen appliance. More particularly, this invention elates to a kitchen appliance capable of displaying information regarding food or drink preparation, recipes and/or caloric content.
2. Background of the Invention
Recipes, too numerous to count, for food and drink preparation have been extensively published. Recipes are usually published in books or pamphlets, and lately recipes are available to professional and amateur cooks all over the world on various websites and in digital files on the Internet. Recipes indicate exact amounts or weights of specific ingredients to be used, to make the food or drink being prepared adhere to consistent texture, taste, and color. Recipes are invaluable especially where precise amounts of ingredients have to be used.
Electric blender appliances are used in millions of households throughout the world to hasten food and drink preparation. To use a recipe, the user of the blender appliance has to have the particular book, pamphlet or the digital file available at the time of food or drink preparation. This means that the user must spend time not only in preparing the ingredients but also in looking for and finding the appropriate recipe, which is usually inconvenient and wasteful of time. Moreover, if at the time of food preparation the user changes his/her mind as to what is being prepared, a new recipe must be found. Also, if a recipe book or pamphlet is open, ingredients from the blender could be spilled on the recipe.
A number of kitchen appliances having an electronic control means are known. Such appliances include, for example, the device described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,649,810, which discloses a computer-controlled integrated cooking apparatus for automatically preparing a culinary preparation according to a predetermined recipe program. The recipe program specifies schedules for dispensing the ingredients. The microcomputer system of the apparatus is also capable of storing recipes, displaying a listing of ingredients, or giving special instructions for a particular recipe. A similar apparatus is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,819,636, where a food processor similar to the aforementioned apparatus comprises a microprocessor for controlling the apparatus for adding, stirring, blending, or heating the ingredients in a recipe.
Similarly, the U.S. Pat. No. 5,704,277 discloses a bread-maker or a program-controlled machine of a similar kind adapted to operate according to one of a plurality of recipe programs provided, which programs are each identified by a code. The code selected corresponds to pre-packaged ingredients. The machine may include a memory device which stores many programs and may be considered to be part of a CPU serving as a control means for the general operation of the device.
These devices are complicated and are limited in the number of recipes that they can use. Moreover, there is still the problem of access to a plurality of recipes and the time spent in selecting or choosing one remains. There is a definite need for a device capable of providing a recipe immediately available to the user without any time spent searching through publications.
It is an object of the invention to provide a smart kitchen appliance and a method of using same.
It is also an object of the invention to provide a blender appliance capable of displaying recipes and/or other information.
It is a further object of the invention to provide a method for displaying recipes or other information on a blender appliance.
These and other objects of the invention will become more apparent from the discussion below.
According to the invention, recipes or other information is displayed on a kitchen appliance such as a blender. The appliance preferably comprises an imbedded computing device or chip, a display screen, and navigational keys. It can optionally be connected to the Internet or can accept computer readable medium, e.g., diskettes and/or CDs. Other kitchen appliances within the scope of the invention include slow cookers, pasta makers, food processors, bread makers, small ovens, toaster ovens, and the like.
First, the recipes, or other information are collected in a database on a server. The server is connected to the Internet, whereupon it receives various recipes or other information from a number of computing devices or websites, which are also connected to the Internet. The received information is converted into records having a consistent record format and is stored in the database. A selection of the records picked by a user, e.g., according to a subscription, is then communicating to the blender appliance. This can be achieved by sending the selection of the records to the user's computing device which needs to also be connected to the Internet, or directly to the computing devise imbedded in the blender appliance which may also be connected to the Internet. Alternatively, the selection of the records may be stored on medium readable by the computing device imbedded in the blender, e.g., diskettes, CDs, etc.
Once the selection of the records is loaded into or imbedded in the appliance of the invention, a choice of various criteria for organizing such a selection of records is presented on the display screen of the blender appliance, and the user, using navigational keys of the computing device imbedded in the blender appliance, chooses the criteria for sorting of the records. The records are then sorted according to the chosen criteria and the sorted records are listed on the display screen. Using the navigational keys the user chooses at least one recipe and displays it on the display screen. After viewing a chosen recipe the user may display a next or previous recipe from the sorted list of recipes using the navigational keys.
The foregoing objects and advantages of the present invention may be more readily understood by one skilled in the art with reference being had to the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment thereof, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein like elements are designated by identical reference numerals throughout the several views, and in which:
a and 4b are representations of embodiments of a preferred blender embodiment useful according to the invention;
c is an exploded view of the embodiment shown in
As shown in
In an alternative embodiment the recipes may be provided directly to the kitchen appliance on a computer readable devices, e.g., diskettes, compact discs (CDs), or digital video disks (DVDs), smart card devices, Peripheral Component Microchannel Interconnect Architecture (PCMCIA) cards, programmable read only memory (PROM), and other types of computer memory.
The computing devices 12 and 14 may illustratively take the configuration of any computer ranging from mainframes to personal computers (PCs). In one illustrative embodiment of this invention as shown in
The common bus 30 is further connected as follows
(a) by the video interface 40 to a display 50;
(b) by the I/O interface 42 to a storage device 52, which may illustratively take the form of memory gates, disks, diskettes, compact disks (CD), digital video disks (DVD), etc.;
(c) by the multimedia interface 46 to any multimedia component 56;
(d) by a peripheral interface 38 to the peripherals 58, such as the keyboard, the mouse, navigational buttons, e.g., on a digital phone, a touch screen, and/or a writing screen on full size and hand held devices, e.g., a Palm Pilotâ„¢;
(e) by the communications interface 44, e.g., a plurality of modems, to a network connection 60, e.g., an Internet Service Provider (ISP), and to other services, which is in turn connected to the network 10, whereby a data path is provided between the network 10 and other computing devices and, in particular, the common bus 30 of these computing devices; and
(f) furthermore, by the communications interface 44 to a wired and/or a wireless telephone system 54.
Embodiments of the preferred blender appliance of the invention are shown in
A coupler 79 is arranged in a manner as to attach a blade assembly 80 to the motor assembly 78. A gasket 82 is then placed on top of the blade assembly 80 to create a seal between the coupler 79 and a jar 84, which is placed on top of the gasket 82. A lid 86 may then be used to cover the jar 84, and a cap 88 may then be removably placed in the opening of the lid 86.
A computing device 28 (
In
The computing device 28 (
In one illustrative embodiment, shown in
In step 112, the user may use the up and down navigational key 58b (
If the user decides to abandon the present processing mode by pressing the On key 58a, in step 118 he/she will be presented with a choice of ending processing or selecting a different display criteria. The user may make a choice in step 120 by selecting an entry with the navigational key 58b and then pressing the OK key 58c. Alternatively the alphanumerical keys 58d-58g may be used. If the user decides to terminate the process 100, the blender appliance will be turned off in step 122. Otherwise, the processing will continue in step 104.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with respect to illustrative and preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the foregoing and other changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention that should be limited only by the scope of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application 60/220,001, filed Jul. 21, 2000.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60220001 | Jul 2000 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09809970 | Mar 2001 | US |
Child | 11111681 | Apr 2005 | US |