Not applicable
Conventional cooking of bacon, whether in a skillet, on a cookie sheet in a traditional oven, or hanging on a rack for microwave cooking, always involves handling the bacon with utensils or by hand. After cooking, the utensils must then be washed.
Using a package which converts to a rack for cooking, there is no handling of the bacon.
This invention proposes a method of packaging bacon in a uniquely designed carton which can be folded and used to hold the bacon while it is being cooked in a microwave oven. The carton and the trapped grease are then discarded together.
The invention consists of a method of packaging bacon so the package itself can be converted into a rack for microwave cooking of the bacon and storage of the resultant grease until disposal.
The device is stamped out of paper or light plastic as shown in the drawing
The manufacturer of the paper folds the ends into a box 7 and secures each end with tab 2 into slot 3, leaving a flat piece of paper with an enclosed box at each end. Then the triangular pieces on the sides are bent under, leaving a rectangular piece of paper with boxes across the ends.
The bacon supplier places the strips of bacon on the paper in the usual manner, only in this case the strips run from box to box. The bacon is wrapped in the usual cellophane material for sale.
The consumer removes the outer cellophane, bends the bacon and the carton into a tent shape
The tent and bacon are placed in the microwave until cooking is complete.
As the bacon cooks, grease drains down the sides of the tent, through the serrated edges of the boxes and is trapped inside the boxes.
After cooking and cooling, the tent and bacon are removed from the oven using the round finger holes 6 on each end. The bacon is removed and the paper tent and the trapped grease are discarded.