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The present invention relates to an apparatus and method for chilling bottles, and more particularly still or sparkling wine bottles.
Prior methods of chilling wine bottles deploy a container filled with either ice or ice water. The temperature of the bottle contents eventually comes to equilibrium with the ice or ice water temperature. A large volume of ice or ice water is used to chill the wine rapidly. While it is desirable to serve white wines in a temperature range of about 42° F. to about 55° F., the more ice or ice water used to chill the bottle quickly, the more likely the wine is to be too cold, that is between about 36° to 32° F. toward the end of a meal.
It is therefore a first object of the present invention to provide a superior method and apparatus for chilling beverages, including wine bottles . . . .
It is another object of the invention to provide an apparatus and method for cooling wine with ice or cold water that does overly chill beverage, yet keeps them cold and within a desired temperature range for table use over many hours.
It is another object of the invention to provide such an apparatus for use in an improved method which is adaptable to different size beverage container.
In the present invention, the first object is achieved by providing a container, comprising a vessel capable of retaining a fluid have a bottom and substantially upright sidewalls connected to and surrounding the bottom, the sidewall having an upward termination at the rim of the vessel, wherein the improvement consists of an inner cylindrical support member attached to an interior bottom of the vessel, and having a plurality of spaced apart perforation that extend upward from about half the height of the vessel to an upper rim of the inner cylinder.
A second aspect of the invention is characterized in that the vessel has doubles walls, and/or handles and a lid.
A third aspect of the invention is providing a cylindrical form with perforation on an upper portion thereof, for attachment to the inside of a vessel.
The above and other objects, effects, features, and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following description of the embodiments thereof taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring to
In accordance with the present invention, bottle chilling apparatus 100 comprises an outer container or vessel 110 and an inner column 120. The inner column 120 is preferably perforated in an upper portion below the rim 125 with a plurality of holes 128. The rim 125 of the inner column preferably extends upward to about the same height or just below the outer containers rim 115. The inner column is a preferably an inner cylindrical support member attached to an interior bottom of the vessel, and preferably has a plurality of spaced apart perforation on an upper portion of the columns upright walls.
The container 100 is used to chill or maintain the temperature of beverage bottles, especially wine and champagne. The inner column 120 is optionally another fluid retaining container bonded at the exterior bottom thereof to the interior bottom 113a of the outer container 110, as shown in
In use, as shown in
While the bottle container for chilling 100 is preferably deployed to chill wine and champagne container, preferably wine and champagne bottles, it is applicable to other beverage, such as apple cider, hard cider, perry, beer, mead, which may or may not be artificially or naturally carbonated, as well as non-alcoholic beverages.
While most beverage containers are cylindrical, the apparatus can be readily adapted to accommodate a range of container shapes, such as rectangular container, and depending on the size of the inner column, to accommodate both cylindrical and non-cylindrical containers of different sizes. Hence, the reference to bottles is not limited to any particular size or shape beverage container absent further express limitations.
The holes 128 provide a means for conduction to chill the bottle 10, which will also chill slowly due to loss of heat to the cold inner wall 129 of the column 120. The inner wall 129 of the column 120 is cooled by direct conduction and radiation from the ice or ice water mixture. However, the solid nature of the column below holes 128 precludes ice water, such as will be formed as ice melts, from directly contacting the wine in the bottle 10. Hence, wine if pre-chilled will easily be maintained in the temperature range of about 41° to 52° F. for many hours, depending on the ambient temperature. If the wine bottle is warmer, it will also chill, but more slowly. By avoiding direct contact of the ice water and/or slush with the bottle, chilling is much slower to avoid the beverage container content from approaching the slush temperature of circa 32° F. It should be understood below about 40°, further chilling is generally undesirable from taste, aroma and flavor perception. However, as this threshold is subject to personnel and regional tastes, the device 100 can be configured with more or larges holes 128, or lower holes 128 (that is the lowest holes on column 120 are closer to the bottom of the container 110) to allow colder chilling and/or establish a colder minimum temperature that will be reached.
The inner column 120 is preferably round in cross-section and has a diameter slightly larger than a standard champagne or sparkling wine bottle, or optionally champagne or sparkling wine magnum so that it can receive and hold upright bottles ranging in size from a relatively narrow bottle for 750 ml of wine to a wider magnum bottle holding approximately 1.5 L. The inner container also prevents the bottle 10 from tipping over, as can occur in a wine ice bucket as it becomes empty.
Red and rose wines can also be chilled slightly from 66° F. to about 54° F. and/or maintained at this temperature depending on the quantity of ice and or/ice water placed in the annular cavity 118. It should be appreciated that while an ice water mixture that forms in the cavity 118 will approach 32° F., the wine in the inner container 120 will avoid being cooled to below a desired serving temperature for many hours.
In a more preferred embodiment shown in
As shown in
As shown in
In
By providing a detachable inner container 120, the inner container 120 can be removed to accommodate larger beverage containers with the large container 110.
However, as fluid flow is gradual and minimized, the bottle will still not be chilled to too low a temperature. According, the seal between the wall 128 and cup 122 need only be substantial to the extent that the flow of water or slush is lower than it would be without the wall like barrier 128.
The perorations 128 can have size, shape and total open areas so long as the wall 125 is reasonably rigid and not reduced in strength by them. The size, shape and open area can be constant with height, or change with height as in a gradient or abrupt change, such as in
To the extent that the container 100 is intended only to maintain beverage bottles at a cool temperature without further chilling, the inner column 120 need not have many or any holes 128. However, the rim 125 should still preferably extend proximal to the height of the outer container rim 115 to preclude accidental overfilling that unintentionally introduces liquid into the inner column 128.
To the extend it is not intended to provide ice to totally fill the outer container, the height of rim 125 can be lowered considerably such as to about or somewhat below the mid-point of walls 112 of the outer container 110. In such case, it would also be possible to forgoes or use less holes 128 below the rim 125.
The description of a feature, aspect or element of one embodiment of the invention is not intended to not does it preclude its combination with other features, aspects or elements of other embodiments of the invention.
While the invention has been described in connection with a preferred embodiment, it is not intended to limit the scope of the invention to the particular form set forth, but on the contrary, it is intended to cover such alternatives, modifications, and equivalents as may be within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160273829 A1 | Sep 2016 | US |