1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to individual serving-sized beverage containers, particularly, wine and martini glasses, containing an internal cell for decanting, filtering, mixing and/or aerating a liquid beverage as it is poured into the glass.
2. Description of Related Art
A wine glass is generally composed of three parts: the bowl, stem, and foot. Glasses for red wine are characterized by a rounder, wider bowl with a larger opening, which permits the wine to breathe. The shape of the bowl concentrates the flavor and aroma to emphasize particular characteristics of the wine.
Beverages made from fruit often contain small solid particles from the skin or seeds of the fruit which may settle to the bottom of the beverage container. Wine, in particular, often contains these particles which may be transferred with the wine to the wine glass.
Wine glasses have been made with internal structures to enhance the swirling and mixing of the wine with air after it has been poured into the glass, for example, as shown in U.S. Patent Publication No. US2006/0032855. Other devices for decanting wine as it is poured are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,409,374, U.S. Patent Publication Nos. US2007/0256568 and US2008/0290102, and WO2007/105075. None of these devices provide an effective structure within the wine glass itself to permit the decanting, filtering, mixing and aerating of the wine as it is poured.
Bearing in mind the problems and deficiencies of the prior art, it is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a beverage glass for aerating a beverage upon pouring the beverage into the beverage glass.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a beverage glass having internal means for decanting, filtering, mixing and/or aerating a beverage upon pouring the beverage into the beverage glass.
A further object of the invention is to provide a beverage glass for changing or maintaining the temperature of a beverage.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide a beverage glass having an interior cell for holding and mixing a flavored liquid with a beverage.
Still other objects and advantages of the invention will in part be obvious and will in part be apparent from the specification.
The above and other objects, which will be apparent to those skilled in the art, are achieved in the present invention which is directed to a drinking container for decanting, filtering, mixing and/or aerating a beverage. The drinking container comprises a bowl having a bottom and an upper opening; and an aerating cell within the bowl having an upwardly facing hollow, concave portion above the bottom of the bowl located a distance above a bottom of the bowl sufficient to permit a desired volume of the beverage to flow therethrough and fall by gravity into the bottom of the bowl. The cell is adapted to decant and/or aerate a beverage that is poured through the bowl upper opening and onto the cell and subsequently flowed through the hollow portion and falls by gravity into the bottom of the bowl.
In a related aspect, the invention is directed to a method of using a drinking container for decanting, and/or aerating a beverage comprising providing a drinking container having a bowl with a bottom and an upper opening and an aerating cell within the bowl having an upwardly facing hollow portion above the bottom of the bowl, providing a beverage, and pouring the beverage through the bowl upper opening into the aerating cell. The beverage is then permitted to flow through the upwardly facing hollow portion and fall by gravity into the bottom of the bowl, thereby decant and/or aerate the beverage.
Preferably, the cell is supported on at least one leg extending above a bottom of the bowl, and the hollow portion has a plurality of openings around the periphery of the cell. The method then includes flowing the beverage through the openings into the bottom of the bowl.
The drinking container may include an upwardly extending protrusion adjacent the upwardly facing hollow portion, along with a plurality of upwardly facing hollow portions disposed around the protrusion and above the bottom of the bowl. The method then includes pouring the beverage onto the upwardly extending central protrusion and permitting it to flow into the adjacent upwardly facing hollow portion, or pouring the beverage onto the plurality of upwardly facing hollow portions.
The drinking container may further include outwardly extending projections inside the bowl at the bottom adapted to impart agitation to the beverage as it is swirled around the bottom of the bowl. The method then includes imparting agitation to the beverage by swirling the beverage around the bottom of the bowl over the outwardly extending projections.
The present invention is also directed to a drinking container for decanting and/or aerating a beverage comprising a bowl having an upper opening, and an aerating cell having a wall, an upper opening along the top of the cell and at least one perforation through the wall. The cell is within the bowl and supported above a bottom thereof by a plurality of legs extending outward of a center of the bowl. The at least one cell perforation is located a distance above a bottom of the bowl sufficient to permit a desired volume of the beverage to flow therethrough and fall by gravity into the bottom of the bowl. The cell is adapted to decant and/or aerate a beverage that is poured through the bowl upper opening and into the cell upper opening and subsequently flowed through the at least one perforation into the bowl. The legs are adapted to impart agitation to the beverage as it is swirled around the bottom of the bowl.
The invention is also directed to a drinking container that comprises a bowl having an upper opening and an aerating cell above the bottom of the bowl having a wall, an upper opening along the top of the cell and at least one opening or perforation through the wall. The cell preferably has an upwardly facing hollow or concave configuration located a distance above the bottom of the bowl sufficient to permit a desired volume of the beverage to flow therethrough and fall by gravity into the bottom of the bowl. The cell is attached to and within the bowl, to decant, filter, mix and/or aerate a beverage that is poured through the bowl upper opening and into the cell upper opening, and subsequently flows through the at least one opening or perforation into the bowl.
In another aspect, the present invention is directed to a method of using a drinking container for decanting, filtering, mixing and/or aerating a beverage. The method includes providing a drinking container having a bowl with an upper opening and, within the bowl, an aerating cell having a wall, an upper opening along the top of the cell and at least one perforation through the wall. The method includes providing a beverage, pouring the beverage through the bowl upper opening into the cell upper opening and permitting the beverage to flow through the at least one perforation and into the bowl, thereby decanting, filtering, mixing and/or aerating the beverage.
Preferably, the cell has a plurality of cell perforations in at least a portion of the cell wall and, more preferably, the cell perforations are all located a distance above a bottom of the bowl a distance sufficient to permit a desired volume of the beverage to flow therethrough and into the bowl. The method includes, in the step of permitting the beverage to flow through the at least one perforation and into the bowl, terminating the pouring upon the beverage level reaching about the level of the cell perforations. Alternately, the cell perforations extend to a bottom of the bowl.
The method may include providing a plurality of perforations in only a portion of the cell wall and the cell may include a lower end supported above a bottom of the bowl a distance designating a desired volume of the beverage to be held in the bowl. The cell may be supported above a bottom of the bowl.
The cell may be removably attached to the bowl. The cell may be removed after permitting the beverage to flow through the at least one perforation and into the bowl. Alternately, the cell may have a lip supported by a rim along the bowl upper opening wherein the cell lip is placed in contact with the bowl rim prior to pouring the beverage through the bowl upper opening into the cell upper opening.
The drinking container may include a cell having an upper opening with a width less than half that of the bowl upper opening. Alternately, the cell upper opening may have a width greater than half that of the bowl upper opening.
The drinking container may include a cell having a separate, removable filter basket and the filter basket may be removed after permitting the beverage to flow through the at least one perforation and into the bowl. The drinking container preferably has the bowl opening larger than the user's mouth.
Preferably, the drinking container is a wine glass having a base and stem supporting the bowl and the beverage is a wine such as a red wine.
Alternately, the cell perforations extend to a bottom of the bowl. A first beverage may be poured into the cell and a second beverage may then be poured into the bowl, and mixing of the first and second beverages may then be initiated by flow of the first beverage through the perforations and into the bowl. The pouring may be terminated upon the beverage level reaching about the level of the cell lower end, or at a higher height.
In another aspect, the present invention is directed to a drinking container for changing or maintaining beverage temperature. The drinking container comprises a bowl having an upper opening and a sealed cell within the bowl containing a substance for cooling or heating the beverage in the glass without diluting the beverage. The cell has an upper end marking a desired volume of beverage within the bowl.
Preferably, the substance in the sealed cell has a solid-to-liquid phase change between about 40 and 65° F. (4 and 18° C.). The bottom of the bowl may have an upwardly convex or upwardly concave surface and the sealed cell is below the convex or concave surface. The sealed cell may be removable from the bowl. Preferably, the drinking container is a wine glass having a base and stem supporting the bowl and the beverage is a wine such as a white wine.
In yet another aspect, the present invention is directed to a drinking container for mixing a beverage, and a method for using same. The container comprises a bowl having an upper opening and a mixing cell attached to and within the bowl having a wall, an upper opening along the top of the cell and plurality of openings through the wall. The axes of the openings are non-radially oriented with respect to a center of the cell. The cell is adapted to mix and swirl a beverage that is poured through the bowl upper opening and into the cell upper opening and subsequently flowed through the perforations into the bowl.
The features of the invention believed to be novel and the elements characteristic of the invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. The figures are for illustration purposes only and are not drawn to scale. The invention itself, however, both as to organization and method of operation, may best be understood by reference to the detailed description which follows taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
In describing the preferred embodiment of the present invention, reference will be made herein to
As shown in
A method of using the beverage glass 10 for decanting, filtering, mixing and/or aerating of a beverage is shown in
Preferably, the method includes providing the beverage glass having a bowl, an aerating cell having an exterior surface, an upper opening along the top of the surface and a plurality of perforations on the surface integrated within the bowl of the beverage glass. The method includes pouring the beverage into the upper opening 32 of the aerating cell 30 and allowing the beverage to permeate through the perforations of the exterior surface 31. The method decants, mixes, aerates and/or filters the beverage 62 flowing through the cell 30 and into the glass bowl 20 outside of and below the cell.
In
To further enhance the aeration of the beverage, particularly wine, outwardly extending projections or ridges may be located inside the bowl at the bottom to impart agitation to the beverage as it is swirled around the bottom of the bowl. Such projections or ridges 60 may be formed into and/or extend upwardly from the bottom of the bowl, as shown in
In another embodiment of the beverage glass shown in
In another embodiment of the beverage glass shown in the exploded and normal views of
Further embodiments of the beverage glass of the present invention is shown in
A modification of the beverage glass embodiment of
For best heat transfer, the bottom of the bowl has an upwardly convex surface 91a and the sealed cell 90′ is below the convex surface, as shown in
Although the drinking container is described herein as a glass, in the preferred embodiment it also encompasses cups, tumblers and other beverage containers having bowl openings larger than an individual user's mouth and intended for serving an individual portion of a beverage. The drinking container along with the internal cell may be made of a material other than glass, for example, acrylic or other plastic, and may be transparent, translucent or opaque.
Thus, the present invention provides an improved beverage glass having an internal cell for decanting, filtering, mixing and/or aerating a beverage upon pouring the beverage into the beverage glass. The invention also provides an improved beverage glass with an internal cell for changing the temperature of a beverage, or for holding and mixing a flavored liquid within a beverage.
While the present invention has been particularly described, in conjunction with specific preferred embodiments, it is evident that many alternatives, modifications and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art in light of the foregoing description. It is therefore contemplated that the appended claims are not limited to the specific preferred embodiments disclosed herein and will embrace any such alternatives, modifications and variations as falling within the true scope and spirit of the present invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20100124594 A1 | May 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12272889 | Nov 2008 | US |
Child | 12464992 | US |