The present invention relates to food processing equipment and methods, for the coating or breading of food products. More particularly, certain embodiments of the present invention relate to a coating machine and methods for dispensing a coating material (e.g., flour, bread crumbs, cracker meal) onto food products, such as in large-scale food processing lines.
In the industry of high volume production of food products, it is desirable to coat certain food products (e.g., chicken) with, for example, batter and a breading material before cooking the food products. Breading material may include a relatively dry material such as fine particle flour breading, Japanese-style breadcrumbs having a large distribution of bread crumb sizes, cracker meal of differing particle sizes, or many other types of coating materials. Each type of breading or coating material has its own characteristics that cause the breading material to react in differing ways when being distributed within a breading or coating machine and onto food products.
For example, a flour type breading made of wheat or some other grain may have a tendency to pack or clog causing the material to bridge over transition spots within the breading machine. Such bridging acts to hamper the free-flow of the breading material through the machine.
Japanese style crumbs typically comprise modified wheat flour along with some salt, sugar, yeast, oil, and possibly other ingredients as well. The Japanese style crumbs can vary in size from that of a small flour particle to a half an inch in diameter. Japanese style crumbs tend to get clogged over larger openings than other common grain breading flours.
Automated breading machines for applying breading and various types of coatings, including flour, to food products for mass production have been manufactured since the late 1940's. The original machines were for coating products such as fish sticks, fish portions, shrimp, and some poultry products. With a major growth in coated or breaded foods including onion rings, fish sticks, nuggets, shrimp, meat patties, and a full variety of chicken nuggets, tenders, wings, etc., breading machine design has changed to accommodate the wide variety of food products. Coated food products are used in mass quantities in retail grocery stores, food service (e.g., schools), and quick service restaurants.
Coating material originally was primarily dried bread crumbs, being granular in nature, and what is considered to be a free flowing type of material. Over the years the coatings have turned more to spiced flour, which has required manufacturers of coating machines to redesign the machines to handle these flour type coatings, which are not considered to be free flowing. For example, if one picks up a hand full of flour and squeezes it, the flour compacts and balls up. On the other hand, a granular type of coating material does not compact when squeezed but, instead, will sift through your fingers, similar to granular salt or sugar.
Today, there is a new variety of spiced flour coating that is applied in a heavy texture called home style. It is generally formed as a build up of wet batter and flour that is applied in multiple stages. Along with new coatings, process line capacity has grown from the two or three thousand pounds per hour to eight to ten thousand pounds per hour and more. Process line durability and coating material control is more critical today than ever. Additionally, food safety standards require sanitary designs, and the machines must be safe to operate.
Certain difficulties with respect to traditional breading machines also include loading the breading machine with the breading material, applying the breading material evenly over the food products, preventing clogging or bridging of the breading material within the breading machine, and eliminating clumping of the breading material within the breading machine.
For example, many breading machines use a breading recirculation system where breading is distributed onto a conveyor to form a bottom coating layer, and to the tops of food products as they travel through the machine on the conveyor. Such machines have in turn used a top hopper for loading breading or coating materials into the machine, and for distribution of coating onto the tops of food products. When the top hopper gets low on coating material, an operator adds one to three bags of new coating material to the top hopper. As a result, the tops of the food products going through the breading machine are coated with all new material resulting in different coating granulation between the top and bottom of the food products. It would be desirable to provide a uniform breading material to both sides of food products. Further, in one known machine, the top coating is sprinkled on using a cross conveyor that creates a sprinkle effect and attempts to break up clumps of coating material into a fine powder. However, such an arrangement causes significant dust, which is not desirable in the processing plant environment. The arrangement also causes the top coating material to be applied at an angle and more coating is dispensed at the beginning portion of the cross conveyor, creating non-uniform coating across the width of the food product conveyor. Additionally, the useful life of the conveyor belt within the top hopper is shortened by the fact that, in many cases, the top hopper is used as the main supply reserve and the heavy load put on the belt causes the belt to stretch and break.
It is also desirable to remove clumps of batter and breading that may be generated, or larger crumbs or food particles from the machine to facilitate operation. A known machine attempts to remove such materials from the top hopper area. Such a system requires such materials to be recirculated throughout the machine before they can be removed. It would be worthwhile to allow such materials to be removed before they are recirculated. Additionally, recirculation systems have been designed using an auger system. It has been found that transferring coating material from auger to auger tends to be a problem and increases in difficulty as moisture builds up in the coating material. High volumes and/or the type of breading material can therefore cause jams at the augers, requiring the machine to be stopped for cleaning of such jams, resulting in process down time. Also with respect to recirculation of breading materials, only about 30% of the coating material is received back at the top hopper and, therefore, only this 30% gets screened. Some industry machines use two augers, three augers, or up to four augers. Some machines use electric drives with chains and sprockets. Others use hydraulics with direct drives and still others use a 90-degree gearbox drive with chain or timing belts. There are various types of augers that are used. Some augers use uniform auger flights and others use increased flightings at transfer points.
Other problems with known breading machines relate to the need for a belt tensioning system for the food product conveyor, to the belt to be set correctly depending on the loading and speed of the belt. Some breading machines have a belt tension system that moves a conveyor support shaft forward, so as to tighten the tension on the main breading belt. However, this results in the breading machine effectively becoming longer, increasing the footprint on the plant floor, and making it more likely that the main belt may get tangled with other processing machinery in the processing line. It would therefore be desirable to provide a tensioning system that would not result in lengthening.
For safety, known breading machines typically have covers over the augers, but if a cover is opened, the auger is exposed, making accidents possible. Newer machines may have safety cut outs or electronic devices that shut down the machine if a cover is opened, but such safety switches have proven not to be reliable and, in some cases, are rendered inoperative, which creates an even greater safety issue. Although an auger guard may be used inside the cover, this presents problems when cleaning of the machine is necessary. It would be desirable to provide easy cleaning without presenting a safety hazard (i.e., direct access to the auger).
Further limitations and disadvantages of conventional, traditional, and proposed approaches will become apparent to one of skill in the art, through comparison of such systems and methods with the present invention as set forth in the remainder of the present application with reference to the drawings.
An embodiment of the present invention comprises a breading machine for dispensing a coating material onto food products. The breading machine includes an enclosure defining a breading chamber, and a conveyor to move the food products through the breading chamber. The breading machine may also include a side-mounted feed hopper for simplified loading the coating material into the breading chamber and onto a lower return path of the conveyor means. Also included is a top-mounted hopper for receiving the coating material internally within the breading machine and for dispensing the coating material onto at least a top surface of the food products.
The coating machine in one embodiment includes an auger transfer box having an input port and an output port. A cross-feed screw having a first end and a second end is used to distribute breading material to the auger transfer box. The auger transfer box is shaped to have a configuration that promotes the movement of breading or coating materials therethrough, and more particularly, may have flow enhancing angled or curved connecting surfaces between sidewalls of the transfer box, instead of orthogonally related walls. The cross-feed screw may have at its second end has a paddle mounted thereon and positioned within the auger transfer box. The cross-feed screw is adapted to accept the coating material within the breading machine and move the coating material toward the second end of the cross-feed screw and into the auger transfer box via the input port as the cross-feed screw rotates. The coating machine also includes at least one feed screw having a first end and a second end, which is adapted to accept the coating material from the output port of the auger transfer box at the first end of the screw as the paddle rotates within the auger transfer box.
Another embodiment of the present invention comprises an auger assembly for use in a breading machine. The auger assembly comprises an auger transfer box having an input port and an output port. The auger assembly further comprises a cross-feed screw having a first end and a second end and being adapted to accept a coating material within the breading machine. The cross-feed screw moves the coating material toward the second end of the cross-feed screw and into the auger transfer box via the input port as the cross-feed screw rotates. The auger assembly also includes a paddle attached to the second end of the cross-feed screw. The paddle is positioned within the auger transfer box via the input port and pushes the coating material out of the output port of the auger transfer box as the cross-feed screw rotates. The coating machine also includes at least one feed screw having a first end and a second end, which is adapted to accept the coating material from the output port of the auger transfer box at the first end of the screw as the paddle rotates within the auger transfer box. The feed screw moves the coating material away from the auger transfer box toward the second end of the feed screw as the screw rotates. In a preferred form, two feed screws are provided, including an upper feed screw that feeds coating material to an upper distribution hopper, and a lower feed screw to feed and apply coating material to form a bottom layer of material on the conveyor prior to distribution of food products thereon.
A further embodiment of the present invention comprises a spreader assembly for distributing a coating material to at least a top of a food product in a relatively uniform or even manner in a breading or coating machine. The spreader assembly includes at least two mounting pieces and a plurality of rods mounted horizontally between the at least two mounting pieces. The spreader assembly further includes a motor and a drive shaft connecting the motor and at least one of the two mounting pieces. The spreader assembly is adapted to receive breading or coating material from a supply hopper, adjacent an outlet opening positioned above the conveyor of the machine on which food products are positioned. The plurality of rods act to uniformly distribute the material as it moves through the outlet opening, such that the material is sprinkled onto the tops of the food products located on the conveyor uniformly across the width of the conveyor.
In another aspect of the invention, the coating machine has a crumb filter assembly for removal of undesirable materials from the breading or coating process. The crumb filter is positioned adjacent the end of the main product conveyor system, such that excess breading or coating materials are dispensed thereon, prior to recirculation of breading material within the machine. The crumb filter is comprised of a conveyor system having a surface to allow uncontaminated breading or coating materials to pass therethrough, while any larger clumps of material are removed from the machine by the conveyor. The crumb filter may comprise a vibrating filter assembly having a conveyor belt positioned near a food product discharge end of the breading machine and oriented substantially perpendicular to and between an upper forward food product path and a lower return path of a main food product conveyor belt of the breading machine. The main food product conveyor belt pushes the coating material onto the filter conveyor belt. Smaller particles of the coating material fall through the filter conveyor belt and onto the lower return path of the main food product conveyor belt for reuse within the breading machine as the filter conveyor belt vibrates. Larger clumps of the coating material are carried out of the breading machine by the filter conveyor belt.
A further embodiment of the present invention includes a method to stabilize a coating material within a breading machine. The method comprises selectively metering in new coating material onto a lower return path of a main conveyor belt of the breading machine from a side-mounted supply hopper. The lower return path also carries a filtered coating material already processed at least once through the breading machine. The method further comprises transitioning the new coating material and the filtered coating material from the main conveyor belt through a low pressure auger assembly of the breading machine and then transitioning at least a first part of the coating materials from the low pressure auger assembly to a top distribution hopper of the breading machine. The method also includes transitioning the at least first part of the coating materials from the top distribution hopper and onto an upper path of the main conveyor belt using a rotating, rod-based spreader assembly positioned at an output end of the top hopper. The upper path carries food products through the breading machine. The method also includes filtering excess coating materials on the upper path of the main conveyor belt near a food product discharge end of the breading machine using a vibrating filter assembly. The method further comprises returning the filtered coating materials to the low pressure auger assembly via the lower return path of the main conveyor belt along with the new coating material being selectively metered in from the side-mounted feed hopper.
These and other advantages and novel features of the present invention, as well as details of an illustrated embodiment thereof, will be more fully understood from the following description and drawings.
The breading machine includes several sections including a top hopper 130, a top hopper feed chute 135, a vertical breading transport section 140, a first horizontal breading transport section 150, and a second horizontal breading transport section 160. The breading machine 100 also includes a coating transfer box 155, a side-feed hopper 170, a crumb filter assembly 180, and a top coating spreader assembly 190. The transport sections 140, 150, and 160 include screws or augers to transport the coating material through various parts of the breading machine 100.
The a machine 100 has a main endless food product/breading conveyor belt 196 running through several sections 191-195 of the breading machine 100. These sections 191-195 form a breading chamber enclosure. The conveyor belt 196 carries food products and coating material through the breading chamber enclosure via an upper forward path of the belt 196. Unused coating material is fed back and recirculated through the breading machine via a lower return path of the belt 196. The food products enter the breading machine 100 at the input side 110 without being coated, and exit via the output side 120 after having been coated by the breading machine.
The breading machine 200 also includes a top hopper 250, a spreader assembly 255, a filter assembly 260, and a main breading conveyor belt 265. The breading machine 200 has an input end 270 and an output end 280 for food products to enter and exit.
Coating material (e.g., flour) is fed into the breading machine (e.g., 100) via the side-mounted hopper 300. The side-mounted hopper 300 is mounted at a relatively low position on the side of the breading machine (see
The transport conveyor belt 395, driven by the motor 370 that is attached to the drive shaft 380, moves the loaded coating material from the container (330 and 340) through the output chute 390 and onto a lower return path of the main breading conveyor belt (e.g., conveyor belt 196 of
Coating material falls from the lower return path down into the cross-feed screw (e.g., 245) where the coating material is transported to the vertical screw (e.g., 215) via the auger transfer box (e.g., 155). Some of the coating material being transported by the vertical screw is intercepted by a spreader screw (e.g., within the second horizontal breading transport section 160 or 230) which deposits coating material onto an upper forward path of the main conveyor belt before food products are introduced onto the belt. This provides a bottom coating for the food products to be moved onto. The vertical screw is operated (i.e., rotated) by a motor at the second end of the vertical screw as an example.
A portion of the coating material being transported by the vertical screw is fed into a top hopper (e.g., 130 or 250) via a top hopper feed chute (e.g., 135) interfacing between a second end of the vertical screw and the top hopper. A spreader assembly (e.g., 190 or 255) at an output end of the top hopper distributes the coating material downward onto the food products, fully coating the remaining portions of the food products not coated by the bottom coating layer on the belt. The coated food products then move toward an output end of the breading machine where excess coating material that does not adhere to the food products is filtered and returned, via a lower return path of the main breading conveyor belt, to be used again in forming the bottom and top coating streams within the breading machine. As should be recognized, an amount of coating is used continuously during the process as the food products move therethrough, and make up coating material is provided via the side-mounted hopper as described. The coated food products exit out the output end (e.g., 120 or 280) of the breading machine.
The auger transfer box 400 also includes an input port 440, an output port 450, and a cleanout port 460. The auger transfer box 400 allows for a 90 degree change in direction of coating material within the breading machine. That is, coating material is transported into the input port 440 along an x-axis direction 441, and exits from the output port 450 along a y-axis direction 451. A clean out port 460 may be used to access this area for cleaning as desired. The clean out port 460 is sealed under normal operating conditions, as is the far side 470 of the auger transfer box 400.
The second end 502 of the cross-feed screw 500 and the attached paddle 510 are positioned within the auger transfer box 400 via the input port 440. The screw 500 and paddle 510 are rotated such that coating material is moved along the screw 500 towards the second end 502 in the x-axis direction 441. When the coating material enters the auger transfer box 400 via the input port 440, the paddle 510 pushes the coating material out of the auger transfer box 400 via the output port 450 in the y-axis direction 451. A first end of a vertical screw (e.g., screw 215 of
Referring to
Similarly, referring to
The spreader assembly 600 includes a first mounting piece 610 and a second mounting member 620 (e.g., circular plates). The spreader assembly 600 also includes a plurality of rods 630 mounted horizontally between the first mounting member 610 and the second mounting member 620. The spreader assembly further includes a motor 640 and a drive shaft 650. The drive shaft 650 connects the motor to at least the first mounting member 610. As shown in
In the embodiment of
A conveyor belt 670 within the top hopper (e.g., 130 or 250) transports the coating material within the top hopper towards the spreader assembly 600, such as in the z-direction 680. As the coating material is uniformly distributed to the spinning spreader assembly 600, the coating material is distributed vertically downward, in a uniform curtain of coating material, onto the food products below the spreader assembly. The action of the spreader assembly 600 results in the coating material being distributed evenly on the top and sides of the food products. For some applications, it may be desirable to form a dust-like cloud of coating material to coat food products as they pass under the spreader assembly 600. For such an application, the user may selectively apply a screen or mesh member 690 to the system 600, such as mounted over the rods 630. The screen member 690 may have a mesh size to create a fine dusting of coating material.
The filter assembly 700 may comprise a frame 720 and a tension shaft 730 mounted across the frame 720 at a first end of the filter assembly 700. The filter assembly 700 also includes a drive shaft 740 mounted across the frame 720 at a second end of the filter assembly 700. The filter assembly 700 further includes at least two belt support shafts 750 mounted across the frame 720 between the tension shaft 730 and the drive shaft 740. The filter assembly 700 also includes at least one belt support 760 mounted between at least two belt support shafts 750. A motor 770 is connected to the drive shaft 740 to drive the meshed conveyor belt 710. The meshed conveyor belt 710 travels around the tension shaft 730 and the drive shaft 740 along a length of the filter assembly 700 when driven by the motor 770. The conveyor 710 is also vibrated as it moves, so as to effectively and quickly sift the materials falling thereon, and avoid clogging at this area, such as by at least one vibrator element.
In accordance with an alternative embodiment of the present invention, a pan may be selectively inserted beneath the filter conveyor belt to prevent the coating material from falling through the filter conveyor belt and onto the lower return path. As a result, the breading machine may be unloaded (i.e., all coating material may be removed from the breading machine, such as for cleaning) using the filter assembly 700 with the inserted pan.
Coating material is fed from the cross-feed screw 920 towards the vertical screw 940 by the paddle 925 in an x-direction as previously described. The vertical screw 940 transports the coating material upward in a z-direction. As the coating material travels upward, some of the coating material feeds into the spreader screw 930, by means of the transition region. The spreader screw 930 is used to deposit coating material onto the upper path of the main food product conveyor belt within the breading machine before the food products are introduced onto the main conveyor belt, as previously described.
As the coating material moves up the vertical screw 940, the angled transition surface 910 provides a low-pressure transition pathway for the coating material to transition to the spreader screw 930 (see flow direction of coating material 950). A sharp 90-degree transition (i.e., vertical to horizontal transition) would tend to create a larger back pressure within the transition region 900 which can cause clogging, jamming, or bridging of the coating material, as well as cause undue wear on the screw motors and components. The angled transition surface 910 opens up the pathway, helping to prevent a larger back pressure that could cause such problems. Also, the angled surfaces 911 and 912 also help to maintain a low pressure within the auger assembly 905. Not all of the coating material is transitioned to the spreader screw 930, and a second portion of the coating material continues up the vertical screw 940 in the z-direction towards the top hopper chute, as previously described.
The in-line belt tensioning assembly 1000 comprises a left side pan 1010, a right side pan 1020, a tension bracket 1030, an end roller 1040, a support shaft 1050, a tension shaft 1060, a pivot shaft 1070, a belt support 1080, a return pan 1090, and an idler shaft 1095. The main food product conveyor belt 1099 is shown transitioning through the in-line belt tensioning assembly 1000. To adjust the tension on the belt 1099, the tension bracket 1030 is moved in the x-direction or the −x-direction, thereby moving the tension shaft 1060 in the x-direction or the −x-direction to decrease or increase the tension on the belt 1099. As a result, the tension on the belt 1099 may be adjusted without increasing the overall length of the upper forward path of the belt 1099, for example, beyond the imaginary line A-A′ in the x-direction.
In step 1210, new (i.e., fresh) coating material is metered in and onto a lower return path of a main conveyor belt of the breading machine from a side-mounted feed hopper. The lower return path also carries a filtered coating material that has already been processed at least once through the breading machine. In step 1220, the new coating material and the previously filtered coating material is thoroughly mixed and transitioned from the main conveyor belt through a low pressure auger assembly of the breading machine, forming a mixture of the new coating material and the filtered coating material. In step 1230, at least a first part of the coating materials are transitioned from the low pressure auger assembly to a top hopper of the breading machine. In step 1240, the at least first part of the coating materials are transitioned from the top hopper and onto an upper path of the main conveyor belt for coating the tops and sides of food products on the belt, such as by the rotating, rod-based spreader assembly positioned at an output end of the top hopper as described. The upper path carries food products through the breading machine. As a result, the food products are coated with the coating materials in a uniform manner.
In step 1250, excess coating materials (i.e., coating material that has not stuck to the food products) is filtered on the upper path of the main conveyor belt near a food product discharge end of the breading machine using a vibrating filter assembly. As a result, larger clumps of coating material are removed from the breading machine and only smaller particles of coating material remain in the breading machine. In step 1260, the filtered coating materials are returned to the low pressure auger assembly via the lower return path of the main conveyor belt along with the new coating material that is continuously being metered in from the side-mounted feed hopper to replace coating material that has stuck to the food products. The method continues as new food products are introduced into the breading machine for coating.
As a result, the coating material within the breading machine that gets applied to the food products comprises a stabilized mixture of new coating material and previously filtered coating material. Further, all of the excess coating materials (i.e., 100%) are filtered by the vibrating filter assembly. The vibrating filter assembly may also remove parts of food products (e.g., smaller chicken parts) that have broken off of the main food products and have fallen through the main conveyor belt and onto the vibrating filter assembly.
In summary, an improved breading machine is disclosed for coating food products with a coating material (e.g., flour, bread crumbs, cracker meal). The improved breading machine includes an improved auger assembly, an improved spreader assembly, a side-mounted feed hopper, and a filter assembly. All of the improvements help to prevent clogging, bridging, and jamming of the coating material within the breading machine.
While the invention has been described with reference to certain embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the invention without departing from its scope. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiment disclosed, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.
This application is a divisional patent application of U.S. non-provisional patent application Ser. No. 11/039,380, filed Jan. 19, 2005, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11039380 | Jan 2005 | US |
Child | 12612919 | US |