The present invention relates to a butter dish, and more particularly, to a butter dish with a rotatable lid that encloses butter on the dish when closed and provides enhanced access to the butter when opened.
Butter dishes are well known containers for sticks or blocks of butter. Typically, the butter dish includes a dish or plate for supporting the butter and a removable cover that is lifted off the dish to provide access to the butter. Several problems exist with such butter dishes including close spacing between the cover and the butter and handling of the cover once it is lifted off the plate. The close spacing means that the cover often comes into contact with the butter when moving away from the dish and/or when the cover is returned to the plate. This translates to greasy butter being deposited on the cover and then transferred to the region between the cover and the plate when the two are brought together again. Having butter between the cover and the plate ruins the quality of the seal of the cover to the plate.
Greasy butter may also be transferred to the countertop or table where the cover is set down during the process of removing a pat of butter and applying the butter to another item, such as a slice of bread. To avoid leaving greasy butter on a countertop a user often attempts to set the cover upside down on the countertop, but this is often difficult because a handle for the cover may be on top of the cover so that the cover is not stable and may fall to the floor and break; also handling of the cover is difficult because it is difficult to grab an upside down cover.
Another problem is that butter left between the cover and the plate softens if left at room temperature but will then fuse the cover to the plate when placed in a refrigerator. When next used the cover will be difficult to open or remove and may even be dangerous as a consumer struggles with the cover.
Another type of butter dish, one with a hinged or roll top, tends to be somewhat complicated structurally and limiting in that such dishes only open to 90° and thus they constrict access to the butter by a user using a butter spreader. With such a restricted opening butter may accidently be smeared on the closure, the lip of a glass plate or of a stand.
Patents have been granted over the years on butter dishes, such as U.S. Pat. No. D259,690 issued in 1981 to Buchsteiner for a design of a “Dish With Hinged Cover.” The Buchsteiner patent purports to disclose a base, a curved back wall and a matching curved cover hinged to only open to 90°. Another such patent was granted to Schwartz, U.S. Pat. No. D192,870 issued in 1962 purporting to show a dish and a removable cover.
The invention described below in detail addresses these and other deficiencies of the prior art. The features and advantages of the present invention will be explained in, or become apparent from, the following summary and description of the preferred embodiment considered together with the accompanying drawings.
In accordance with the present application, an advantageous method and apparatus are disclosed. The apparatus takes the form of a sleek and stylish butter dish that is easy to use, simply constructed and opens widely enough to avoid, when used, butter smearing parts of the butter dish. In addition to bcing stylish, easy to use and simply constructed, the butter dish disclosed herein is structurally robust, relatively inexpensive and provides easy access to the stored butter because the closure opens to more than 90°. The butter dish is also designed to be scaled up or down as a function of the shape of the block of butter to be enclosed or of the size of opening desired and yet, the butter dish is still relatively compact.
Briefly summarized, the present invention relates to a butter dish with a rotatable lid including a base having a bottom surface for supporting the butter dish on a support surface and a top planar surface spaced away from the bottom surface for supporting butter, a rear wall connected to the base for forming part of an enclosure and defining a rotational axis, the rotational axis being spaced from the top surface of the base and located near a rear of the base, and a lid connected to the rear wall and forming another part of the enclosure over the base and over any butter on the top planar surface of the base, the lid having a bottom edge and a rear opening with a rear edge, and the lid being constructed and dimensioned to be rotatable around the rotational axis between a first position where the rear edge of the lid cooperates with the rear wall to close the enclosure and the lower edge of the lid is supported by the top planar surface of the base, and a second position where the rear and lower edges of the lid have rotated to about the same obtuse angle relative to the top planar surface of the base.
The invention also relates to a method for making a butter dish including the steps of forming a base having a top surface and a spaced apart bottom surface, forming a rear wall extending from the top surface of the base, forming an axis of rotation on the rear wall above the top surface of the base and near a rear of the base, and connecting a lid to the rear wall, the lid being movable around the axis of rotation between a closed position where the lid, the rear wall and the top surface form an enclosure for butter on the top surface of the base and an opened position where a lower edge of the lid rotates to an obtuse angle and a rear edge of the lid moves away from the rear wall wherein the lid rests on a butter dish support surface to enable easy access to the butter.
For the purpose of facilitating an understanding of the invention, the accompanying drawings and detailed description illustrate a preferred embodiment thereof, from which the invention, its structure, its construction and operation, its processes, and many related advantages may be readily understood and appreciated.
The following description is provided to enable those skilled in the art to make and use the described embodiment set forth in the best mode contemplated for carrying out the invention. Various modifications, equivalents, variations, and alternatives, however, will remain readily apparent to those skilled in the art. Any and all such modifications, variations, equivalents, and alternatives are intended to fall within the spirit and scope of the present invention.
Referring to
The base 12,
In the alternative, the base 12 may have a different geometric shape in plan view, such as being more rectangular or square, or trapezoidal, or even circular or a blending of these or other shapes. The bottom rim 40 may also have a different geometric shape, such as a rectangle, a square or a circle, or simply a flat surface. Or, other shapes may be used as long as those shapes of the bottom surface of the base provide that the base and, therefore the butter dish, is stable when placed on the support surface. Also in the alternative, the top surface 22 may be coated, roughened or grooved to better restrain the butter from easily moving around the top surface, or a removable plate or butter holder may be used on the top surface, if desired. The top surface may also include a recessed region for the butter, if desired.
Referring now to
In the alternative, the rear wall may assume a somewhat different shape and may be formed, if the butter dish material is molded plastic, integral with the base.
The stylish lid 16, as seen in
Extending from the rear edge 80 at each side panel 72, 74 are tabs 84, 86, and the tabs extend the lower edge 78 rearward as clearly shown in
The front panel 70 is smoothly curved upward from the lower edge 78, and the upper panel 76 is positioned obliquely or slanted downward from the top of the front panel 70 to the rear edge 80. Extending outward from the front panel 70 is a handle 92 to facilitate opening and closing the lid. Extending rearward from the upper panel 76 and the rear edge 80 is a bumper 94 with an end portion 95. The bumper is preferably formed of resilient material and functions to limit the rotation of the lid and cushion contact of the lid with the support surface 42,
In the alternative, the rear wall may mount shafts for receipt by openings in the lid, or fastener elements may be placed in aligned openings in both the rear wall and the lid. The shape of the lid may be more rounded or less so, and other products besides butter may be stored in the butter dish.
In operation of the butter dish 10, a user places the butter dish on a conveniently located countertop or table, near a toaster for example, so that toast may be easily buttered. A stick or block of butter 18 is placed on the planar region 24 of the top surface 22 of the base 12 and the lid 16 is closed as shown in
The preferred dimensions of the butter dish are as follows: the major dimension A,
(The dimensions provided above are somewhat approximate even though some dimensions extend to two decimal places. This approximation is because the intersections of connecting panels are difficult to discern when curved corners are used as here, unlike for example, a sharp crease in a folded piece of paper. In addition, different materials will form intersections somewhat differently and different wall thicknesses will also affect the geometry of the intersections.) It is noted that the butter dish may be formed of any suitable plastic, metal, ceramic or porcelain, and may even be formed of coated paper.
Because of the dimensions of the structures set forth above, the angle of rotation N,
The plastic material for the butter dish 10 may be ABS, polycarbonate, a blend of ABS and polycarbonate or polypropylene. Soft components, such as the bumper 94, the side pads 34, 36 and the handle 92, may be formed from a thermoplastic elastomer that may be over-molded or molded separately and attached by stretching a part and mechanically interlocking the part with another part. According to Wikipedia butter sticks are commonly produced in two different configurations: the dominant shape east of the Rocky Mountains is the “Elgin” or Eastern-pack shape and is about 4.8 inches long and about 1.3 inches wide; west of the Rocky Mountains a different shape developed and it is referred to as the Western-pack, and these are about 3.1 inches long and about 1.5 inches wide.
It is noted that throughout this detailed description, words such as “upper,” “lower,” “front,” “rear,” “top” and “bottom,” as well as similar positional terms, refer to portions or elements of the butter dish as they are viewed in the drawings relative to other portions, or in relationship to the positions of the apparatus as it will typically be deployed and moved during use, or to movements of elements based on the configurations illustrated.
The present invention also includes a method 200,
The butter dish 10 provides for a wide opening to ease access to the butter and prevent inadvertent smearing of the butter on the butter dish lid. The butter dish is also structured and dimensioned to easily alter the extent of the opening and/or adjust for different size butter sticks or blocks. The butter dish described in detail above is structurally robust but simply constructed, inexpensive to manufacture, compact and adapted to contain butter or other products of different dimensions.
From the foregoing, it can be seen that there has been provided features for an improved butter dish apparatus and a description of a method for making the butter dish. While a particular embodiment of the present invention has been shown and described in detail, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made, some of which having already been suggested above, without departing from the invention in its broader aspects. Therefore, the aim is to cover all such changes and modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention. The matters set forth in the foregoing description and accompanying drawings are offered by way of illustration only and not as limitation. The actual scope of the invention is to be defined by the subsequent claims when viewed in their proper perspective based on the prior art.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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D192870 | Schwartz | May 1962 | S |
D259690 | Fetzer | Jun 1981 | S |
6872920 | Haber | Mar 2005 | B2 |
7293846 | Collins | Nov 2007 | B2 |
8960441 | Marquis | Feb 2015 | B1 |
20110084071 | Gundersen | Apr 2011 | A1 |
Entry |
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Butter dish with spreader, Google search-butter dish-images. |
Butter dish with oval plate, Google search-butter dish-images. |
Butter dish with roll top, Google search-butter dish-images. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160255974 A1 | Sep 2016 | US |