1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to butter makers; and, more particularly, a butter maker adapted to be set on top of a counter and activated to make butter and buttermilk.
2. Related Art
In my U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,511,219 and 6,257,755, I disclose a compact butter maker that can be used in a kitchen or the like. Butter is a common food fat product that has been used throughout the world for centuries as an ingredient of other foods or as a condiment. Today, butter is commonly made on an industrial scale with apparatus suitable for handling tens, hundreds, or more gallons of cream or milk. In a day before commercial creameries, butter was commonly made in the home using mechanical churns that, typically, were manually operated. As commercial creameries became prevalent, home butter making became less popular and advances in equipment for home butter making slowed. As a result, modem improvements in kitchen appliances have not been incorporated into home butter makers. Therefore, my patents fill a need for a butter maker that can be conveniently used in a contemporary home kitchen.
Thus, my butter maker in my patents used in the contemporary home kitchen. The butter maker therein is compact and fits on a counter or other surface in a home kitchen. The butter maker includes a cream container, a drive housing, a drive, and a dasher. The drive housing houses a drive, which is coupled to the dasher and adapted and configured to drive the dasher in reciprocal motion. The drive housing and the cream container are adapted and configured to reversibly mate and to position the dasher in the cream container for reciprocal motion within the container. The dasher and the container have complementary shapes with the dasher dimension to fit within the container and to define a space that can be occupied by cream within the container and around the dasher. Reciprocal motion of the dasher within the container converts the cream to butter.
I have determined that there is a need for a more substantial butter maker which is the type of appliance suitable for use in a kitchen.
It is an object of this invention to provide a butter maker adapted to be set on top of a counter and activated to make butter and buttermilk.
Referring now to
Butter maker 10 includes a stepped container lid 19 which may be of a resilient material so that the container 14 press fits into an annular groove 20 (
Referring again to
A beater assembly 30 is provided internally of butter maker 10 extending downwardly through lid 19.
Thus, as seen in
As seen in
Referring again to
Shaft 38, at its upper end, extends through a bearing 41 mounted in a throughhole 42 extending through lid 19.
As seen, a centrally located integral hub portion 43 extends downwardly from stepped portion 23 of lid 19. A conventional shaft seal 44 may be provided at the area where shaft 38 enters bearing 41.
The upper end 45 of shaft 38 terminates in a beater drive assembly 46 as will be discussed. A closure member 47 is centrally mounted on lid 19 through which shaft 45 extends and is secured to lid 19 by a plurality of screws 48. The entire assembly shown in
The beater drive assembly 46 is coupled to a motor assembly 49 comprising a motor mount 50 coupled via screws 51 or the like to a mounting plate 52. Motor assembly 49 has a motor shaft 53 extending through an opening 54 in mounting plate 50 into driving engagement with a flywheel 55. A drive shaft 56 extends from flywheel 55 to a bearing 57A (
A fan 60 (
The beater drive assembly 46 is seen more particularly in
It can be seen in
As seen in
In operation, the user pours 1 pint of heavy whipping cream into container 14. Preferably, the cream should be at room temperature. The lid assembly, which includes the lid 19 and paddle assembly 30, is now inserted into the cream in container 14. The lid assembly fits automatically in place.
Switch 71 is set to either automatic or time and the start button 25 is pressed. If automatic, the butter will churn until done. If time controlled, the timer 67 may be set for any time between 0 and 30 minutes.
Inserting the container assembly 14 into the maker 10 automatically seals the container. Closing the door 26, and pressing the start button 25, starts the churning process. The churn process either stops automatically when butter is separated or runs for a predetermined length of time.
The user now removes the container and lifts the lid 19. The churned butter and buttermilk are placed in suitable containers.
Although the basic process for churning butter is disclosed, certain refinements can be made by the user. For example, ultra-heavy pasteurized whipping cream may be used. Various types of cream from different manufacturers may be used.
If the whipping cream is too cold, it does not separate or takes a long time. If the cream is too warm, it melts the butter and does not separate properly; the butter may get too creamy and mushy containing most of the buttermilk.
Preferably, the best cream temperature is about 55 to 65 degrees Fahrenheit. It should be removed from the refrigerator about 3–4 hours before processing.
Time setting: Depending on conditions and type of whipped cream the time for churning varies from 2–5 minutes. One should start with time setting of 5 minutes. If the butter separates in less time, the machine should be stopped by opening the access door. If more time is needed after the machine is stopped, the start switch should be pressed again. When the butter maker 10 is started in the “Auto” mode, the butter maker 10 runs until the churning process is completed (butter is done) and the motor is deenergized and stops. In the “Auto” mode, the churning process is controlled by the “Auto” control unit as seen in the wiring diagram of
When the butter is done, the buttermilk separates and the butter solidifies. The motor may labor heavily and may stop under load. The access door should be opened and the container removed.
The cover should be removed along with accumulated butter from the container.
The butter may be collected into a shallow dish and, working with a spoon, compressed and drained to draw out all excess buttermilk.
The butter may be placed into a suitable container and keep cold in the refrigerator.
Briefly, the short operation is as follows:
Container 14 may be of any suitable materials and dimensions, such as a 1½ pint mixing container of strong, clear acrylic material.
All container 14 components should be dishwasher safe. The butter maker assembly, (motor, etc.) stays clean during the churning process and is not submersible.
Any suitable motor dimensions and specifications may be used. For example, a 250 watt, 120 VAC 50/60 Hz motor may be used. The overall dimensions of maker 10 may be about 10″ high, 7″ wide, 11″ deep and about 16 pounds in weight.
Thus, the door opening is rather small so that people will not insert fingers in it. Unless the container 14 is properly aligned, the container 14 can no be removed or inserted, the door 20 itself is in the way.
Opening the door 26 disconnects the electric power and thus the motor except for the jog switch 207, becomes inoperative.
The door safety disconnect switch 72 is shown in
Just behind the container 14 is the container switch 74. This is a normally open wherein inserting the container 14 pushes the plunger 75 and activates the switch 74. The maker 10 can not be run without container 14 inserted.
Any suitable electronic means may be used to carry out the invention. For example, a schematic illustration of a circuit that may be used is shown in
Receptacle container 14 may be 4½″ in height, 4″ in diameter with a ⅛″ wall thickness. Paddles 31, 32 may be about 3.375″ in diameter so a spacing of about 0.375″ is provided between the outer periphery of the paddles and the inner wall of container 14.
In order to seal the container 14 and hold it firmly in place, a tension spring 200 (FIG. 6—see also
In conclusion, the maker 10 includes a container 14 with a separate cover assembly. The container 14 may be conventional kitchen type-type Pyrex Glass container that is dish washer safe. The cover assembly includes container lid 22, beater paddle assembly 30 and driver rod 45 are assembled into one unit. This unit can not be home disassembled and is dish washer safe. Container lid 22 has an O-ring style seal 24 on its underside matching the upper rim of the class container 14.
Both the glass container 14 and the cover assembly are individual parts and have no interlocking features and, unless inserted into maker 10, are always free to separate.
Sliding container 14 into the maker activates the tension spring parts 201, 202 located on each side underneath the maker 10 and seals the container 14 and holds it in place. In order to remove container 14, one opens the door 26 and slides the container 14 out.
Although a particular embodiment of the invention is disclosed, variations thereof may occur to an artisan and the scope of the invention should only be limited by the scope of the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country |
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2100613 | Jan 1983 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060176766 A1 | Aug 2006 | US |