The disclosure relates generally to a cooking apparatus for food preparation and structural elements thereof. More particularly, the disclosure relates to an outdoor cooking apparatus including a basin interconnected to a pedestal having a housing and a container for a heat generating source such as an insertable starter unit that is insertable within the housing.
One known outdoor cooking apparatus is a charcoal grill. Charcoal grills use charcoal briquettes as their fuel source. The briquettes, when burned, transform into embers that radiate the heat necessary to cook food. The typical charcoal grill is a hollow, metal hemisphere with three legs and a small metal disc to catch ash, with a lower grate to hold the charcoal and an upper grate to hold the food to be cooked.
Often, to light the charcoal, a chimney starter, also known as a charcoal chimney is used. A chimney starter usually includes a steel cylinder about 8 inches in diameter and about 12 to 18 inches tall. Chimney starters commonly have a plate or grate with several holes that are welded horizontally inside the cylinder about 3 inches from the bottom. The chimney of the chimney starter may have large apertures drilled around its circumference below the grate. This is to allow air to flow up underneath the charcoal, which rests on top of the grate. Chimney starters also have handles that are frequently insulated.
The chimney starter may be used by first placing newspaper in the chimney (or alternatively, below the grate in a second chamber). Second, charcoal is placed within the chimney and then the newspaper is ignited through the starter grate (or alternatively, the holes). This fire, which is easy to start, eventually will ignite the charcoal. Once the top layer of briquettes is fully lit (when they have a light coating of gray ash), the chimney starter is lifted by the handle, the cooking grill surface is removed and the briquettes are poured into the basin of the barbeque grill. Then, the chimney starter is set aside. A chimney starter is commonly used in situations where the use of charcoal lighter fluid, a toxic petroleum derivative, is either banned or deemed to be undesirable.
Wok pans, by design, are meant to be used over a gas stove which has either concentrically sloped grates or burners that are recessed below a round “pit” in order to encompass the wok's shape. Sloped grates on a stove further provide stability to the curved wok. A recessed “pit” stove provides not only stability for the wok, it also concentrates heat by directing all the hot gases produced onto the wok instead of allowing such hot gases to escape around the wok. This allows foods to be stir-fried at a very desirable high temperature. Using gas stoves for wok cooking has many drawbacks because the grills are typically located indoors and cost hundreds of dollars. Wok cooking also produces a great deal of smoke which is highly undesirable indoors sufficient ventilation to clear the smoke is often unavailable. It is believed that the concentrated smoke billowing from improperly ventilated super-hot cooking oils, especially unrefined cooking oils, contributes to eye irritation, respiratory problems or potentially other, more serious health concerns. Therefore, others have tried to use a wok outside on a traditional charcoal or gas grill. This method has proved ineffective as not enough heat is concentrated in a small enough diameter, to provide enough heat for effective cooking in a wok, especially if there is even a little wind.
Therefore, what is needed is an outdoor cooking apparatus that generates concentrated heat for wok cooking and the like. What is also needed is an economical, adaptable apparatus that may be used both for cooking that requires high levels of concentrated heat and for traditional barbeque cooking that requires a lower, less concentrated heat.
The present invention provides solutions for these and other problems associated with the prior art devices for outdoor cooking and methods used to accomplish the same.
The present invention provides an outdoor cooking apparatus having a basin interconnected to a pedestal and these two structural elements of the cooking apparatus. In preferred embodiments, the basin includes a sidewall and a bottom having a bottom aperture. The pedestal has a housing positioned below the bottom aperture. The housing includes first and second ends and a middle portion having an opening. In preferred embodiments, the pedestal will include a generally cylindrical housing and a base connected to the second end configured and arranged to support the housing in an upright position. The housing of the pedestal preferably defines a chamber. In preferred embodiments, the outdoor cooking apparatus further includes a container for a heat generating source, most preferably an insertable starter unit, that is positioned, preferably removably secured, within the chamber so that heat, generated by combustible material located within the chamber, can be concentrated proximate the bottom aperture.
In order to prepare the outdoor cooking apparatus of the present invention for cooking, the insertable starter unit is removed from the housing. Then, material, such as charcoal, is placed within the insertable starter unit. Another easily ignitable material capable of relatively rapid combustion, such as paper, may also be placed within the insertable starter unit to promote combustion of the charcoal. In one possible method, the insertable starter unit is placed within the outdoor cooking apparatus, and the paper is ignited. The insertable starter unit remains in the outdoor cooking apparatus during cooking, serving as the heat source. A wok, cooking pan or surface is placed within the basin, preferably on a small grate having a stand, such that heat is delivered from the removable insertable starter unit to the wok.
The insertable starter unit defines a chimney having a first section and a second section divided by a grate. The combustible material and the easily ignitable material can be introduced into the first section. The outdoor cooking apparatus also includes a basin mounted proximate a first end of the housing. The basin is arranged with the chamber such that during combustion of the combustible material, a strong channel of hot air rises up the chamber and is delivered through the bottom aperture.
Alternatively, the preferred outdoor cooking apparatus is modifiable such that the hot air produced by the combustible material may be diffused to accommodate cooking requiring lower temperatures over larger diameters. In this alternative embodiment, the outdoor cooking apparatus further incorporates a diffuser used to disperse the strong channel of hot air rising from the insertable starter unit when it contains a sufficient quality of burning combustible material. The preferred diffuser includes a plate having a series of apertures. The apertures are arranged on the plate such that they allow some hot air to pass and block or redirect the rest. Preferably, the center of the plate is free of apertures to block the channel of hot air where it is the strongest. The diffuser is preferably used in conjunction with the small grate. In this embodiment, the diffuser is placed on top of the small grate with the stand facing downward, preferably in the center. The diffuser preferably further includes a lip to direct hot air towards the basin sidewall and legs to secure the diffuser on the small grate. The food to be cooked can then be placed on a large grate that is positioned towards the top of the basin. This embodiment has cooking properties similar to a typical charcoal grill.
Additional objects, advantages, and features will become apparent from the following description and the claims that follow, considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
In the drawings, in which corresponding reference numerals and letters indicate corresponding parts of the various embodiments throughout the several views, and in which the various embodiments generally differ only in the manner described and/or shown, but otherwise include corresponding parts;
The following description of various embodiments implemented in the context of wok cooking is to be construed by way of illustration rather than limitation. This description is not intended to limit the invention or its applications or uses. For example, while various embodiments are described as being implemented in this context, it will be appreciated that the principles of the disclosure are applicable to cooking apparatuses operable in other applications, such as grilling.
In the following description, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of various embodiments. It will be apparent to one skilled in the art that some embodiments may be practiced without some or all of these specific details. In other instances, well known components and process steps have not been described in detail. These various embodiments include preferred embodiments of the present invention.
Referring now to the drawings, in particular,
The middle portion 18 of the housing 12 has an opening 20 such that it may receive a container 70 for a heat generating source such as charcoal or the like. In the most preferred embodiments, the container 70 is an insertable starter unit which is similar to known chimney starters. The insertable starter unit 70 includes a chimney 72, handle 74 and starter grate 76. The chimney 72 has a only slightly smaller diameter than the diameter of the chamber 22 such that the heat generated from combustible material 38 is directed generally straight up through the chamber 22. Dividing the chimney 72 into a first section and a second section 71a, 71b is the starter grate 76, which is arranged and configured to retain the combustible material 38 (see
The handle 74 of the insertable starter unit 70 has a first portion 82 and a second portion 84 interconnected by a connecting portion 86. The connecting portion 86 is preferably made of a heat insulating material because the connecting portion 86 serves as a grip for holding the insertable starter unit 70. It is further desirable that the handle 74 include a heat guard. The heat guard 88 is preferably bowed to have a slight curvature away from the chimney 72. The slight curvature aids in keeping the connecting portion 86 cool by deflecting heat radiating from the chamber 22.
As air is essential in keeping the combustible material 38 lit and hot, it is preferable that the housing 12 be configured such that when the insertable starter unit 70 and the ash pan 90 are placed within the chamber 22, the opening 20 be only partially unobstructed. As well as providing access to the necessary oxygen for combustion, the draft of air created by the combustible material 38 pulling in air also minimizes the risk of hot ash 98 falling out of the housing 12.
In order to generate a hot “channel” of heat directed at the bottom of a cooking pan, such as a wok pan, the distance “d” between the insertable starter unit and the cooking pan (or grate stand since the cooking pan typically is resting on the stand) is preferably from about 2 to about 20 inches, more preferably about 4.25 inches.
To prepare the outdoor cooking apparatus 10 of the present invention for wok cooking and the like, the small grate 60 is inserted into the basin 40 so that the grate top 62 is resting on the second ridge 50 of the basin 40 and the stands 68 are facing upward. The cooking pan or wok 36 can then be positioned and supported on the stands 68 of the small grate 60 during the cooking process. The small grate 60 may have numerous other configurations to support different types of pans or create different surfaces for other types of cooking that require the same channel-like distribution of high heat. The location of the small grate 60 and the second ridge 50 are preferably close to the bottom 44 of the basin 40 such that the channel of hot air emerging from the chamber 22 will be focused on the bottom of the wok 36.
To begin the heat generating process, the insertable starter unit 70 may be prepped by inserting an easily ignitable material (not shown), such as paper, most preferably newspaper, into the chimney 72 and loosely on the grate 78. Then combustible material 38, such as charcoal, is placed on top of the easily ignitable material. Next, the insertable starter unit 70 is secured in the chamber 22 as discussed in detail below. Then the easily ignitable material is lit with a match, candle lighter, or similar apparatus by reaching into the air intake section 20 and igniting the easily ignitable material through the starter grate 76. Then, the easily ignitable material will burn and the combustible material 38 should eventually light.
Alternatively, the combustible material 38 may be ignited while the insertable starter unit 70 is outside of the chamber 22. The combustible material 38 inside the insertable starter unit 70 is lit just as mentioned above, but before the insertable starter unit is placed within the chamber 22. Once the combustible material 38 is ignited, the insertable starter unit 70 is carefully secured within the chamber 22 as will be discussed in detail below. This method may have safety drawbacks as it requires moving the insertable starter unit while it contains burning material.
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It will be understood by those who practice the embodiments described herein and those skilled in the art that various modifications and improvements may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosed embodiments. The scope of protection afforded is to be determined solely by the claims and by the breadth of interpretation allowed by law.