This application relates generally to (i) control systems for combination ovens and (ii) communication systems for ovens and other food equipment.
In combination ovens more than one heat transfer process is typically available for use in cooking food products, providing advantages such as decreasing cooking time, improvement in the taste, texture, moisture content or the visual, appeal of the cooked foodstuff and/or enabling greater versatility with a single cooking unit. Combination ovens may include multiple cooking sources such as radiant, convection, steam and/or microwave, or in some cases multiple mechanisms that enable control of more than one cooking factor of an oven chamber. Combination ovens also often include a recipe program feature that enables a user to select and implement a specific pre-stored recipe for a cooking operation, where the recipe may include one or more phases and relates temperatures, times, power levels etc.
It would be desirable to provide improved techniques for (i) selecting and implementing given recipes, (ii) making recipes available for oven users, (iii) associating recipes with specific food products and (iv) communicating with food product ovens and other food equipment more generally.
In one aspect, an oven includes a cooking chamber with at least one associated cooking source, a user interface, a scanning mechanism for scanning product codes associated with food products to be cooked, and a controller for receiving scanned product code information and connected for (i) receiving input from the user interface and (ii) controlling operation of the cooking source. In a cook ready mode the controller operates such that upon receiving a scanned product code the controller: (a) implements a cook preparation sequence associated with the scanned product code, including operating the cooking source to prepare the cooking chamber for cooking and setting a timer to a duration associated with the scanned product code; and (b) maintains the oven in a ready state, without initiating countdown of the timer, until a start cooking input is received via user actuation of a portion of the user interface.
In one or more implementations, the scanning mechanism is a bar code scanning mechanism and wherein the scanned product code information includes cook program details therein. In one or more implementations, in the cook ready mode the controller operates such that upon receiving the scanned product code the controller identifies a stored cooking program associated with the scanned product code and implements the cook preparation sequence for the identified cooking program.
In another aspect, an oven includes a cooking chamber with at least one associated cooking source, a user interface, a scanning mechanism for scanning product codes associated with food products to be cooked and a controller for receiving scanned product code information and connected for (i) receiving input from the user interface and (ii) controlling operation of the cooking source. In a cook ready mode the controller operates such that upon receiving a scanned product code the controller identifies a stored cooking program associated with the scanned product code. In a cooking program input/modify mode selectable via the user interface, the controller operates such that: (i) a program link selection for a specific cooking program can be activated by a user; (ii) upon user activation of the program link selection the controller initiates a timeout operation; (iii) upon receipt of a scanned product code prior to completion of the timeout operation, the scanned product code is linked, in memory of the controller, to the specific cooking program; and (iv) upon receipt of a scanned product code after completion of the timeout operation, the scanned product code is not linked to the specific cooking program.
In a further aspect, a method of communicating oven cooking programs to an oven involves the steps of: storing multiple cooking programs in a file with a binary format; uploading the binary file to a portable hand-held device including Bluetooth communication capability; utilizing the hand-held device, selecting the binary file for transfer to an oven having Bluetooth communication capability; transferring the binary file to the oven via the Bluetooth communication link between the oven and the hand-held device.
In still another aspect, a method of retrieving information from a food equipment device involves the steps of: configuring an information request as a binary file; uploading the binary file to a portable hand-held device including Bluetooth communication capability; utilizing the hand-held device, selecting the binary file for transfer to the food equipment device, wherein the food equipment device has Bluetooth communication capability; transferring the binary file to the food equipment device via the Bluetooth communication link between the food equipment device and the hand-held device; the food equipment device includes a controller and responsive to receipt of the binary file the controller identifies the information request and transfers the information in a text file format to the hand-held device via the Bluetooth communication link.
An exemplary combination oven is shown and described in U.S. Patent Publication No. 2006-0054155 the details of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Generally, referring to
A basic control schematic for the oven 100 is shown in
The scanner 124 may be a bar code scanner for scanning UPC bar codes commonly provided on food item packages. EAN, Delta matrix and other types of bar codes could be scanned as well. In another implementation the scanner 124 may be and RFID scanner for scanning RFID tags or elements included on food product packages.
In one embodiment, the controller 150 includes memory storing multiple possible cooking programs for the oven 100. The user may utilize the user interface 106 to select and implement a given stored cooking program. Alternatively, the user may utilize the scanner 124 to select and implement a stored cooking program. Specifically, and referring to the high level functional operation shown in
Once the program begins running at step 160, the controller may include a lockout feature that causes it to ignore scanned product information received while another program is already running. A similar lockout could be included for a cleaning process being carried out by the oven controller. In one implementation, if a subsequent scanned product code is received during wait step 158, the controller may be configured to automatically proceed with steps 152, 154 and 156 for the subsequent scanned product code. In another implementation, during step 156 and wait step 158 the controller could ignore any subsequent bar code scans, and a user interface button must be pressed to return to step 150 without completing the identified cooking program.
If the scanned product code received at step 150 is not linked with a stored program, the controller may respond by simply ignoring the code and returning to step 150 (e.g., path 162). In another implementation, the controller may effect output a message (visual and/or audible) advising the user that no corresponding stored program was found (e.g., path 164). In yet another implementation, the controller may effect output of a query to determine if the user desires to link the scanned product code with an existing stored recipe/program (e.g., path 166).
In another embodiment, the scanned code may embody the cooking program/recipe itself (e.g., cook modes, temperatures/powers and durations) such that the controller does not need to carry out a check of its stored program database. By way of example, reference is made to the exemplary bar codes shown in
Referring to
As shown in
Referring now to
In another implementation, rather than e-mailing the file to the portable hand-held device, the file could be retrieved by the hand-held device directly from a web site, where the export function makes the file available on the web site. Alternatively, all cooking programs could be made available on a web site, in appropriate formats, for selection and download. On such a site, multiple programs for a given food item may be provided for different oven types, with the user entering oven type and the web site offering only the cooking program that is configured for the user's identified oven type.
Referring now to
In one implementation, each cooking program stored in the binary file includes an associated cooking program number. The controller operates to overwrite any previously stored cooking program having a cooking program number that is the same as the cooking program number associated with an identified cooking program of the binary file.
In another implementation, each cooking program stored in the binary file includes an associated cooking program identifier (e.g., program number and program name), and the controller operates to overwrite any previously stored cooking program having a cooking program identifier that is the same (i.e., both program number and name) as the cooking program identifier associated with an identified cooking program of the file.
In another implementation, each cooking program stored in the file includes an associated cooking program number, and the controller operates to avoid overwriting any previously stored cooking program having a cooking program number that is the same as the cooking program number associated with an identified cooking program of the file. In this implementation the identified cooking program file may simply be stored as the next available numeric cooking program in memory of the controller or may be stored by program name only without a numeric identifier.
Other types of uploads (e.g., firmware uploads) to the oven controller could be handled in a similar manner using the binary file format with picture file extension (or other extensions).
The Bluetooth communication feature of the oven 100 may be used for other communication operations as well. For example, it may be used to facilitate data retrieval from the oven (e.g. such as service information, fault information, HAACP compliance records etc.). By way of example, a method of retrieving information from a food product cooking oven may involve configuring an information request as a binary file stored with a picture file extension; e-mailing the binary file to a portable hand-held device including Bluetooth communication capability; utilizing the hand-held device, selecting the binary file for transfer to the oven, wherein the oven has Bluetooth communication capability; and transferring the binary file to the oven via the Bluetooth communication link between the oven and the hand-held device; and the oven includes a controller and responsive to receipt of the binary file the controller identifies the information request and transfers the information in a text file format to the hand-held device via the Bluetooth communication link. Other file formats could also be used. This same process could be used for other types of food equipment products/devices (e.g., mixers, slicers, refrigeration, dishwashers, scales or wrappers).
It is to be clearly understood that the above description is intended by way of illustration and example only and is not intended to be taken by way of limitation. Variations are possible.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 60/908,201, filed Mar. 27, 2007, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60908201 | Mar 2007 | US |