The present invention relates to the preservation of fluid inside a container.
Containers used for the storage of fluids, such as beverages, are usually sealed to reduce spillage and contamination caused by exposure to outside air. Often a beverage is only partially consumed and resealed after opening. However, since the volume of fluid within the container has been reduced, potentially contaminating air is often sealed inside the container along with the fluid, causing contamination of the fluid.
For example, one may open a bottle of wine, consume only a portion of the contents of the bottle of wine, and reseal the wine bottle so that the remaining wine can be enjoyed at a later time. However the wine will only retain its flavor and quality for a few days in the resealed condition because air has entered the bottle to replace the consumed volume of wine and the air is in contact with the wine in the resealed condition. The air oxidizes the wine, which diminishes the flavor and quality of the wine.
A similar problem exists with other beverages, such as carbonated beverages, milk, or other beverages which are adversely affected by air or other gasses entering the container and coming in contact with the beverage.
A similar problem exists with other fluids, such as chemicals, either liquid or gaseous, which are affected by exposure to air or other gasses.
To counteract these problems, several approaches have been taken to minimize a fluid's contact with contaminating gases. Most of these approaches have taken place in the beverage field.
Vacuum sealers have been used to seal wine bottle in an attempt to remove as much air as possible from the wine bottle during the resealing process. These devices only pull a light vacuum, however, and do not remove all the air from the bottle. As a result, wine is still contaminated relatively quickly.
Nitrogen has been used to replace the air in wine bottles since nitrogen is less contaminating than air to wine. However, this approach is cumbersome and requires replacement pressurized nitrogen cartridges.
Patent application 2004/0081739 describes the concept of pouring marbles, anatomically shaped or otherwise, into a wine bottle after it has been partially consumed. However this approach does not allow the marbles to be removed easily from the bottle. The approach also would make pouring the remaining fluid from the bottle, after the marbles have been introduced, a very messy and cumbersome operation.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,220,311 describes a fluid preservation system that is an integral part of the fluid storing container itself and not a separate device which can be used with various or standard containers. The patent also describes, briefly, a wine preservation method of pouring conventional marbles into an opened wine bottle to displace some of the oxygen in the wine bottle. This is shown in
There remains a need to provide a simple, effective, inexpensive and reusable way to preserve fluid inside a container which allows the fluid to be easily used after resealing the container and storing the container for some period of time.
The present invention provides a solution which overcomes the shortcomings of the prior art. The present invention provides a fluid preservation system and method, for preserving fluid in a container, which is simple, inexpensive, effective, reusable and which also allows for easy use of the unconsumed fluid after it has been stored. The fluid preservation system comprises a series of fill members connected along a flexible filament which is inserted into a container which contains a partially consumed fluid.
In one embodiment the container may be a wine bottle and the fluid may be wine. In this case the fill members may be glass beads which are strung on a filament which is made of a flexible material which is impervious to the wine and strong enough to hold the glass beads without breaking, such as nylon or PTFE thread. After the wine is opened for the first time, and a portion of the wine in the wine bottle is consumed, the fluid preservation system, including glass beads connected by a filament, is introduced into the bottle until the majority of the air left in the bottle has been displaced. The bottle is then resealed with the fluid preservation system in place inside the bottle. Some of the fluid preservation system may remain outside of the bottle or the entire fluid preservation system may be placed in the bottle. A sealing member may be designed to work with the fluid preservation system so that the wine bottle can be sealed while the fluid preservation system is in place. For example, the sealing member may be a rubber stopper which is sealed using vacuum, where the stopper has a slit down the length of its side which allows the filament of the fluid preservation system to snuggly rest between the stopper and the inside surface of the opening of the bottle, while maintaining the air-tight seal.
The sealing member may also be a rubber stopper which is sealed using vacuum where the stopper has a slit or holes in the interior of the stopper. The slit or holes may serve both to allow a vacuum pump to pull a vacuum through the holes/slit and also as a conduit for the filament of the fluid preservation system. In this case, the material of the stopper would need to be soft and flexible enough to maintain the seal around the filament.
The bottle may be also be resealed with any type of sealing member including a standard cork or with a standard sealing member made of metal, rubber or any other material. The bottle may also be resealed with a vacuum sealer, electronic or manual, such as that shown in U.S. Pat. No. 4,998,633, which is herein incorporated by reference, or the Vacu Vin wine saver manufactured by Vacu Vin BV located in Kalfieslaan, the Netherlands or PRESORVAC vacuum and pressure seal pumps/stoppers manufactured by Epicurean International Products, LLC. The bottle may also be resealed using a nitrogen sealer such as The Keeper wine preserver made by Winekeeper, located in Santa Barbara, Calif.
The container may be sealed using a sealing member after the fluid preservation system is wholly or partially inserted into the container. Preferably, the fluid preservation system displaces as much gas as possible from the container so that the fluid remaining in the container is exposed to a minimal volume of gas after the container is sealed.
The sealing member may or may not be incorporated into the fluid preservation system. The filament of the fluid preservation system may reside between the sealing member and the opening of the container after sealing. The filament may also reside within the perimeter of the sealing member after sealing, such as through a hole or slit in the center of the sealing member. The filament may also reside in a groove or slit on the outside of the sealing member after sealing. The filament may also terminate inside the container and therefore not reside inside or next to the sealing member.
A pouring spout may also be used in conjunction with the fluid preservation system and the sealing member such that the pouring spout is inserted through the sealing member or between the sealing member and the container. This allows the user to pour the contents of the container easily without removing the fluid preservation system.
The sealing member may also be removed from the container before the contents of the container are poured from the container. The fluid preservation system may also be removed from the container before the contents of the container are poured from the container.
The fluid may be any liquid or gas and may even be a consumable solid-like material such as honey, jelly, flour or tar. The fluid may be a food or beverage or may be an industrial material such as acid or a cleaning solution. The container may be any container, either rigid or flexible. The fill members may be of any shape and material and may be solid or deformable. The fill members may float on or sink in the fluid in the container. The filament may be made of any material including plastic, nylon, PTFE, polymer, silk, or metal. The sealing member may be reusable, or temporary. The sealing member may be a cork, plug, cap, screw-top, vacuum seal, stretch seal, zip-lock seal, heat seal, adhesive seal or other type of seal.
The sealing member may be made out of any material including rubber, cork, plastic, metal or any other material or combination of materials. The sealing member may be a cork, plug, cap, screw-top, vacuum seal, stretch seal, zip-lock seal, heat seal, adhesive seal or any other type of sealing member.
In the embodiment showed in
Depending on the number of fill members necessary to displace the air in the bottle, some fill members may remain outside of the bottle after the air in the bottle is displaced. This is shown in
There may be an opening in the fill member to allow for the filament to connect the fill members. The opening may be a hole 42 as shown in
The sealing member may also have no hole or slit. For example, the sealing member may be a conventional cork used to bottle wines or may be a cap, plug, screw top, stretch seal (such as plastic wrap), or any other type of seal. The sealing member may be made out of a polymer, metal, glass, cork, rubber, silicone, or any other suitable material or combination of materials. The sealing member is sized so that it comfortably seals the opening of the container. For example, an opening of a wine bottle is generally about 2 cm and a sealing member for a wine bottle may be about 1-5 cm in diameter. The diameter may be tapered so that insertion into the container is easier.
The pouring spout may be inserted into the sealing member while the sealing member is inside the opening of the container. The pouring spout may be inserted next to the filament of the fluid preservation system (not shown) so that both the pouring spout and the filament of the fluid preservation system occupy the same opening of the sealing member. The pouring spout and filament may also not occupy the same opening. The insertion of a pouring spout allows the user to dispense fluid from the container without removing the fluid preservation system. The pouring spout may be inserted into a hole or slit in the center or side of the sealing member. The pouring spout may also be inserted through the surface of a sealing member, for example, if the sealing member is a thin cap or has an area of thin material which can be easily broken. The pouring member may have a sharpened edge at the inserting end to more easily enter the sealing member.
The pouring spout is preferably made of a rigid material such as metal, glass or polymer or any combination of materials. The pouring spout may also be made of a more flexible material which has bee rolled into a tube to make it more rigid. The pouring spout is generally longer than the sealing member so that it can extend through the sealing member while allowing an extension on the outside for pouring. Preferably, the length may be about 2-8 cm.
The fluid preservation system may be used with or without the pouring spout.
The fluid preservation system invention provides a fluid preservation system and method for introducing volume displacing fill members, such as beads, into a container which is partially filled with a fluid, such as wine.
The present invention also provides the means for easily removing the fill members from the fluid by connecting multiple fill members to each other.
The present invention also allows for a sealing member for sealing the container after a portion of the fluid has been consumed and after the fill members have been introduced into the container.
The present invention also allows for the pouring of the fluid from the container so that the preserved fluid can be easily and neatly consumed.