The present invention relates to stabilizing food products for treatment and processing.
Known processes for food products include pressing the food product, such as by mechanical presses, and various forms of treatment to physically arrange the product in a predetermined manner for subsequent processing. In particular, when the food product is injected with for example ingredients such as marinates or other treatment solutions, it is important that the ingredients are retained in the food product during subsequent processing, even during pressing the food product. Unfortunately, this is not carried out with known systems. In other words, it is desirable not to permit a “purge out” of any marinates or solutions that have been injected into the food product.
In addition, since the food product is sized for a particular end use, it is important that a resulting yield is maintained for the food product so that subsequent processing is efficient and cost effective, i.e. the product remains in the same physical form (doesn't “rebound”) through the processing line without loss of any of the product, compromise of product dimensions, or loss of any solutions or ingredients incorporated therein. Known systems do not provide for these processing requirements.
Further, known processes heat or cook the food product before same is frozen.
For a more complete understanding of the embodiments of the present invention, reference may be had to the following drawings, taken in conjunction with the description of the invention, of which:
Referring to
The food product 12 or product is cut and measured having particular dimensions for being introduced into the method 10 for batch or continuous processing. The method may also be used with products 12 that are of the IQF-type, i.e. individually quick frozen type.
The method 10 includes an injection station 16, wherein the product 12 is infused such as by injection with marinades, perhaps antibiotics, and/or other fluids, ingredients or compositions to maintain or improve the organoleptic qualities of food products, i.e. the taste, color, odor freshness and mouth feel of the food product 12. The injection station 16 is discussed in more detail with respect to
The product 12 then proceeds to a tumbling step 18, wherein the product may be vacuum tumbled and chilled in a rotating tumbler system. In addition to the injection station 16 or alternatively, the tumbling station can be used in those instances where the marinade or ingredients to be infused into the product 12 have a large amount of particulate matter in solution or are highly viscous. Therefore, with the vacuum tumbling station, it takes much longer for the marinade or the ingredient to be absorbed into the product 12. Therefore, injection and tumbling may each be performed to the exclusion of the other, or both may be performed in sequence on the product 12. Injection can be performed on the product 12 before tumbling or vice versa, but regardless of which are used or the order of use, each occurs prior to stabilizing and pressing the product. The tumbling station is further discussed with respect to
The product 12 is then transferred to a stabilizing step 20 of the invention. The stabilizing step 20 processes the product 12 so that it will not “rebound”, i.e. will not return to its original, undesirable shape and/or thickness. In the stabilizing step 20, the product 12 is chilled with cooling or freezing technology, such as for example impingement or immersion freezing technology, after at least one of the injection step 16 and the tumbling step 18. The stabilizing step employing the cryogen chilling technology, such as cryogen impingement chilling, insures that the food product 12 maintains its shape during subsequent processing steps of the method 10 and retains any marinades, ingredients or other fluids earlier injected (or tumbled) into the product 12 prior to the stabilizing step 20. The stabilizing step increases the surface firmness of the product 12 and substantially reduces if not eliminates product rebounding to its original shape during subsequent processing. With the present embodiments, the product 12 is crust frozen at its surface before any heating of the product.
Impingement freezer technology is one manner of stabilizing the product 12 during the stabilizing step 20, although other chilling technologies may be employed on the product 12. The stabilizing step 20 of cooling or freezing provides a crust, such as for example a 1/16″ crust, of the product 12 at its surface or surface area. The crust retains any fluids, such as marinades, which have been injected or tumbled earlier into the product 12 so that said fluids remain in the product during the subsequent pressing step 22. The crust also helps to substantially reduce if not eliminate the product 12 from rebounding to its original shape during subsequent processing. Thus, the stabilizing step 20 permits the product 12 to retain the deformed shape selected for the product after the pressing step.
Accordingly, use of the stabilizing step 20 after the product 12 has been subjected to the injection step 16 and/or the tumbling step 18, but before the product 12 is subject to the pressing step 22, prevents product rebound and loss of that which was previously injected or absorbed into the product 12.
During the pressing step 22, the product 12 is pressed to selected dimensions. It is possible to include a subsequent batter and breading step 24 after the pressing. The previous stabilizing step 20 prevents the product 12 from losing that which was previously injected or absorbed into the product and insures that the product retains its shape after being pressed during the step 22. The batter and breading step 24 provides for example a pre-dust, batter and bread coating process prior to a heating step for the product 12. The pressing step 22 includes a particular type of action upon the product 12. That is, the term “pressing” as used herein refers to exerting pressure on a body (such as the product 12) for the purpose of shaping said body, but excluding cutting the body. The term “press” as used herein with respect to the apparatus embodiments of the present invention refers to a machine or apparatus by which a substance or body, such as the product 12, is shaped upon application of pressure without cutting. The pressing apparatus may also include a mold to render or form the body into a select shape, but is not constructed with a cutting instrument or operated for cutting the product 12.
Thereafter the product may be cooked, in a heating step 26, such as by frying by heat from a heat assembly.
The product 12 may then be subjected to a freezing step 28, after which the product 12 is packaged in a packaging step 30 for subsequent distribution 32.
All the while subsequent to the stabilizing step 20, the product retains its shape since the pressing step 22 and retains any ingredients, compositions, fluids or marinades, etc. injected or absorbed therein.
The use of the method 10, delivers improved product 12 quality and operational savings to plant processors by reducing re-work of the food product 12 (no product rebound or loss of product ingredients), increased yield benefits, along with increased flexibility and throughput.
An impingement freezer or an immersion freezer may be used for the stabilizing step 20. Impingement freezing includes applying cryogenic spray or a fluid stream to a food product to freeze all or a portion of the product 12. Immersion freezing includes immersing the product 12 into a cryogen fluid for freezing all or a portion of the product 12. The cryogenic fluid used for impingement freezing may be either nitrogen or carbon dioxide; while nitrogen is used in immersion freezing. The impingement freezer technology provides for more efficient use of the cryogen, such as for example nitrogen, as a medium to crust a surface of the food product 12. Impingement and immersion freezer technology and systems are available from Linde LLC of New Jersey USA.
The steps of the method 10 discussed herein can occur in any sequence although the stabilizing step (cooling or freezing) 20 must occur before the pressing step 22.
A stablizing apparatus 40 is also provided for processing the product 12 as shown in
Referring also to
Alternatively, as opposed to the injector 44, a tumbler 70, such as a vacuum tumbler, may be used to provide the marinades 54 or other liquid ingredients into the product 12 as shown in
With thicker cuts of the product 12, sometimes the tumbler 70 is used subsequent to the injector 44 to more rapidly achieve flavor equilibrium in thicker cuts of the product 12.
Referring again to
An alternate embodiment of the apparatus 40 calls for the conveyor belt 88 to be of the mesh variety or any other construction having holes therethrough such that the cryogenic substance can be sprayed from underneath the conveyor belt to crust a lower side of the product 12 as shown in
Referring to
An embodiment of the invention also includes a product of the process of the method 10 of the invention.
It will be understood that the embodiments described herein are merely exemplary and that a person skilled in the art may make many variations and modifications without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. All such variations and modifications are intended to be included within the scope of the invention as described and claimed herein. It should be understood that the embodiments described herein are not only in the alternative, but may be combined.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61107835 | Oct 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12332586 | Dec 2008 | US |
Child | 13613499 | US |