The present invention relates to a forming machine for making pasta filata cheese sticks.
In the industrial production of cheese, it is known to form pasta filata into sticks by extrusion.
In a conventional extruder, the pasta filata is pushed by two oppositely rotating screw feeders toward a perforated extrusion wall, from which the pasta filata exits in the form of bars the diameter of which substantially corresponds to the diameter of the holes on the extrusion wall. The resulting bars of pasta filata are cooled in a consolidation vat filled with cold water and are cut at regular intervals to form sticks of equal length.
This conventional extrusion system has the drawback that the produced bars can have an irregular profile and an inconstant diameter, especially in the case of bars having a relatively small diameter, for example 10-15 mm.
This drawback is due to the fact that pasta filata is an elastic material which is compressed during extrusion and which, when it exits from the extruder in the form of bars, still has internal tensions which cause it to expand radially in an uncontrolled manner.
This entails further negative consequences when the bars are divided into sticks, since the above-mentioned profile and diameter irregularities lead to appreciable differences in weight between one stick and another.
EP 2845468 B1 in the name of the same Applicant describes a forming machine for pasta filata which has the purpose of overcoming the above cited drawbacks of traditional extruders.
The machine is provided with a body that has a concave surface shaped like a cylindrical sector which abuts against the convex cylindrical surface of a rotating drum. The cylindrical surfaces of the body and of the drum have respective rows of mutually opposite circumferential grooves.
The pasta filata is extruded through the body, which for this purpose is provided with holes which lead into the circumferential grooves. Then the pasta filata is conveyed by the drum for part of its rotation so as to receive a molding action caused by the mutually opposite profiles of the grooves on the body and on the drum. Finally, as in the preceding case, the bars of pasta filata that exit from the drum are cooled in a consolidation vat and are cut at regular intervals by a cutter.
In this machine, therefore, the pasta filata bars remain trapped between the body and the drum until the material has substantially stopped expanding and the profile of the bars has consolidated.
Another advantage of the system described in EP 2845468 B1 is that the pasta filata sticks always have the fibers arranged longitudinally, differently from other drum systems, in which however the grooves on the drum are longitudinal instead of circumferential. As is well known to the person skilled in the art, the longitudinal arrangement of the fibers renders the sticks resistant to fracture when subjected to traction or flexing, as occurs for example when they fall into the consolidation vat.
However, although the machine described in EP 2845468 B1 allows to reduce drastically the shape irregularities of the sticks, in the path from the drum to the cutter the pasta filata can still undergo a slight expansion.
Furthermore, during this path the bars immersed in the cold water can bend or curve, compromising the shape and weight uniformity of the sticks at cutting time.
Therefore, the aim of the present invention is to provide a forming machine for making pasta filata cheese sticks that is capable of making sticks that are even more uniform in terms of shape, dimension and weight than known systems, at the same time maintaining a predominantly longitudinal arrangement of the fibers.
Within this aim, an object of the invention is to provide a forming machine which, with respect to known systems, is relatively simple to manufacture and has a high productivity.
This aim and this and other objects which will become better apparent hereinafter are achieved by the forming machine having the characteristics presented in claim 1, while the dependent claims define other advantageous characteristics of the invention.
The invention is now described in greater detail with reference to some of its preferred but not exclusive embodiments, illustrated by way of nonlimiting example in the accompanying drawings, wherein:
With initial reference to
The duct 14 is advantageously delimited by a double wall with an interspace 15 in which it is possible to feed hot water to heat the material in the duct itself.
In a per se known manner, the duct 14 accommodates a pair of oppositely rotating motorized screw feeders 20, which are supported mutually side by side (only one screw feeder is visible in
With particular reference now to
The drum 34 is provided with a series of mutually parallel grooves 36, which will be described in greater detail hereinafter.
A body 26 is interposed between the exit opening 22 and the drum 34 and has a first surface 30 (
A slit 28 is extended between the first surface 30 and the second surface 32 and the pasta filata fed by the screw feeders 20 is extruded through it.
According to the invention, the grooves 36 have a profile which is elongated in the longitudinal direction of the drum and the slit 28 is extended obliquely with respect to them.
In the embodiment described herein, the grooves 36 are parallel to the axis of the drum 34 while the slit 28 is arranged frontally with respect to the drum 34 and is inclined with respect to the axis (i.e., in this case with respect to the horizontal plane) by an angle comprised preferably between 10° and 60°, in the example described herein approximately 25°.
Furthermore, in this embodiment, the grooves 36 are rectilinear and have two longitudinal, parallel and mutually opposite planar surfaces 36a, 36b and a bottom 36c which has a profile having a semicircular cross-section. Other rounded or polygonal profiles can in any case be provided for the grooves 36.
The grooves 36 are provided with respective venting channels 36d (
Furthermore, the drum 34 is provided with rectilinear slots 36e (
The slit 28 also has a rectilinear profile—considering its projection in plan view (in this case, on a vertical plane)—and faces the grooves 36 from one of their ends (the left end in
As shown in
In the example described herein, the drum 34 is hollow and is closed at its opposite ends by two disk-like plates 48, 50.
The body 26 is pushed into abutment against the drum 34, which therefore rotates slidingly with the body 26, by a clamping mechanism 52.
In a per se conventional manner, downstream of the drum 34 it is possible to support a consolidation vat filled with cold water (not shown).
The drum 34 is preferably made of aluminum for food use, while the body 26 is preferably made of plastic material. Advantageously, the drum 34 is subjected to sanding at the grooves 36, in order to facilitate the adhesion of the pasta filata to its surface during rotation.
The operation of the machine 10 can be controlled advantageously by a control unit (not shown) in a per se conventional manner.
In operation, the pasta filata is introduced in the chamber 14 through the hopper 18. By actuating the screw feeders 20, the pasta filata is pushed against the first surface 30 of the body 26, with consequent extrusion through the slit 28, and enters the grooves 36 of the drum 34, which rotates in the direction indicated by the arrow R in
The oblique arrangement of the slit 28 with respect to the grooves 36 causes the extruded pasta filata to progressively enter the grooves 36 in a longitudinal direction from one end (in this case, the end aligned with the lower end 28a of the slit 28) to the opposite end, so as to obtain the desired longitudinal arrangement of the fibers inside the stick (
As shown schematically in the vector chart of
The pasta filata under pressure completely fills also the “blind” terminal portion of the grooves 36, which never faces the slit 28. During filling, the air contained in the grooves 36 is expelled through the venting channels 36d and the circumferential trough 37.
The inclination of the slit 28 can be optimized experimentally by the person skilled in the art as a function of the consistency of the pasta filata being processed and of the cross-section/length ratio of the grooves.
While the drum 34 draws the pasta filata for part of its rotation, it undergoes a molding action determined by the profile of the grooves 36 and of the concave surface 32 of the body 26.
The concave surface 32 of the body 26 has an angular extension that is sufficient to contain the pasta filata until it has substantially stopped expanding and the profile of the sticks inside the grooves 36 has therefore consolidated. The sizing of the body 26 can be determined experimentally as a function of the specific physical properties of the pasta filata being processed.
At a certain point of the rotation, the sticks will be unloaded by gravity, with the optional aid of steam or water under pressure fed through the rectilinear slots 36e in order to force expulsion.
By virtue of the longitudinal arrangement of the fibers, the sticks remain intact, falling into the vat.
The alternative embodiments of
Some preferred embodiments of the invention have been described, but the person skilled in the art may of course provide different modifications and variations within the scope of the appended claims.
For example, the drum 34 might rotate in the opposite direction with respect to what has been shown, so as to unload the sticks downward.
In this case, the oblique slit would have to be inclined in the opposite direction with respect to what is shown in
As an alternative, the slit might remain inclined as shown in
Furthermore, differently from the illustrated solutions, the slit on the body might be horizontal and the grooves on the drum might be oblique (i.e., helical, if one considers the projection of an oblique straight line on a cylinder). Also, as an alternative, both the grooves and the slit might be oblique. Essentially, what matters for the purposes of the invention is that the grooves and the slit are arranged obliquely with respect to each other.
The disclosures in Italian Patent Application no. 102016000128399 (UA2016A009222), from which this application claims priority, are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
102016000128399 | Dec 2016 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2017/058051 | 12/18/2017 | WO | 00 |