The disclosure relates to food grills. More particularly, the disclosure relates to the holding of tools used in association with food service grills.
A variety of food service grills exist. Exemplary grills include one or more grilling surfaces. For collecting fat and food debris from the food (collectively grease) exemplary grills include channels along at least portions of the perimeter of the grilling surfaces. An exemplary channel is along a side of the grilling surface. Exemplary channels may have drains for draining the grease into a removable collection tray.
Many tools are used in association with a grill. Exemplary tools include utensils such as spatulas, tongs, forks, knives, chopping tools, and the like used on food. Additional tools may be used to clean the grill (e.g., scrapers and the like). A variety of tool holders have been proposed for holding the tools above the grill.
One aspect of the disclosure involves a grill having at least one grilling surface. A grease collection channel is along at least one side of the grilling surface and has a sidewall with an upper edge. A tool holder is mounted to the sidewall and has at least one tool-holding compartment having an outboard wall extending above and outboard of the sidewall upper edge. The tool holder has at least one drainage port positioned to drain the at least one tool-holding compartment into the grease collection channel.
In various implementations, at least one tool may be carried by the tool holder with a portion of the tool in the tool-holding compartment. A removable grease collection tray may be positioned below the grease collection channel or the removable grease collection tray may define/provide the grease collection channel. The tool holder may straddle the upper edge of the sidewall. The tool holder may comprise a sheetmetal assembly. The sheetmetal assembly may comprise or consist essentially of a first sheetmetal piece, a second sheetmetal piece secured to the first sheetmetal piece, and a third sheetmetal piece secured to the first sheetmetal piece. The first sheetmetal piece may form an outboard wall of the at least one tool-holding compartment and extend from below inboard of the sidewall upper edge to above an outboard of the sidewall upper edge. The second sheetmetal piece may form an inboard wall of the tool-holding compartment. The at least one drainage port may be formed between the first sheetmetal piece and the second sheetmetal piece. The second sheetmetal piece may comprise a plurality of legs or fingers extending along the surface of the first sheetmetal piece inboard of the sidewall. The third sheetmetal piece may extend downward outboard of the sidewall to define a wall-receiving channel between the first sheetmetal piece and the third sheetmetal piece.
In a method for using the grill, food may be grilled on the at least one grilling surface. A tool may be used in association with the at least one grilling surface. The tool may be placed in the at least one tool-holding compartment so that grease from the tool drains through the at least one drainage port into the grease collection channel.
Another aspect of the disclosure involves a grill tool holder for mounting to a wall structure. The grill tool holder comprises at least one tool-holding compartment, at least one drainage port positioned to drain the at least one tool-holding compartment and a flow guide portion depending below the at least one drain port. In various implementations, the grill tool holder may comprise a channel for receiving an upper portion of the wall structure. The grill tool holder may be a sheetmetal assembly comprising a first sheetmetal piece and a second sheetmetal piece secured to the first sheetmetal piece.
The details of one or more embodiments are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
The exemplary cooking surface 32 is formed as the upper surface of a plate/platen 40. The exemplary grill includes at least one removable grease receptacle (grease can) 42. The grease can is configured to mate with the platen 40 along the adjacent outboard side/edge thereof. This allows grease and/or debris to drain or be swept directly from the cooking surface into the grease can. In the example of
Each exemplary grease can 42 acts as a grease collection channel and has an inboard sidewall 50 surface and an outboard sidewall 52 separated therefrom by a chamber or compartment 54 of the grease can that receives the grease and debris. The chamber or compartment is further defined by first and second end walls 56, 57 and a base 58 of the grease can. The inboard sidewall 50 has an inner surface 60 (
With the grease can 42 installed, the upper edge 64 of its inboard sidewall 50 rests below a portion of the cooking surface 32 and platen 40 adjacent the associated edge 44 or 45. This allows grease, food, and the like to be scraped from the grill into the compartment 54. The exemplary outboard sidewall 52 protrudes above the inboard sidewall and above the cooking surface 32 to serve as a splatter guard for grease that may splatter during the cooking or when being scraped from the grill.
As so far described, the exemplary grill 20 is merely illustrative of one of several grill configurations to which its present teachings may be applied. A tool holder 80 may be removably mounted to the grill. The exemplary tool holder 80 mounts to the outboard sidewall 52 of the grease can 42. The tool holder has at least one tool-holding compartment 82 (
The exemplary tool holder straddles the upper edge 70 of the outboard sidewall of the grease can to mount the tool holder to the grease can 42.
The exemplary tool holder is formed as a sheetmetal assembly. The exemplary sheetmetal assembly consists essentially of three pieces of metal (e.g., including any welds or other attachments between the pieces and also eventually including any ornamental trim, additional accessories (e.g., hooks and the like)). An exemplary first or main sheetmetal piece 100 (
The second piece 120 forms an inboard wall 121 (
At front and rear ends of a main portion of the second piece, ears of the second piece wrap around to join the first piece to define the end walls 122, 123 of the tool-holding compartment and are secured to the first piece (e.g., via seam welds 140 along the respective front and rear edges of the first piece).
The third piece 150 cooperates with the lower portion of the first piece to mount the tool holder to the grease can. In the exemplary embodiment, the lower portion of the first piece is essentially flat and vertical. The exemplary third piece 150 extends from an upper edge 151 to a lower edge 152 and has a generally inboard surface 153 and a generally outboard surface 154. The third piece has a pair of generally opposite ends 155, 156. Along an upper portion 160 (
At a lower end of the upper portion 160, a double bend 162 allows an intermediate portion 164 of the third piece to be spaced slightly apart from the first piece lower portion 110 to define a channel 166 for receiving the upper edge portion of the outboard sidewall of the associated grease can. At a lower end of the intermediate portion 164, a bend 168 may separate the intermediate portion from a lower edge portion 170 which forms a guide allowing ease of installation of the tool holder to the grease can. The material of one or both of the first and third pieces may have sufficient elasticity to be slightly strained in the installed condition so as to grasp the grease can sidewall. The exemplary material for each of the three pieces is stainless steel (e.g., a single grade of stainless steel such as a 300-Series stainless steel (e.g., a sixteen gauge 304-stainless steel)). In an exemplary manufacturing process, the exemplary stainless steel pieces are cut, bent, welded to each other, and then polished (e.g., via a shaking in stone).
In use, the grease can 42 may be installed in position. Thereafter, the tool holder may be installed over the upper edge 70 of the outboard sidewall 52. As noted above, this installation may involve a slight flexing of portions of the tool holder so as to securely grasp the grease tray outboard sidewall 52. Tools may be placed into the tool-holding compartment 82 and repeatedly removed therefrom for use and thereafter returned. When the tools pick up grease, debris, or the like, once placed in the tool-receiving compartment, the grease, debris, or the like, may drain downward through the drainage ports and into the grease can. When the grease can is full or at another cleaning interval, the tool holder may be extracted from the grease can (e.g., via lifting up either with the tools or after the tools have been removed). The grease can may then be removed, emptied, and returned. At that time or separately, the tool holder may be cleaned. For example, the tool holder may be cleaned in a conventional food service sink or dishwasher.
Dimensionally, an exemplary overall length L (
The exemplary first piece upper portion is divided by bends into three subportions 200, 202, and 204 (
The tool holder may be used with other configurations of the grill. For example, some grills may have a permanent grease collection channel. Such a channel may, for example, have an angled bottom leading to a drain port which, in turn, discharges grease into a removable grease collection tray/can. In such a situation, the upper edge of the channel sidewall may represent an upper edge of an associated wall of the grill body. In such a situation, the collection tray/can may thus be moved and cleaned independently of the tool holder.
Although an embodiment is described above in detail, such description is not intended for limiting the scope of the present disclosure. It will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure. For example, when implemented as an accessory for an existing grill, details of the configuration of the existing grill may influence details of any particular implementation. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
Benefit is claimed of U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 61/373,994, filed Aug. 16, 2010, and entitled “Grill Tool Holder”, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety as if set forth at length.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US11/47753 | 8/15/2011 | WO | 00 | 12/13/2012 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61373994 | Aug 2010 | US |