Ovens suitable for restaurant and other high-use services typically use oxygen burning heating elements, such as gas or wood burning heating elements. The heating elements are sometimes disposed within the same chamber as the food item to be heated and other times are not readily accessible. To prevent scorching and to evenly distribute heat, the food item is sometimes set on a rotating platform. These oxygen burning heating elements take significant time to provide sufficient heat within the chamber and typically do not maintain a particular temperature when the chamber door is opened to insert or remove the food item. Moreover, the requisite heating time may need to be adjusted to account for different altitudes.
Examples of ovens suitable for restaurant and other high-use services are found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,860,225, 3,155,814, 3,313,917, 3,552,299, 3,626,155, 4,238,669, 4,305,329, 4,934,260, 4,951,648, 5,036,179, 5,039,535, 5,378,872, 5,454,295, 5,492,055, 5,560,285, 5,605,092, 5,653,905, 5,872,351, and 6,146,677, 6,250,210, 6,307,185, and 6,670,586 the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
The present disclosure describes a deck oven having an infrared heating element positioned below a floor or deck in a cooking chamber. The disclosure also describes a kit for retrofitting a traditional deck oven, replacing a gas-fired burner heating element with an infrared heating element. The disclosure also describes a method of cooking a food item in a deck oven equipped with an infrared heating element.
As shown in
As shown in
Exterior controls 24 for operating deck oven 10 are provided adjacent the doors. Typical controls may include a thermostat for setting a desired cooking chamber temperature, an on/off switch for selectively supplying gas to a heating element, and a pilot light control knob among other control options.
Cooking chamber 14 is an enclosed and insulated chamber configured to store heat therein for cooking food items. Cooking chamber 14 includes a bottom cooking surface 26, sidewalls 28, and an upper surface (not pictured). Vent holes 30 may be provided for bringing cooking chamber 14 into fluid communication with heating chamber 16, such as through flues 29 extending to heating chamber 16.
Cooking surface 26 supports a food item as it cooks in cooking chamber 14. Cooking surface 26 may be formed from brick, stone, ceramic, or other opaque material that is capable of withstanding a high temperature environment without burning. An example of such a ceramic material is cordierite (magnesium aluminum silicate). Cooking surface 26 may be removable, such as for ease of cleaning, or it may be integrally formed within cooking chamber 14. For example, cooking surface 26 may be divided into a number of individually removable tiles such as shown in
As shown in
Infrared heating element 26 supplies heating energy by emitting infrared radiation 32 onto an underside of cooking surface 26. In the example shown in
Infrared heating element 12 may be selected such that it provides sufficient heating without the need for supplemental heating devices. For instance, in the example provided in
While it is within the scope of this disclosure that infrared heating elements may be mounted inside a cooking chamber to emit infrared radiation directly at food items, a preferred embodiment attains satisfactory heating and cooking solely with infrared heating from below cooking surface 26. Similarly, while an infrared heating element could be used merely to provide supplemental heat to a cooking surface in conjunction with another primary heating source, such as wood burning fire or gas-fired burners, the preferred embodiment utilizes infrared radiation directed to an underside of a cooking surface as the sole source of oven heating.
Infrared heating element 12 may be a gas-fired infrared heating element. However, other infrared heating elements, such as, for example, electrical resistance infrared heating elements may be used additionally or alternatively to gas-fired infrared heating elements. A gas-fired infrared heating element 12 typically combusts a gas at or near an emitter, a material that emits infrared radiation when heated. For example, ceramic materials typically emit significant amounts of infrared radiation when heated between approximately 1700 and 1850 degrees Fahrenheit. Additionally or alternatively to ceramic emitters, wire mesh emitters may be used. Suitable gas-fired infrared heating elements include the JFS 322-1000 and JFS 522-1000 burners manufactured by JF Swinehart Co., Inc. of Fostoria, Ohio.
Heating chamber 16 typically includes a supply of combustible gas from an external source, which combusts in infrared heating element 12 to produce infrared radiation 32. In the example shown in
Gas-fired infrared heating element 12 typically includes an ignition device 38 to ignite the combustible gas supplied thereto. Ignition device 38 may include a pilot light having it's own supply of combustible gas in combination with a thermocouple for regulating the supply of gas. In some examples, additional, alternative, or no gas regulation devices like a thermocouple may be employed in conjunction with a pilot light. Further, ignition device 38 may utilize an alternative to a pilot light, such as an electric arc ignition device. When multiple gas-fired infrared heating elements 12 are employed in a spaced apart fashion, a line lighter may be included to ignite gas-fired infrared heating elements not having their own ignition device 38.
As shown in
For example, a first array 40 employs 7 burners in a footprint of approximately 45 inches by 25 inches, with approximately 7.25 inches between each of the 5 spaced apart heating elements. First array 40 may include a single ignition device, and it is capable of producing approximately 70,000 BTU/hr.
Second array 42 employs 7 heating elements 26 in a footprint of approximately 47 inches by 22 inches with approximately 6.5 inches between the three rows of heating elements. One ignition device may be used to ignite all heating elements 12. Second array 42 is capable of producing approximately 70,000 BTU/hr.
Third array 44 utilizes 8 heating elements arranged in two sub-arrays, a first sub-array 46 and a second sub-array 48, as shown in
Infrared heating element 12 may mount to a mounting frame 50 secured to a bottom surface 52 of heating chamber 16. Mounting frame 50 may be a bended metal frame as shown in
Kit 11 for retrofitting a traditional deck oven having a traditional gas-fired burner 13 (
A plurality of mounting brackets 54 are included to secure infrared heating elements 12 to the included mounting frame 50. Mounting frame 50 may be selected to position infrared heating elements 12 between 4 and 6 inches from cooking surface 26 of deck oven 10. Further, kit 11 includes a plurality of anchor brackets 56 for securing mounting frame 50 to a surface of heating chamber 16, such as, for example, bottom surface 52.
Kit 11 includes piping 34 and manifolds 36 for bringing the plurality of gas-fired infrared heating elements 12 into fluid communication with an existing supply of combustible gas. Ignition device 38, such as a pilot light or an electrical arc igniter, may be included in kit 11. In some examples, kit 11 includes ignition device 38 having a thermocouple or other gas regulation device. Suitable packaging for housing each component of kit 11 safely and economically may also be selected.
A method for cooking a food item in a deck oven with an infrared heating element is schematically depicted in
Moreover, the method for cooking a food item may include controlling 64 the infrared heating element to maintain an oven temperature conducive to cooking a food item, for example maintaining the temperature near an optimum selected level for cooking a pizza. In some examples, the temperature in one of the chambers is detected and in other examples the temperature of both of the chambers is detected. Temperature detection may include measuring the temperature of the air inside the chamber or measuring the surface temperature of the deck.
While embodiments of infrared deck ovens and infrared heater retrofit kits, and methods of heating a cooking chamber have been particularly shown and described, many variations may be made therein. This disclosure may include one or more independent or interdependent inventions directed to various combinations of features, functions, elements and/or properties, one or more of which may be defined in the following claims. Other combinations and sub-combinations of features, functions, elements and/or properties may be claimed later in this or a related application. Such variations, whether they are directed to different combinations or directed to the same combinations, whether different, broader, narrower or equal in scope, are also regarded as included within the subject matter of the present disclosure. The foregoing embodiments are illustrative, and no single feature or element, or combination thereof, is essential to all possible combinations that may be claimed in this or a later application. Each claim defines an invention disclosed in the foregoing disclosure, but any one claim does not necessarily encompass all features or combinations that may be claimed.
Where the disclosure recites “a” or “a first” element or the equivalent thereof, such recitations include one or more such elements, neither requiring nor excluding two or more such elements. Further, ordinal indicators, such as first, second or third, for identified elements are used to distinguish between the elements, and do not indicate a required or limited number of such elements, and do not indicate a particular position or order of such elements unless otherwise specifically stated.
Inventions embodied in various combinations and subcombinations of features, functions, elements, and/or properties may be claimed through presentation of claims in a related application. Such claims, whether they are directed to different inventions or directed to the same invention, whether different, broader, narrower or equal in scope to the other claims, are also regarded as included within the subject matter of the present disclosure.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) to U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/718,209 filed on Sep. 16, 2005, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60718209 | Sep 2005 | US |