Claims
- 1. An insulated food tray,
- comprising the combination of upper and lower cover members made of thin impervious sheet material,
- said upper cover member being superimposed upon said lower cover member,
- said upper and lower cover members having edge portions joined together,
- said upper and lower cover members having a space therebetween,
- and insulating material disposed in said space,
- said upper cover member being formed with at least one dished portion forming a receptacle for food or the like,
- said upper cover member having a nesting element extending around said dished portion,
- said lower cover member having a complementary nesting element underlying the nesting element of said upper cover member,
- whereby a plurality of said trays may be stacked with said nesting element of one tray in interlocking engagement with said complementary nesting element of the overlying tray so that said interlocked nesting elements form a seal around said dished portion.
- 2. A tray according to claim 1 in which one of said nesting elements comprises a groove while the other nesting element comprises a tongue, the tongue of one tray being adapted to interlock with the groove on the adjacent tray when a plurality of said trays are stacked.
- 3. A tray made of insulating material and having an upper surface relieved to define a plurality of dished receptacles adapted to receive food, said upper surface being also formed to define a first sealing surface facing upwardly and extending around each of said dished receptacles, the lower surface of said tray being formed to define a downwardly facing second sealing surface complementary to said first sealing surface and directly underlying it, whereby said tray is adapted to be stacked with other trays of like construction to define a food serving device in which the first sealing surface of any tray intermediate in the stack is in sealing engagement with the second sealing surface of the tray next above it in the stack, said tray and the one next above it cooperating thereby to define insulating enclosures completely surrounding said respective dished receptacles, operative to insulate the interior thereof from the ambient environment and from one another.
- 4. A tray as defined in claim 3 wherein the wall separating the bottom surfaces of said dished receptacles and the corresponding portions of the lower side of the tray are thinner and less insulatingly effective than the lateral walls separating the respective dished receptacles from one another, whereby a stack of such trays, when identically stocked with food portions, defines a food serving device in which the dished receptacles of the various trays form vertical columns characterized by like-temperature contents and insulated from one another by said lateral walls.
- 5. A tray according to claim 3 wherein at least one of the dished receptacles is provided with a thin impervious liner removably disposed therewithin.
- 6. A tray according to claim 5 in which said liner is provided with an upper edge portion having a bead-shaped upper flange adapted to sealingly engage the second sealing surface of a like tray stacked above it. .[.7. A food tray formed at least in part of insulating material and having upper and lower surfaces, said upper surface being formed to define at least one dished receptacle provided with an upper sealing element disposed entirely therearound, said receptacle being adapted to receive food, said lower surface being formed to define a complementary sealing element directly underlying and dimensioned to register with said upper sealing element, said structural features enabling a plurality of said trays to be stacked vertically with the upper sealing element of each intermediate tray in said stack cooperating with the complementary sealing element of the tray next above it to form an insulating enclosure having relatively thin bottom and top walls and relatively thick side walls wholly surrounding said dished receptacle of said first-mentioned tray..].
- . An insulated food service system comprising a multiplicity of stacked insulated trays, each tray having upper and lower surfaces, each upper surface of each tray being formed to define a plurality of dished receptacles for the reception of food portions, said lower surface of each tray being formed to define a plurality of inverted dished portions under and substantially coextensive with a corresponding dished receptacle formed in said upper surface to form a plurality of groups of vertically aligned compartments having thin, essentially non-insulating upper and lower walls and thicker insulating side walls, so that first food portions of a like temperature may be placed in one group of vertically aligned compartments and second food portions of a like different temperature may be placed in another group of said vertically aligned compartments, whereby a food portion in any intermediate one of said vertically aligned compartments has substantial insulation between it and food portions in adjacent compartments but substantially none between it and food portions
- in compartments above and below it. 9. A food service system as in claim 8 wherein the upper surfaces of each tray are provided with sealing elements
- engageable with the lower surface of the tray above it. 10. A food service system as in claim 8 wherein each of said dished receptacles has a depth sufficient to accommodate substantially the entire height of a food holding container placed therein. .Iadd. 11. An insulated food service system comprising a multiplicity of stacked insulated trays, each upper surface of each tray being formed to define a plurality of dished receptacles for the reception of food portions, said lower surface of each tray being formed to define a plurality of inverted dished portions under and substantially coextensive with a corresponding dished portion formed in said upper surface to form groups of vertically aligned compartments, one group of said compartments having thin, essentially non-insulating upper and lower walls and thicker insulating side walls so that first food portions of a like temperature may be placed in said one group of vertically aligned compartments and second food portions of a like different temperature may be placed in another group of said vertically aligned compartments whereby a food portion in any intermediate one of said group of vertically aligned compartment has substantial insulation between it and food portions in adjacent compartments but substantially none between it and food portions in compartments above and below it. .Iaddend.
Parent Case Info
This application is a continuation of my copending application Ser. No. 690,654, filed Dec. 14, 1967, now abandoned, which was a continuation-in-part of my copending application Ser. No. 672,219, filed Mar. 30, 1967, now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (11)
Foreign Referenced Citations (8)
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1253289 |
Jan 1961 |
FRX |
1408476 |
Jul 1965 |
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Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
690654 |
Dec 1967 |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
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Parent |
672219 |
Mar 1967 |
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Reissues (1)
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Number |
Date |
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Parent |
837979 |
Apr 1969 |
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