The following description relates generally to a multi-function pan assembly that can be used as an oven broil pan or a cooktop griddle.
Food supporting pans can be used to cook food on grills, barbeques, or stovetops. The pans are typically used to help keep the food from falling through cooking grates and/or to protect the food from burning due to direct contact with a flame or heating element.
The following summary presents a simplified summary in order to provide a basic understanding of some aspects of the devices and systems discussed herein. This summary is not an extensive overview.
In accordance with one aspect, a multi-function griddle pan assembly includes a pan and an insert removably positionable thereon. The pan includes a pan surface and a pan sidewall extending from or adjacent a peripheral edge of the pan surface. The insert includes a planar wall having a top surface, a bottom surface, and a plurality of apertures therein. The insert further includes an insert sidewall extending from or adjacent a peripheral edge of the top surface. In a first configuration the insert sidewall is configured and dimensioned to rest and support the insert on the pan surface inward of or bounded by the pan sidewall such that the planar wall of the insert is spaced above the pan surface a distance corresponding to a height of the insert sidewall. In a second configuration the insert planar wall is configured and dimensioned such that its top surface rests and supports the insert on the pan surface inward of or bounded by the pan sidewall, such that the insert sidewall extends upward from the pan surface.
In accordance with another aspect, a method of cooking utilizing a griddle-pan assembly is disclosed. The assembly includes a pan having a pan surface and a pan sidewall wall extending from the pan surface, and an insert having an apertured planar wall and an insert sidewall extending from a top surface of the planar wall. The method includes the step of configuring the griddle-pan assembly in a broiler configuration by positioning the insert within the pan such that a perimeter edge of the insert sidewall rests on the pan surface, wherein the planar wall of the insert is spaced above the pan surface a distance corresponding to a length of the sidewall. The method further includes the step of configuring the griddle-pan assembly in a charbroiler configuration by inverting the insert such that the top surface of the apertured planar wall thereof rests on the pan surface, wherein the insert sidewalls extend upward away from the pan surface.
Embodiments will now be described in further detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In the following description reference is made to the accompanying drawings in which are shown, by way of illustration, exemplary embodiments.
Turning to
In an embodiment, the pan surface 16 is substantially planar, though it also could have other profiles to suit a variety of desired configurations; e.g. sloping or stepped.
The pan surface 16 can take any shape consistent with a desired use. For example, in the illustrated embodiment the pan surface 16 is rectangular. But it can be square, circular, or any other suitable shape. The shape of the pan surface 16 can be configured based on the size and shape of the stovetop or the size of the oven, for example.
The pan sidewall 18 can extend from the pan surface 16 at any angle consistent with the desired use. In one embodiment, the pan sidewall 18 extends perpendicularly from the pan surface 16. In another embodiment, the pan sidewall 18 extends from the pan surface 16 at an angle other than 90°. In the illustrated embodiment the sidewall 18 slopes outward from a center of the pan 12 as the wall 18 progresses away from the pan surface 16. This can be useful to retain drippings in the pan because drippings (such as condensation) that may fall to or form on the sidewall 18 will flow downward back into the pan toward the pan surface 16. The height of the pan sidewall 18 can be substantially uniform or have portions that vary in height.
The pan 12 can further have one or more handles 24 attached, e.g. to the sidewall 18. In the illustrated embodiment the pan 12 has two handles 24 attached to two opposing portions of the sidewall 18. Any number of pan handles 24 and locations of the pan handles 24 are contemplated.
In one embodiment, the handle 24 is a generally “U-shaped” and its legs are attached to the sidewall 18. The handle 24 can be attached via fasteners (e.g. screws) that pass through a hole 26 in the sidewall 18 and a corresponding hole 28 in a leg of the “U-shaped” handle 24. Alternatively, the pan sidewall 18 includes an outwardly extending protrusion and the “U-shaped” handle 24 includes a corresponding hole in a leg and a locking mechanism is placed on a portion of the protrusion extending from the handle 24 when it is attached. The handle 24 can be attached to the pan 12 by any suitable means.
In an embodiment shown in
Returning to the insert 14, its planar wall 20 has a top surface 32, a bottom surface 34, and a plurality of apertures 36 extending therethrough. Any shape consistent with the desired use for the apertures 36 is contemplated. For example, the apertures 36 can be circular, square, or any other shape. In the illustrated embodiment, the apertures 36 are diamond shaped.
Any number and/or arrangement of apertures 36 is contemplated. For example, in the illustrated embodiment an array of diamond-shaped apertures are formed in the planar wall 20 of the insert 14, e.g. via stamping, leaving behind a lattice structure forming the wall and defining the apertures. The lattice defines the plurality of apertures 36 arranged in parallel rows extending diagonally across the wall 20 of the insert 14. But other arrangements are contemplated. For example, the plurality of apertures 36 can be arranged in the form of concentric circular apertures, which can be formed by cutting, punching, or other appropriate technique. This may be desirable when the pan, and hence the insert 14 and its planar surface 20 are circular. Still further, arrays of other-shaped apertures (e.g. square, circular, other polygonal, or closed shapes), can be provided in definite arrays or arranged at random in the wall 20. Optionally, one or more such apertures 36 can be specially shaped to define a particular image, message or other indicia, which it is desired to convey to a user and, optionally, to transfer to grilled food.
Any shape of the planar wall 20 consistent with a desired use is contemplated. Ideally, the shape of the planar wall 20 of the insert 14 will be similar to the pan surface 16.
Similar as for the pan 12, the insert sidewall 22 can extend from the planar wall 20 of the insert 14 at any angle consistent with the desired use. In an embodiment, the insert side wall extends from the planar wall 20 perpendicularly. In another embodiment, the insert sidewall 22 extends from the planar wall 20 at an angle other than 90°. Optionally, the array of apertures 36 formed in the planar wall 20 of the insert can continue into the sidewall 22; as, for example, when the sidewall and adjacent planar wall 20 are formed together and separated by bending a previously-stamped (to form the apertures 36) sheet of metal. Alternatively, the sidewall 22 can be made separately and attached to the planar wall 20 to form the insert; in which case the sidewall 22 can include apertures similar to the apertures 36 in the wall 20, apertures different from the apertures 36 in the wall 20, and/or can be solid with no apertures.
As noted above and seen in
In another embodiment, the insert 14 includes a wire grid or other mesh that provides passages (e.g. apertures 36) through a planar wall thereof on which food may rest when cooking. Any method of manufacturing and/or suitable material may be used for the pan 12 and the insert 14 or for their components. In an embodiment, the pan sidewall 18 is formed as a separate frame to which the pan surface 16 is attached. In a further embodiment shown in
The insert 14 and the pan 12 can be combined together in a plurality of configurations to support various different modes of cooking. These combinations create a variety cooking surfaces useful in different cooking modes that may be suited to different types of foods.
Turning to
In the first configuration, shown in
In the second configuration, shown in
Where only one insert 14 is received in the pan 12, the insert can be dimensioned to substantially correspond to the dimensions (eg. length×width) of the pan 12 (see
In a further alternative configuration, the insert 14 can be used alone, without the pan, to support food to be grilled over a heating source, e.g. on the top surface 32 of the insert 14. In this configuration the sidewalls 22 of the insert will face downward and rest on the cooktop surface so that the wall 20 straddles the heating source (e.g. burner) so that food can be placed thereon for cooking. This configuration may be desirable from the standpoint of allowing drippings to fall away from grilling food. But it can be undesirable insofar as those drippings then may fall to the cooktop and foul the cooktop surface or the burner(s).
In still a further configuration, the insert 14 can be positioned above a heat source on the cooktop as above, with the pan 12 resting upon the top surface 32. In this configuration the pan 12 acts as a frying pan, so that food may be placed therein for frying over the cooktop. In this ‘fryer’ configuration, the pan 12 may have depth sufficient to hold a quantity of frying fluid, such as oil, if desired, wherein the depth will be fixed based on the height of the sidewall 18 of the pan 12. In an alternative ‘fryer’ configuration, the insert 14 may be inverted so that its top surface 32 rests on the cooktop and its bottom surface 34 faces upward, wherein the pan can rest on the bottom surface 34 of the insert with the insert sidewall 22 facing upward. In this arrangement the pan 12 is essentially nested within the insert 14.
In addition, the insert 14 and the pan 12 can be used separately as independent cooking utensils presenting unique cooking surfaces. For example, the pan 12 can be placed on a cooktop by itself to act as a griddle. In another example, the insert 14 can be placed directly on the cooktop for open air cooking. In one version, the insert 14 is placed with the insert sidewall 22 facing downward to elevate the top surface above a cooktop surface (as in the ‘chargrill’ configuration described above). In another version, the insert 14 is placed with the insert sidewall 22 facing upward such that the top region 32 is in contact with a cooktop surface.
As can be seen, the disclosed assembly includes a pan 12 and an insert 14 that can be used together or independently to provide a variety of different configurations to support a variety of different cooking modes. The assembly can be configured as a broiler, fryer, charbroiler, grill, or griddle, among other possible cooking configurations. And when used on a cooktop the surface that supports food (e.g. either the wall 20 of the insert or the pan surface 16) can be placed in direct contact with the heating source (burner, surface griddle) to receive direct heat, or it may be spaced from the heating source via its own sidewall or by resting on the other of the pan 12/insert 14 to receive indirect or radiant heat, depending on the cook's preference. Thus, a versatile companion cooking utensil capable of a multitude of different configurations can be provided from only two elements: the pan 12 and the insert 14.
The invention has been described according to example embodiments. However, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various alternatives and equivalents may be substituted for elements or steps described herein without deviating from the scope of the invention. Modifications may be made to adapt the invention to a particular situation or to a particular need without departing from the scope of the invention. It is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiments described herein, but that the claims be given their broadest interpretation to cover all embodiments, literal or equivalent, covered thereby.