The present invention relates to the manufacture of food products. In one particular form, the present invention relates to equipment involved in the manufacturing of meat products.
In the manufacture of food products, and in particular in respect of the manufacture of meat products, natural or artificial casings in the form of elongated tubes are normally pumped full of meat from a filling machine specifically designed for this purpose. These machines pump or force meat through a stuffing tube over whose external surface a tubular casing has been shirred onto. The meat is thus extruded under pressure from the stuffing tube into the casing which is first clipped and closed at one end, drawing the casing off the stuffing tube in the process. Depending on the desired length of the meat product, the process is interrupted at various stages so that clips or twists may be applied to form separate and individual meat product portions.
These filing machines can be used either with minced meat products, meat portions or whole meat muscle and the means used to force the meat through the stuffing tube includes a hydraulically or pneumatically forced piston ram or alternatively, in the case of minced or chopped meat, by direct pumping. The tubular casing is typically shirred onto the stuffing tubes as a separate first step. The stuffing tube is then attached to the outlet port of the filling machine using either a screw thread or pin bayonet arrangement. As can be readily appreciated, these filling machines represent a significant capital expense. Often only small batch amounts are contemplated and the additional overhead of configuring and loading a filling machine makes these small batches relatively costly when compared to larger amounts.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a device which allows for the efficient stuffing of casings in small batches or by hand.
In a first aspect the present invention accordingly provides a device for filling tubular casings with edible material, said device including:
As the device is simple to manufacture and is manually operated there is no requirement for sophisticated and, expensive filling machines making it ideal for preparing small batches.
Preferably said tube inlet is adapted to allow substantially full insertion of an arm into said tube. This allows a large amount of pressure to be generated on the contents of the tube. In addition, this will facilitate cleaning of the device which is always important in the preparation of food products.
Preferably said tube includes mounting means to rigidly mount said device when shirring said tubular casing onto said tube. This will facilitate the shirring operation considerably which in turn makes the overall process more convenient and efficient.
In a second aspect the invention accordingly provides a method for manually stuffing edible material into tubular casing, said method including the steps of:
The end section of the casing may be closed by clipping (for example) or may be left open.
An illustrative embodiment of the present invention will be discussed with reference to the accompanying drawings wherein:
Referring now to
Tube inlet 20 includes a section 21 having a length of 200 mm and depth of 30 mm cut away from a top area of the cylinder. As the length of the tube is longer than that of the average arm, cut away section 21 allows the operator of the stuffing tube to gain greater penetration with a hand or any other manually operated plunger device.
Attached to the periphery of section 21 is a lip 60 of 20 mm width, also of stainless steel. Lip 60 is incorporated as a safety measure which ensures that the operator of the manual stuffing tube will not encounter any sharp edges. As a secondary function, lip 60 also facilitates the insertion of material into the tube. As this embodiment is designed to be operated in a vertical position, tube 10 also includes an angle bracket 40 attached to the exterior of the cylinder. Diametrically opposed to bracket 40 a protruding section 50 of the lip 60 also forms a separate support, so that tube 10 may be mounted on a frame with outlet end 30 pointing downwards. Clearly, the invention is not limited to a vertical orientation and therefore other types of support means which allow orientation of the stuffing tube 10 in a horizontal or other inclined position are considered to be within the scope of the invention.
Inlet end 20 also includes a flange 70 of width 15 mm which is formed to join with lip 60. Referring now to
Refuting now to
Referring now to FIGS. 1 to 5, to load casing onto tube 10, first a mandible (not shown) is fitted to tube outlet 30 and an initial portion of casing 131 is threaded through guide members 143, 144 through interference sleeve 160 which has been inserted into shirrer 170 and onto tube 10. Tube 10 is then inserted into shirrer 170, which is possible as fingers 171 are held outwards from tube 10 by interference sleeve 160. Tube 10 is then fixed to platform 110 as described previously. Interference sleeve 160 is then removed from shirrer 170, allowing fingers 171 to move inwards and engage the initial portion of casing 131 onto tube 10.
Platform 110 is moved upwards by pneumatic lifting sections 111, 112, 113 and guided by columns 114, 115, 116 thus also raising tube 10 through shirrer 170. Fingers 171 engage the casing 131 and drive it down to bracket 40 and protruding lip section 60 as tube 10 is raised. This prevents casing 131 from moving further down tube 10 towards inlet end 20. After completion of the upstroke, platform 110 moves downwards and fingers 171 release from tube 10, allowing further casing to be drawn from casing storage and dispensing compartment 130. Shirred casing 180 is thus shirred onto tube 10. This process is repeated until a suitable amount of casing 131 is shirred onto tube 10 at which point tube 10 may be removed from casing loader 100, the mandible removed and casing 131 then tied off at the outlet end before commencing stuffing of the tube.
It will be understood that the term “comprise” and any of its derivatives (eg. comprises, comprising) as used in this specification is to be taken to be inclusive of features to which it refers, and is not meant to exclude the presence of any additional features unless otherwise stated or implied.
Although a preferred embodiment of the method and apparatus of the described in the foregoing detailed description, it will be understood that the invention is not limited to the embodiment disclosed, but is capable of numerous rearrangements, modifications and substitutions without departing from the scope of the invention as set forth and defined by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2003904652 | Aug 2003 | AU | national |