The invention relates to a package for ready-prepared foods, consisting of a dish containing the packed food in which the food has been cooked, and a lid heat-sealed to the rim flange of the dish, the rim flange being provided with two or more concentric ridges circulating the dish so that when closing the dish, a gastight seaming line is formed between the lid and the flange ridge.
Food industry produces dish-shaped consumer packages for ready-prepared foods, such as pasta and casserole dishes, the dish section of which operates as the baking dish at the preparation stage of the food. Food is put into the dish uncooked, it is cooked in it in baking temperature and finally, the dish containing the prepared cooked food is sealed with a lid. The baking dish can be made of aluminium, heat-resistant plastic or cardboard, the polymer coating of which has a sufficiently high melting temperature to withstand the food's baking temperature without melting. Packages for ready-prepared foods are marketed as frozen or most preferably deep-frozen products, which the consumer can melt and heat in an oven or microwave oven without removing the food from the dish.
A problem with baking ready-prepared foods in a dish is that greasy vapour is separated from the food when baking, the grease deposits as a thin film onto the rim flange of the dish. Likewise, hot grease and also other food ingredients may end up onto the rim flange as spatters. The rim flange working as a counter surface for the heat-sealable lid sealing the package, grease and other extra ingredients that end up on the surface of the flange upon baking cause sealing problems, because of which the lid may be left leaking and the packed food can thus perish prematurely.
The problem relating to the packing of ready-prepared foods containing fat mentioned in the patent publication EP 1 725 473 B1 has been solved so that the edges of the lid closing the dish are bent under the rim flange of the dish and heat-sealed to the lower surface of the flange. The solution is based on that, upon baking, the lower surface of the flange is substantially less exposed to grease spatters than the upper surface of the flange. There is nevertheless the drawback that the lid sealed to the lower surface of the flange is more difficult to open than if the lid were straight and sealed only to the upper surface of the flange.
Especially advantageous packages for opening are those provided with a lid that can be pulled off, in which the detachability of the heat-sealed lid has been achieved by suitable seaming polymers. Such specific polymer and their combinations are known for those skilled in the art. For example, the patent publication U.S. Pat. No. 4,605,142 discloses a plastic packing dish the rim flange of which is provided with a ridge that encircles the mouth of the dish and elevates from the surface of the flange, the lid of the dish being heat-sealed to this ridge, which is equipped with sharp tips that especially tend to facilitate the opening of the lid.
The patent publication JP 2004106865 discloses a dish sealable with a lid and intended as a food package, the rim flange of which comprises two concentric ridges circulating the dish. In addition, these concentric ridges have been connected by a transverse ridge in the dish corners, the purpose of the transverse ridge being to guide and facilitate the pulling off of the lid by pulling the flap in the said corner. Each corner of the dish is provided with a transverse ridge so that the mutual positioning of the dish and lid is not critical; the lid can be pulled off easily irrespective of in which corner the pull-off flat is located.
The patent publications U.S. Pat. No. 4,605,142 and JP2004106865, from which the ridges located in the rim flange and circulating the dish are as such known, do not especially concern the baking dish of the present invention. In accordance with the invention it has been noted, however, that the ridges elevating from the surface of the flange and circulating the ridge are especially suitable for baking dishes that contain vaporizable grease or food containing spattering ingredients upon cooking and that are closable by heat-sealing, because at the sealing stage, the lid to be pressed against the flange tends to push grease and other foreign matter aside from the top of the ridges and to reveal a clean counter surface, to which the lid can tightly be sealed. In other words, the ridges are self-cleaning at the sealing stage. This effect can still be intensified, if the cross-section profile of the ridges is tapering or sharp-pointed. For example, a grease film settled onto the flange surfaces breaks upon sealing at the tip of the ridge, making possible the generation of an intact sealing line along the ridge.
Although the ridges improve the sealability of the dish lid and the pulling off of the sealed lid, and reduce the risk of leakages in baking packages, there is however a certain risk of leakages, due to the previously mentioned grease and other impurities, but also to possible small manufacturing flaws and other irregularities in the narrow ridges. The risk of leakages becomes naturally smaller, if the flange has several concentric ridges circulating the dish instead of one; the package is a leaking package only if all concentric ridges are leaking.
Nevertheless, multiplying the number of concentric ridges is as such an ineffective solution for diminishing leakages and it further requires a wide area of the rim flange. The problem solving according to this invention comprises a significant reduction in the probability of leakages without it being necessary to increase the area required by the ridges or the area of the rim flange for arranging the ridges onto it. It is characteristic of the invention that the space between two concentric ridges of the rim flange has been divided into at least five compartments by trans-verse ridges to minimise the possibility of sealing leakages.
The essential idea of the invention is that as a sealing formed by merely two concentric ridges is leaking every time both ridges leak from any place, in the invention leakage requires that both leakage points fall on the area of the same compartment separated by transverse ridges. If an inner and outer ridge leak into different compartments, the sealing line formed by ridges is still tight, let it be that it transfers through the transverse ridges from the inner ridge to the outer and vice versa for bypassing the compartments.
According to an advantageous embodiment of the invention the rim flange has three concentric ridges circulating the dish and, respectively, two spaces between the ridges, both having been divided into compartments by transverse ridges. Such a package leaks only in cases in which all three concentric ridges leak into compartments, which are located adjacent to each other in the transverse direction. The transverse ridges in the said spaces between the concentric ridges can be located side by side, or they can be located in a stepped manner in relation to each other in the said spaces. The transverse ridges that divide the space between two concentric ridges into compartments can be located at regular intervals on the circumference of the dish. Even though the minimum number of transverse ridges is five according to the invention, it is obvious that the risk of leakages is the smaller the more densely the space between concentric ridges has been divided into compartments, i.e. the bigger the number of transverse ridges is. The only restriction is that the compartments must not become so small that they could not receive the grease pushing into their direction from the ridge in the sealing. Thus the number of transverse ridges is preferably at least 10 and in a typical portion package for ready-prepared food preferably between 20 and 200.
Portion packages for ready-prepared foods are most typically rectangular when seen from above, the dish section often expanding slightly upwards. In a lid to be heat-sealed into such a dish the pull-off flap is located in one of the package's four corners. At least part of the transverse ridges is then located on the straight sides of the package, separated from the package's corners and the lid's pull-off flap. These transverse ridges only serve to provide tightness to the package of the invention, and they are not significant for the pulling off of the lid according to the publication JP2004106865.
Alternatively the package for ready-prepared foods can be shaped also circular or elliptical when seen from the top so that the transverse ridges have been divided along the circumference of the dish or onto the elliptically curving sides, preferably approximately at regular intervals. According to the invention at least the main part of the transverse ridges are then located elsewhere than in the points into which the pull-off flap of the lid is intended to be positioned.
Materials used for the packages for ready-prepared foods can vary according to the invention, but a package can be mentioned as an advantageous embodiment, in which the dish section is made of polymer-coated cardboard with the exception of the rim flange, which is made entirely of injection-moulded plastic, and the inner surface of the lid is made of polymer-coated paper or cardboard. The heat seal closing the package is formed by the polymer materials of the flange and lid, the materials being chosen so that the lid will come off by peeling off from its joint sealing by pulling the flap.
The invention will next be explained in more detail by means of examples, referring to the attached drawings, in which
In
The dishes according to
The structure of the rim flange 2 of the dish 1 and the shape of the sealing ridges 3 can be seen more closely in the cross-section of the side wall of the dish 1 in
The cross-section profile of the longitudinal sealing ridges 3 can vary in scope of the invention, but most preferably the profile tapers upwards towards the top of the ridge. In a triangular profile the angle of point is most suitably 45-120°. Alternatively the profile shape can be e.g. a trapezoid. The cross-section profile of the transverse ridges 4 is preferably identical with that of the longitudinal ridges 3.
A suitable material for the injection-moulded rim flange 2 is especially polyethylene terephtalate (PET) or some other polymer with high melting temperature and withstanding the baking temperatures. Also the polymer coating 9 of the base cardboard 10 of the dish 1 can be made of PET. Alternatively the polymer 9 can be silicon containing, partly inorganic and partly organic hybrid polymer as disclosed in the patent publication U.S. Pat. No. 6,307,192 B1. The lid 7 can be made of paper or thin flexible cardboard 11, and its internal polymer coating 12 can consist of e.g. a composite of ethylene methylene acrylate copolymer (EMA), ethylene vinyl acetate copolymer (EVA) and wax, as disclosed in the publication EP 1 448 381 B1. The sealing polymer in question provides together with the ridges 3, 4 of PET a gastight closure, which is easily removable when pulling off the lid.
The packages for ready-prepared foods according to the invention and illustrated in the drawings are baking packages, in which food has been placed into the dish 1, baked in it, and after that the dish has been closed by heat sealing the lid 7. In heat sealing the internal polymer coating 12 of the lid forms a vapour and oxygen impermeable closure together with the ridges 3, 4. Grease vapour is released from the food during cooking, and this will deposit as a film onto the surface of the rim flange 2. In addition grease and other food ingredients can spatter to the rim flange 2 during baking. The grease layer on the rim flange 2 impedes the heat sealing so that the closure of the lid may be left leaking. However, in the invention this has been prevented so that upon sealing the lid 7 pushes the grease aside at the place of the ridges 3, 4, especially the pointed tops of the ridges so that tight sealing lines are formed between the ridges 3, 4 and the polymer coating 12 inside the lid. The space divided into compartments 5 between the ridges operates then as a collector of grease and other matters transferring aside from the ridges. In addition, it has been achieved with the transverse ridge 4 that even though the sealing lines at some points of the longitudinal ridges 3 were left leaking, a tight sealing line twisting from one longitudinal ridge 3 to the other through the transverse ridges 4 can in high probability still be maintained in the package. Thus the risk of sealing leakages has been substantially diminished with the invention.
Reference is still made to
It is obvious for one skilled in the art that the embodiments of the invention are not restricted to the examples disclosed above, but they can vary within the scope of the following patent claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20080462 | Aug 2008 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FI2009/050655 | 8/12/2009 | WO | 00 | 11/15/2010 |