The present invention relates to a process for producing a food product having a multicolored continuous pattern from fluid food materials of identical properties.
The patent documents listed below disclose processes and apparatuses for producing a food product having different colors in three or more divided regions thereof from two or more viscous fluid food materials of different colors through molding. According to the invention disclosed in Patent Document 1 below, as illustrated in
The above-described invention has a drawback in that, even when fluid food materials of considerably high viscosity are used, neighboring food materials may be mixed (as a result of eddy formation at corners or like positions) in the passages or at corners and discharge ports of the passages. Also, since only one outlet port is provided, the end products are limited to those in which layers are formed starting at that outlet port.
Meanwhile, with an apparatus equipped with a single nozzle having a mechanism designed for discharging highly fluid food materials, such as chocolate, of two colors separately on a color basis, the discharged fluid chocolate normally presents a continuous irregular pattern as shown in the Patent Document 2 listed below.
The present invention provides a process for producing a wide variety of food products having a various decorative color pattern. According to the present invention, even when the fluid food materials have relatively low viscosity, the fluid food materials are not mixed in a single passage, since they are forwarded to a nozzle outlet for discharge into a mold through mutually independent passages, each being assigned for a food material of one specific color. Moreover, according to the present invention, a color pattern is formed by selecting points of injection from each nozzle facing the mold, and also by making use of the phenomenon that the injected food materials spread out while forming concentric ripples.
In other words, the present invention has been made on the basis of a technical principle that is quite different from that in the above-described prior art techniques. Specifically, the present inventor has found that, when fluid food materials of two or more colors are simultaneously injected into a single mold, the materials which differ in color spread away from the points of injection while forming concentric ripples, and that the spreading movement of fluid food materials that are injected at neighboring points results in their colliding at a minimum distance point between the two points of injection and “competing” to form a straight boundary between them, thus completing the invention.
Accordingly, an object of the present invention is to provide a process for producing a food product with a multicolored decorative pattern from fluid food materials having a predetermined viscosity, comprising:
simultaneously injecting, directly into a mold having no dividing walls, fluid food materials of two or more colors having identical viscosity at a same injection rate, through nozzles having outlets of an identical diameter and provided for the respective colors, towards two or more points of injection predetermined in the mold so as to form the decorative color pattern of the end product;
allowing the injected fluid food materials to gradually spread out while forming concentric ripples until neighboring fluid food materials collide at a minimum distance point therebetween, said minimum distance being identical between any neighboring fluid food materials, and, due to their fluidity, mutually and evenly compete to form a straight boundary therebetween which extends in opposite directions starting from the point of collision, to thereby fill the mold while developing an integrated pattern; and
solidifying the resultant molded product naturally or through temperature control.
The above-described “competing principle” is not the only key factor for reproducing the present invention; i.e., production of food products having a desired multicolored pattern, and in order to create a particular multicolored pattern repeatedly, certain requirements must be met. That is, the nozzle outlets must have the same diameter, and moreover, the fluid food materials must have the same viscosity and must be simultaneously injected at the same injection rate, regardless of the difference in color, towards certain predetermined positions in the mold until the mold is filled. When fluid food materials are injected into a mold in such a manner that these requirements are met, initially at the points of injection where the fluid food materials hit the mold, the materials continuously accumulate to form Mt. Fuji-like cones, and subsequently in the mold, they spread away from respective points of injection, forming concentric ripples until neighboring fluid food materials collide at a minimum distance point therebetween, and, because the materials are mutually identical, having the same viscosity and the same mass, when injection is performed continuously, the neighboring fluid food materials mutually and evenly meet (“compete”) to form a straight boundary therebetween that extends in opposite directions starting from the point of collision until they fill the mold, thus forming a constantly reproducible, specific pattern as a whole. Afterwards, the multicolored-pattern-bearing food product resulting from the fluid food materials is solidified naturally or through temperature control, depending on the properties of the obtained product.
Examples of food materials which change their state from fluid to solid and which fit the purpose of the present invention include food materials having relatively low viscosities, such as chocolate, cheese, jelly, and mizu-yokan (an agar-based sweet).
When chocolate is used as a fluid food material of the present invention, its viscosity is between 500 cp and 20,000 cp, preferably between 1,000 cp and 2,000 cp.
The outer shape of a food product with a multicolored pattern, which is the end product, may differ depending on the shape of the mold employed. For example, if a mold having a flat bottom is employed, the resulting end product has a flat upper surface, because a portion of the material that is brought into contact with the flat bottom will become an upper portion of the end product.
Alternatively, if the bottom of the mold has a concave-convex surface, the resultant food product has a top that has concave-convex pattern.
Since not only the top but also the sides of the end product are defined by the mold, a pattern similar to a ridge along the edge of a coin may be formed.
Moreover, if the bottom of the mold is partially or entirely provided with an engraving of, for example, a chrysanthemum, a crest, or a trademark in a concave/convex pattern and such a mold is filled with fluid food materials as described above, there can be produced an even more elaborate and attractive food product with a multicolored pattern.
Furthermore, if fluid food materials as described above are introduced into a mold and subsequently the mold is further filled with a fluid food material of the same or different type, the bottom of the end product can be provided with an additional layer of the latter fluid food material so that the entire bottom is covered by the layer at a certain thickness.
According to the present invention, a food product with a predetermined multicolored pattern can be produced in a short time, through a single injection/filling of fluid food materials of different colors into a single mold. This can be attained by simultaneous injection of fluid food materials of two or more colors having the same viscosity performed in such a manner that the materials are injected through nozzles having nozzle outlets of a certain common diameter, each nozzle being provided and assigned for a respective color, at the same injection rate for all the colors, and also by selecting the aforementioned positions of injection in the mold so as to obtain an intended pattern of the final food product. Although for the sake of convenience the above description of the present invention is provided while taking an example of producing a single food product with a multicolored pattern in a single mold, in actual practice, the process is performed by use of a mold having two or more (e.g., 12) mold cavities therein, whereby many food products can be obtained simultaneously. Also, according to the present invention, after fluid food materials of two or more colors are injected into a mold, they spread while forming concentric ripples in the mold until materials injected through neighboring nozzles collide with each other. However, since the materials are of the same viscosity, the collided materials neither form turbulence at the colliding point nor are they pressed one-sidedly. Rather, the materials mutually and evenly compete, forming a boundary therebetween to run in opposite directions perpendicular to the direction of collision. Thus, the mold is gradually filled with the materials of different colors whose boundaries are in straight-line segments, to thereby give a food product generally having a multicolored pattern which is defined by the number and the position of injection points in the mold, and the shape of walls and bottom of the mold cavity, except for the mold top, i.e., opening, to be filled with the fluid food materials.
a) is a plan view which shows a state where the mold is filled with two fluid food materials having mutually different colors, wherein the formed boundary is a diagonal line.
a) is a plan view of a resultant mold obtained through the steps of
a) is a plan view of a pattern or mode, which differs from those shown in
a) is a plan view of a pattern or mode, which differs from those shown in
a) is a plan view of a pattern or mode, which differs from those shown in
1 . . . Mold
2 . . . Nozzle outlet
3 . . . Spread of material in the form of concentric ripples
4, 6, 10, 11, 12 . . . Boundary
7 . . . Depressed portion provided at the mold bottom
According to the present invention, basically, fluid food materials of two or more colors which are injected into a single mold are allowed to separately spread concentrically, like water circles that spread out, until fluid food materials injected through neighboring nozzles collide and mutually compete as they spread while forming straight boundary lines, whereby a food product with a specific multicolored pattern can be obtained.
With reference to
With reference to
When the mold 1 is filled with the fluid chocolate, the filling step is complete, and the mold is forwarded to a cooling step by means of a belt conveyor (not shown), where the chocolate material is solidified, to thereby produce a chocolate product with a two-colored pattern.
The resultant chocolate product formed in the mold 1 as shown in
a) and 6(b) show a different pattern from
a) and 8(b) show another example. This pattern is achieved by setting four injection points O, P, Q, and R so that they are located at the same distance from the boundaries 10 and injecting fluid white chocolate 8 at two points that are on a first diagonal line and fluid dark chocolate 9 at the remaining two points that are on a second diagonal line.
Unlike any of the above embodiments, the inner side wall of the mold cavity shown in
The present invention is applicable to the production of chocolate, cheese, jelly, mizu-yokan (an agar-based sweet), and the like, which is produced from fluid food materials of two or more colors and which has color boundaries formed on the basis of the so-called “competing” phenomenon of fluids, observed when the fluid food materials are injected or deposited into a mold. This competing phenomenon does not occur when the fluid materials have low viscosities like water, or excessively high viscosities. Preferably, the viscosity of the fluid food materials, which may differ depending on the materials per se, falls within a range of 500 cp to 20,000 cp.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-291300 | Oct 2004 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP2005/018277 | 10/3/2005 | WO | 00 | 4/3/2007 |