The present invention concerns cooking snack foods in a hot oil cooking bath in a continuous process and especially relates to controlling and agitating a pack of product during cooking so as to achieve better uniformity in product quality.
In the field of cooking snack foods in a continuous process it has become accepted to rely largely upon the velocity of the cooking oil in the fryer to propel the product through the fryer in the cooking operation. Energy in terms of both heat and velocity is supplied to the cooking oil as it is pumped from a sump in the fryer to a heat exchanger and then returned to the fryer usually at the start of the cooking path or also at locations along that path as needed. Configurations displaying this arrangement are shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,580,598; 5,167,979 and 5,137,740 all of which are owned by the assignee of this invention.
The term “snack food” as used in this disclosure shall be taken to include potato chips, corn and tortilla chips, pellet snacks and the like. In the case of cooking potato chips, raw potato slices are deposited from above into the oil bath of a continuous fryer in a substantial volume to eventually form into a pack. Initially there is a vigorous boil as the water carried on the slice surfaces as well as the moisture contained within the slices boils off. Rotating stirring means known in the field as “paddles”, as well as the cooking oil velocity, serve to urge the mass or pack of potato slices away from the slice inlet and downstream toward the product outlet thereby defining a cooking path.
Uniformity of moisture content in a package of snack foods is a highly desired quality in that it assures the producer that his product, when packaged, will have a longer shelf life as well as good taste and bite when the package is opened and consumed. Assuming the overall goal product moisture content is, for example, 2% there invariably are deviations among items within the package and from package-to-package as well as among production runs. These variations in product moisture contents, in large part, can be attributed to uneven agitation of the product while being cooked. There a large portion of the product will be cooked evenly while a small portion will be under cooked or over cooked. When mixed together in the product packaging operation the resulting combination of proper cooked, under cooked and over cooked product there is created a non uniformity in product moisture content. For the producer the issue becomes how much non uniformity can be tolerated before “off taste” and shorter shelf life become paramount and waste follows. If the moisture content of every slice in the pack is held to a controlled level at a known location in the fryer, the result is very good uniform control over the finish frying stage of the product. Uniform control over the finish frying stage of the product means virtually every chip exits the fryer with the same moisture content. Uniform moisture content of the final product means that some chips are not produced with significantly lower moisture contents than other chips. Noteworthy is that the significantly lower moisture content chip is in danger of having significantly higher acrylamides because it finish fried at a lower moisture content.
Prior art paddles for continuous fryers generally included a motor driven rotatable shaft mounted laterally across the fryer at one or more locations along its length. Arranged on the shaft were “blades” such as generally rectangular sheets of metal configured on the shaft to serve as an impeller. Such paddles, depending upon the direction of their rotational motion, acted to regulate, by somewhat blocking, product flow downstream against the velocity of the cooking oil. Being that the paddles and blades were mounted to extend into the product pack and for a small distance down into the bath of cooking oil, some product slices would work their way around or beneath the paddle blades and receive a shorter cooking time. The result was inconsistency in the product cook time, appearance and moisture content.
The development of acrylamides in snack food containing starch has been noted and studied and may soon become a matter of governmental regulation. See: http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/˜dms/acrydata.html. Potato chips from a variety of well known producers and tested by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration were found to be in the range of a high of 1265 ppb (parts per billion) to a low of 20 ppb of acrylamide. Several animal tests have shown acrylamide to be a carcinogen, and a recent study conducted by the National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark, has shown a positive association between acrylamide and breast cancer in humans. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acrylamide. Clearly established when frying carbohydrates in hot cooking oil is the link between product moisture content (around 5%) cooking time and temperature of the oil medium. The research teaches the shorter the cooking time when the product is at or below the critical moisture content, the less acrylamide the will be found in the oil cooked product.
This invention promotes uniformity of product final moisture content and appearance while minimizing the time for development of acrylamides by providing rotatable, segmented paddle wheel assemblies arranged in a snack food fryer of the continuous cooking oil type wherein the paddle assemblies skirt the bottom of the fryer pan and are controllable to rotate in a variety of modes and speeds. The segmented paddle wheels are of various types including a double break finger type and a double break blade type in four arm and eight arm configurations. A plurality of the segmented paddle wheels arranged in the fryer control progression of the product through the fryer and vigorously mix the product within the pack so that the individual product pieces receive the same exposure to the hot cooking oil for the designed cook time.
A general object of this invention is to create uniformity of final moisture content in a snack food product by ensuring at each stage of cooking that the product receive the same exposure to the cooking oil.
Another object of this invention is to provide a method for cooking snack food products to a uniform designated moisture content thus insuring a uniformity in appearance and taste and a long shelf life.
Still another object of this invention is to provide apparatus arrange to vigorously mix product while cooking as well as urging product to move at a designated rate through a snack food fryer.
Yet another object in view of the prior object is to promote the cooking of a snack food with a desirably low acrylamide content.
A further object is to provide a snack food fryer equipped with novel paddle wheel assemblies operable to aggressively and vigorously stir the product during cooking to the end of producing a product of uniform final cooked moisture content.
These and other objects of the invention will become apparent from a consideration of the specification text when considered with the following drawings.
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Alternatively, each individual segmented paddle wheel may be driven by a dedicated programmable drive motor (not shown) so that the rotational speeds of the segmented paddles wheel may be selected to suit widely varying conditions. In such a configuration certain of the segmented paddle wheels may rotate alternately clockwise and then counter-clockwise as indicated by the arrows 26 to achieve the objectives of controlling the forward movement of the product pack 13 against the forces of the cooking oil pumped into the fryer and being withdrawn at another location. This action of the segmented paddles 10 also facilitates agitation of the pack of product in a vigorous manner. Further it separates slices from each other thereby permitting the cooking oil to reach all surfaces of the individual product piece.
Product agitation through rotation of the segmented paddles is vigorous given that the paddles may rotate in the range of ½ RPM to about 20 RPM. This assists in promoting even exposure of the product to the cooking oil throughout the pack with the expected result being a very even product moisture content at every point along the cooking path. We have been able to obtain repeatable final moisture results as intended and typical for different products. This in turn insures much better product shelf live when all of the product pieces within a package are at the same desired final moisture content.
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It will be readily apparent that various modifications may be made to the structures and processes of this invention and still be within the scope of the present invention. In particular, in may be readily appreciated by those skilled in this art from the above description that the apparatus according to the invention provides for adjustability not only in the available rotational speeds of the segmented paddle wheels but in the rotational directions as well or in the oscillation rate of the paddle wheels. This feature of adjustability accords with better cooking times and the resulting uniformity of the final product moisture content. Accordingly, the scope of this invention shall only be limited within terms and spirit of the following claims.