The present disclosure generally relates to rocker chillers for carcasses such as poultry carcasses, that reduce the temperature and increase the moisture retention of the carcasses and that enhance the ability of the carcasses to more effectively respond to disinfectant.
Paddle type chillers, also known as “rocker chillers,” have a history of use in the poultry processing industry and in other food processing industries. The basic principle of operation is that a paddle or long blade is used to agitate poultry carcasses in a tank of cold heat exchanging liquid to chill the carcasses as the carcasses are advanced by movement of the liquid through the tank.
Continuous introduction of cold water in one end of the tank and removal of warmer water at the other end of the tank provides the mechanism for removing heat from the carcasses and for moving the carcasses along the length of the tank. The side to side rocking motion of a paddle adjacent the semi-cylindrical bottom wall of the tank tends of distribute the carcasses throughout the volume of heat exchanging liquid, thus assuring more thorough contact between the water and the product and more rapid chilling.
An unexpected consequence of paddle type chiller operation has been that carcasses processed in some such chillers retain more moisture than those processed in other types of chillers. Until now, it appears that this moisture retention phenomenon has not been understood or fully exploited. The current invention addresses optimization of moisture retention as well as improving certain operational problems of paddle type chillers.
Moisture retention in the poultry carcasses has significant financial implications for the poultry processing industry. The industry typically measures “yield” of the carcasses as the weight of processed carcasses divided by the live weight of birds delivered to the plant expressed as a percentage. Typical yield for whole carcasses can be around 74%. Processing steps that remove moisture from the meat will reduce yield since the weight of moisture removed is not included in the final product. Use of prior art rocker chillers has been shown to increase yield by about 1%. Use of chillers designed according to the current invention has increased yield by an additional 1% or more. To put this in perspective, a 1% increase in yield at a modest size plant processing 400,000 pounds of poultry per day would generate an additional 5400 pounds of salable product with an additional wholesale value of about $840,000 per year at current prices.
Briefly described this disclosure concerns a rocker chiller for reducing the temperature of carcasses, such as poultry carcasses received from a processing line that still may be near their normal live temperature of about 104° F. The chiller, which may be a pre-chiller or a final chiller, or the only chiller in the poultry processing line, may include an elongated tank with a semi-cylindrical bottom surface for containing a cold heat exchanging liquid at a liquid level in the tank. An elongated baffle assembly is positioned in the tank and extends along the length of the tank and means, such as a motor, are provided for oscillating the baffle assembly across the curved bottom of the tank for moving the carcasses laterally in the tank through the body of heat-exchanging liquid. The baffle assembly may include a baffle that includes a lower edge adjacent the semi-cylindrical bottom surface of the tank and a body portion that extends upwardly from the lower edge toward the surface of the liquid in the tank. The baffle may include baffle openings sized and shaped to allow the heat-exchanging liquid to pass through the baffle in response to the oscillation of the baffle and to retard the movement of carcasses through the baffle as the heat exchanging liquid rushes about the carcasses. The baffle assembly may include a baffle blade that extends from the lower edge of the baffle and is positioned adjacent the facing curved surface of the tank and provides structural support to the baffle. The baffle defines baffle openings therethrough that are selected from shapes including, for example: circular, non-circular, elongated and polygonal. Other shapes may be used. The baffle openings allow the chilling liquid to rush through the baffle and about the poultry carcasses moving with the baffle. The poultry carcasses tend to become more densely gathered in the heat exchanging liquid when the baffle sweeps in that direction and less densely gathered on the trailing side of the baffle, contributing to a massaging action on the carcass.
The rocker chiller disclosed herein may further include a carcass guide shaped for directing the carcasses moving into the tank to alternate sides of the tank, for example, to the side of the tank in which the baffle is positioned. The carcass guide may move in unison with the baffle assembly.
The present disclosure will be better understood with reference to the following drawing figures. Similar reference numerals designate corresponding parts throughout the figures, and components in the figures are not necessarily to scale.
Referring now in more detail to the drawings in which like numerals indicate like parts throughout the several views,
In addition to the heat exchanging liquid 14 that substantially fills the tank 12,
Baffle assembly 18 includes a drive shaft 20 that may extend at the liquid level along the length of the semi-cylindrical tank 12. Drive shaft 20 oscillates about the longitudinal axis 22, which may be the longitudinal axis for both the drive shaft 20 and the semi-cylindrical tank 12. A power means 23 is used to oscillate the drive shaft. An electric motor and gear box may function as the power means. In the embodiment illustrated in
A conventional drive motor 41 and transmission 40 are connected to the drive shaft 20 of the rocker chiller and function as means for oscillating the baffle assembly 18 in an arc from side to side in the heat exchanging liquid 14 across the interior facing surface of the tank 12, as shown by arrow 17. When the baffle assembly oscillates, it sweeps from side to side and tends to engage and move the poultry carcasses 28 adjacent the side wall of the tank toward alignment with recirculation conduits 16 as indicated in
Poultry carcasses 28 are placed in the tank 12 with the carcasses being generally submerged in the heat exchanging liquid 14. Most of the carcasses tend to slowly sink toward the bottom of the heat exchanging liquid 14, adjacent the interior surface of the semi-cylindrical bottom wall of tank 12.
With this arrangement, some of the carcasses 28 are engaged by the baffle 26 and move up with the movement of the baffle and become aligned with the streams of liquid emitted from the recirculation conduits 16 so that the recirculated heat exchanging liquid that may bear an antimicrobial is directed against the carcasses. The drive motor may operate to intermittently pause the baffle assembly 18 at its up positions at the sides of the tank when the baffle assembly is aligned with a recirculation conduit 16. The oncoming streams of heat exchanging liquid tend to urge the carcasses 28 along the length of the tank 12 toward the discharge end of the tank and to wash the carcasses with the heat exchanging liquid.
As shown in
The baffle 26 includes openings extending therethrough that may be of various shapes, such as circular, non-circular, elongated, and polygonal. Other shapes of baffle openings may be suitable, as generally shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
While the baffle blades 21A-21G may provide structural and operational advantages in specific cases, it is not necessary to the general function of the baffle which is to allow heat exchanging liquid to pass through while retarding the passage of carcasses. For example, the baffle blade 21E could be replaced by additional parallel rods 27E of
In some cases, the baffle may be designed with sufficient structural integrity to eliminate the need for the baffle blade and even the support arms.
The carcass guide may comprise a deflector plate 42 or other guide surface that functions to direct the oncoming carcasses 28 downwardly at a sloped angle into the heat exchanging liquid 14. As shown in
In the current invention, the baffle restricts carcasses from moving through the baffle assembly, and the poultry carcasses 28 tend to become more densely gathered in the turbulent heat exchanging liquid 14 when the baffle assembly 18 sweeps in that direction and less densely gathered on the trailing side of the baffle assembly as shown in
The contact of the carcasses with the surfaces of the tank 12, with the baffle assembly 18 and with one another creates a mild compression of each carcass, providing the benefit of massaging the meat of the carcasses. Repeated cycles of compression and relaxation cumulatively tend to help break down some of the cell structure of the carcasses, thereby tenderizing the meat and creating microscopic voids where moisture can be retained within the product.
It is desirable to not only chill the carcasses but to massage the carcasses so that moisture will be retained in the product through the production process. The additional surface area of the baffle provides more contact with the carcasses thus promoting the massaging action.
As the poultry carcasses gather more densely on the leading side of the baffle assembly, the heat exchanging liquid rushes through the baffle toward the opposite side of the tank. This is illustrated by the horizontal arrows 44 in
A result of the new rocker chiller herein disclosed is the washing action of the more vigorous movement and more positively churning of the birds about in the heat exchanging liquid 14. This vigorous washing function of the carcasses tends to remove bits of organic matter that are usually carried by the carcasses into the heat exchanging liquid. This vigorous churning tends to get more of that substance off the birds and this may be important if the rocker chiller is functioning as a pre-chiller where the birds are first placed for treatment in the pre-chiller and then moved to the final chiller.
When the rocker chiller disclosed herein is functioning as a pre-chiller, the temperature of the water in the pre-chiller is usually significantly higher than the temperature of the water in the final chiller, and at the higher temperature the compression and turbulence action experienced in the pre-chiller tends to remove more of the unwanted substances from the surfaces of the carcasses while the surfaces of the carcasses are relatively warm. The warmer surfaces of the carcasses are more subject to being cleansed by the turbulence of the water and the impact against the carcasses. The oil and bits of fat and organic matter on the meat tend to be washed off the carcasses in the chiller when the temperature of the carcasses is still above about 60° F. The combination of the higher temperature and the more vigorous impact and churning of the carcasses provides a cleaner carcass at the exit of the pre-chiller. Thus, these items, skin oil, bits of fat, organic matter, etc. tend to remain in the heat exchanging liquid of the pre-chiller, where it is not transferred to the subsequent main chiller, where disinfectant in the main chiller can be used at a lower concentration for providing the same cleaning results. A stronger dose of disinfectant in the pre-chiller allows a minimal dose of disinfectant in the final chiller.
By scrubbing the birds in the pre-chiller, less organic matter is transferred into the final chiller and whatever chlorine or other disinfectant is used is more available to attack the microbes of the carcasses.
The cycles of alternate compression and relaxation of the water on opposite sides of the baffle assembly as shown in
Although preferred embodiments of the invention have been disclosed in detail herein, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that variations and modifications of the disclosed embodiments can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the following claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 14/991,041, filed Jan. 8, 2016, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,841,245, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/070,521, filed Mar. 24, 2011, now abandoned, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/424,363, filed Dec. 17, 2010, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
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---|---|---|---|
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Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
H 05-195028 | Aug 1993 | JP |
Entry |
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Shell Exhibit 1: website: Morris-Associates.com/page/drag_chiller, 4 pages. |
Shell Exhibit 2: Morris & Associates Heavy Duty Rocker Chiller, 2 pages. |
Shell Exhibit 3: Simon-Johnson Positive Control Chiller, printed advertisement, 4 pages. |
Shell Exhibit 4: Cantrell Giblet Chillers, 4 pages. |
Shell Exhibit 5: Photograph of a dasher assembly for a baker spin chiller, 1 page. |
Shell Exhibit 6: Morris & Associates Drag Chillers, 4 pages. |
United States Patent and Trademark Office Decision on Appeal corresponding to Reexamination Control No. 90/012,927, dated Nov. 25, 2015, 12 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61424363 | Dec 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14991041 | Jan 2016 | US |
Child | 15805538 | US | |
Parent | 13070521 | Mar 2011 | US |
Child | 14991041 | US |