The present invention relates to apparatus and methods for drying salad ingredients or other leafy materials by using centrifugal force to remove a liquid from the materials.
Salad ingredients have to be washed and dried before serving. This simple task has led to an unusually long history of attempts to solve the problem of removing all the water without destroying the ingredients. Various types of rotational schemes have been tried that use centrifugal forces to expel the water. They all suffer from a common defect, namely an inability to separate the leafy ingredients so that water does not remain trapped between leaves that are adhered by the water. The obvious concept of rotating the ingredients faster to provide greater centrifugal forces to remove the water is self defeating because it results in the leaves being pressed harder against each other and thereby making it less likely that the water trapped between the leaves will be expelled.
What is lacking in the prior art is a device that while spinning the ingredients causes them to tumble apart from each other so that the water which it is desired to expel is subjected to the centrifugal force engendered by the rotation without the leaves being compressed.
Among the prior attempts to solve the problem of water removal are noted the following United States patents: U.S. Patent No. 4,702,162 is a spinner dryer attachment for a food processor. It rotates the salad ingredients about a vertical axis at a rotation rate that is a fixed value reduced from the high speeds of a food processor. U.S. Pat. No. 5,156,084 is a hand driven vertical rotating food processor having a drainer basket. It too rotates about a vertical axis so that using a rotation rate that is low would cause the ingredients to fall to the bottom of the apparatus rather than to tumble. U.S. Pat. No. 5,562,025 is another device for spinning a salad about a vertical axis, thereby having the same defect with regard to an inability to allow the ingredients to tumble. U.S. Pat. No. 5,992,309 is yet another device for rotation about a vertical axis. U.S. Pat. No. 5,966,830 describes a device for rotation about a vertical axis that has inwardly sloping sides so that ingredients towards the bottom have a smaller rotation radius and therefor experience a lesser centrifugal force in order to protect delicate ingredients. This device cannot circulate the ingredients to experience both high and low centrifugal forces or allow tumbling. Indeed it is designed to keep the delicate ingredients away from high forces. U.S. Pat. No. 6,343,546 is another device rotating the ingredients about a vertical axis and therefore having the same defect as the previously described patented devices.
The invention is a salad spinner dryer that has a cylindrical drum into which the salad ingredients are placed. Here the term cylindrical is not limited to circular cylinders but may include cylinders having other cross sections, examples of which may be oval or rectangular. Circular cylinders are preferred. The drum rotates about a horizontal axis at different rates and in different directions (e.g. clockwise and counterclockwise about the axis). By horizontal is meant an axis that is preferably exactly horizontal but which may deviate from the horizontal by as much as 45 degrees. It definitely excludes a vertical axis. Water thrown from the drum is collected on an inner surface of a cover and collected in a tray at the bottom of the apparatus. The different rates and directions of rotation are programmed from a control panel. The rates and directions assure that at some portion of the operating cycle of the dryer the salad ingredients tumble so as to separate the ingredients and avoid water trapping between ingredients adhered to each other by the water.
A preferred embodiment of the invention is depicted in the figures. As seen in
When the drum rotates about its axle (which may rotate with the drum or be fixed with respect to the drum) the salad ingredients will experience a centrifugal force. If the rotational velocity is high enough this will cause water to move to the inner curved surface of the drum. The water will pass out of the drum where they will contact the inner surface of the body cover 14 and eventually flow downwards by gravity to be collected in the water collection tray 7.
The invention may be embodied in a system having the ability to subject the salad components to at least two different rotation rates and preferably, but not essentially, at least one change in direction (e.g. clockwise to counterclockwise) of rotation of the drum. The control of the motor rotation rates and rotation direction is accomplished by choices made at the control panel 15.
One of the problems of the prior art was that the rotation rate that forced the water from the salad components also kept the salad components pressed against each other thus limiting the amount of water that could be removed, The present invention employs a second slower speed or speed reversal during which the salad components tumble so as to loose this intimate contact and, when the rotation rate is again increased, allow more water to be removed. In order to further promote this tumbling the direction of rotation is reversible. During the reversal the components also tumble as is desired.
Although not preferred the system could operate with only one rotation rate, provided the direction of rotation is reversed from time to time, or slowed down enough to minimize the centrifugal forces holding the leaves together against the drum's wall.
The method of using the apparatus is as follows:
Beginning from a state in which the main door and the drum doorway are aligned, the salad ingredients are placed within the cylindrical drum. In an alternative embodiment the ingredients may enter the drum through a door in the end of the body cover that aligns with a door in the end of the cylindrical drum.
A second embodiment of the present invention has a removable drying drum used in conjunction with a side-loading door. A removable drum 18 of a cylindrical shape, with perforated or wicking wall 22 which has four longitudinal channels 23 is employed. The channels have two purposes: to engage the four driving pins 21, (see
The method of using this second embodiment is as follows:
The removable drum 18 is loaded with the salad ingredients and placed into the unit horizontally through an end door 17 having a guiding pin 30. When the end door 17 is closed, two functions are triggered: the drum engages into the door's guiding pin for additional support, and a safety lock 19 holds the door shut as long as the drum is rotating. The removable drum 18 is indexed into the four guiding pins 21 which in turn, are connected to the rotating plate 25 which is being supported by the two bearings 20 and being driven by the belt 5 and gear motor 3. Upon starting of the motor, the drum spins at various speeds, causing the water to be expelled due to the centrifugal forces at the elevated speeds, and to tumble and mix at low speeds. At the end of the cycle, when the drum is stopped, the end door may be opened, the removable drum pulled out and the dried salad ingredients removed.
Control functions are entered at the instrument panel to determine the cycle of operations of the invention. In particular the rotation rates, the frequency of direction reversal, and the length of the process may be programmed from the instrument panel.
The device is stopped in a state in which the main door and the drum doorway are aligned. The door and the doorway are opened and the salad ingredients removed.
In the second embodiment, the end door is opened, the removable drum is pulled out of the unit and loaded with the wet salad ingredients. The loaded drum is placed back into the machine and the door is closed. A run switch is depressed and the spinning cycle initiates. During the time of drum rotation, the end door is locked and cannot be opened. At the end of the drying cycle the end door is released and can be opened, the drum is pulled out and the dried salad ingredients are ready for use.
The collected water is then removed from the tray in which it was collected.
Although the invention has been described in terms of preferred embodiments it should be understood that the scope of the invention is that described in the following claims, together with structures equivalent to those recited.
This application claims priority of U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 60/541,098, filed Feb. 2, 2004.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60541098 | Feb 2004 | US |