The present invention relates to food packaging, and, more particularly, to a sauce tray and a lid system for a food container.
In the quick service restaurant industry, a wide variety of packaging is used for food products. Furthermore, in the quick service restaurant industry, a wide variety of condiments and dipping sauces are often served with the food products and also require some form of packaging. For example, several types of storage containers for condiments and dipping sauces are commonly used. For condiments such as ketchup, mustard, and mayonnaise, perhaps the most common and well-known containers are the pillow-shaped packets that are made of a flexible plastic and are opened by tearing the packet along a selected edge. For dipping sauces, however, it is more common to store such sauces in a small plastic container with a flexible plastic or foil lid that can be pulled off of the container; leaving an open top for dipping another food product into the sauce. In any event, in most cases, such condiments and dipping sauces are simply thrown into a bag with the primary food products.
The present invention is a sauce tray and a lid system for a food container. The sauce tray defines one or more openings through a base surface to receive and retain one or more containers of dipping sauce, and the sauce tray is further configured to be positioned in either a first orientation or second orientation on top of the food container. In some embodiments, the sauce tray is part of a lid system that also creates a separate cavity within the interior volume of the food container to store another food product.
An exemplary lid system made in accordance with the present invention includes three components: an insert tray; a paperboard insert; and a sauce tray. In one configuration, the insert tray is configured to be received in an upper portion of a food container. The insert tray has a bottom wall and a continuous side wall that collectively define an interior cavity with an open top. Accordingly, the insert tray effectively functions as a bowl. The insert tray further includes an upper circumferential flange, so that insert tray can be received in the food container, with the upper circumferential flange engaging the rim of the food container. Such placement of the insert tray within the food container creates a separate cavity within the interior volume of the food container to store another food product. Then, the paperboard insert is sized and shaped such that it can be used as a lid to close access to this separate cavity.
In a second configuration, the sauce tray can be placed over the insert tray on top of the food container. In this second configuration, the sauce tray is in a first orientation and effectively forms a dome over the insert tray. Thus, a cavity is created between the base surface of the sauce tray and the insert tray. The sauce tray includes one or more openings through its base surface (or floor), and each of these openings is sized and shaped to receive and retain a container of dipping sauce.
In a third configuration, the exemplary sauce tray can be inverted into a second orientation and then positioned directly on top of the food container. Thus, rather than forming a dome, the sauce tray forms a bowl that encroaches into the interior volume of the food container. Although now inverted into the second orientation, the sauce tray still functions in the same manner, with each of the one or more openings configured to receive and retain a container of dipping sauce.
The present invention is a sauce tray and a lid system for a food container. The sauce tray defines one or more openings through a base surface to receive and retain one or more containers of dipping sauce, and the sauce tray is further configured to be positioned in either a first orientation or second orientation on top of the food container. In some embodiments, the sauce tray is part of a lid system that also creates a separate cavity within the interior volume of the food container to store another food product.
Referring first to
Referring still to
Referring now to
For purposes of example, two such containers 120, 130 of dipping sauce are shown in
Thus, in the second configuration, and referring still to
As a further refinement, the insert tray 20 and the sauce tray 60 may be provided with a means for locking the two components together in the second configuration. Perhaps as best shown in
Finally, with respect to this second configuration, the paperboard insert 40 is not used in the exemplary embodiment described above. However, it is contemplated that some form of paperboard insert or similar divider could be incorporated into and used in this second configuration to separate the cavity defined by the insert tray 20 from the second cavity defined by the sauce tray 60 without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
Referring now to
One of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that additional embodiments are possible without departing from the teachings of the present invention or the scope of the claims which follow. This detailed description, and particularly the specific details of the exemplary embodiments disclosed herein, is given primarily for clarity of understanding, and no unnecessary limitations are to be understood therefrom, for modifications will become obvious to those skilled in the art upon reading this disclosure and may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the claimed invention.
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