This invention relates to a set of inter-stacking cooking pans with integrated handles and preferably with accompanying lids. The pans may be of any conventional type used in the preparation and cooking of food, including saucepans, frying pans, skillets and casserole dishes each with one or two side handles, but the generic term “pan” will be used later in this specification for the sake of convenience.
Pans are an essential part of food preparation and in particular to the cooking and heating of ingredients. There are many shapes and sizes of pan ranging from a large frying pan to a small ‘milk’ pan with many iterations in between. These pans conventionally have a vessel to contain a certain level or volume of ingredients combined with a handle to assist with cooking, lifting and pouring and normally an accompanying lid for heat retention during cooking. When the pans are not in use they have to be stored away. This has traditionally been achieved in a number of ways: by either hanging the pans by their handles; stacking one on top of another where the lids, sometimes turned upside down, provide a platform for the next pan to stack onto; stacking the pans into each other, starting with the largest first, where the pan vessel collides with the handle of the smaller pan tipping it up and where the lids have to be stored independently. These storage methods either use up a lot of space or they create an untidy solution.
If there could be a solution that accommodated the lids and created an economic use of space where one pan, even with a lid in place, stacked into the next and so on, in a similar manner to ‘Russian dolls’, then this could not only have commercial benefits for minimising shipping and retail space but also provide the consumer with a space saving and tidy solution.
The invention provides a set of pans as specified in claim 1 herein.
The largest pan of the set creates the outside envelope of the stacked set of pans. Preferably when the pans are stacked together for storage purposes all of the pan bodies of the smaller pans of the set, and all of their pan handles, are enclosed completely within that outside envelope. A localised rim recess may be formed in the top rim of each but the smallest pan of the set, sufficient to allow a proximal portion of the handle of the next smaller pan to pass through that rim recess while the body of the smaller pan is received completely within the body of the next larger pan. Alternatively the top rims may be of uniform height all around the perimeter of each pan.
The pans of the set preferably incorporate lids each of which has a lifting knob which has a recessed underside, the size of each recess being sufficient to receive therein the lifting knob of the lid of the next smaller pan of the set when the pans are stacked together one inside the other with their lids in place for storage purposes. The lids preferably have location details such as a peripheral depending flange to cause them to seat securely on the top rims of their associated pans. For pans with localised recesses in their top rims to allow the handles of the smaller pans to pass through the recess and over the top rim, the peripheral depending flange of the lid preferably has at least one discontinuity alignable with a localised recess in its pan top rim, sufficient to enable the flange to straddle the proximal portion or portions of the handle or handles when the pans are stacked one within the other with their lids in place for storage purposes.
If the pans have top rims of uniform height all around the perimeter of those top rims, and are provided with lids, then each pan lid except for the lid of the smallest pan of the set preferably has at least one edge recess formed therein to permit passage therethrough of a proximal portion of a handle of the next smaller pan in the set when the pans are stacked one within the other with their lids in place for storage purposes.
Preferably the handles of the nested pans of the set incorporate apertures by means of which the user can hang the pans in their stacked condition on a single hanging hook. Cooperating locating details in the interfitting handles, and cooperating locating details in the lids or alternatively internal magnets in the lids can make it easier to hang up the set of pans as a single stacked set without the pans separating and without the lids falling off.
Referring first to
The large pan assembly 2 has a large vessel 6, a large handle 7 and large lid 8. The medium pan assembly 3 has a medium vessel 9, a medium handle 10 and a medium lid 11. The small pan assembly 3 has a small vessel 12, a small handle 13 and a small lid 14. The smallest pan assembly 5 has a smallest vessel 15, a smallest handle 16 and a smallest lid 17.
The large handle 7 has a location pin detail 18 and hanging detail 19. The medium handle 10 has a location pin detail 20 and hanging/location detail 21. The small handle 13 has a location pin detail 22 and hanging/location detail 23. The smallest handle 16 has a hanging/location detail 24.
The large lid 8 comprises a cover disc 25 with a lifting knob 26. The medium lid 11 comprises a cover disc 27 and a lifting knob 28. The small lid 14 comprises a cover disc 29 and a lifting knob 30. The smallest lid 17 comprises a cover disc 31 and a lifting knob 32. The lids 8, 11, 14 and 17 may be made integrally with or separately from the lifting knobs 26, 28, 30 and 32. Each lifting knob has a hollow interior which receives completely the lifting knob of the next smaller lid in the set. Preferably the lids incorporate locating details to cause them to seat securely on the rims of their pans, lightly to hold the lids on the pans in conventional manner. In addition each pan lid may incorporate a magnet (not shown) which attracts the lid of the next smaller or larger pan lid when the lids are stacked together, which gives the user a reassuring ‘feel’ of accurate alignment when the lids are stacked together as shown in
The smallest pan and lid assembly 5 stacks into the small vessel 12. The smallest handle 16 locates into the upwardly facing recess in the small handle 13 and is held in position by location details 22, 24. The small lid 14 is placed onto the small vessel 12 where the small lid lifting element 30 interlocks with the smallest lid lifting element 32. The small pan and lid assembly 4, preferably with smallest pan and lid assembly 5 stacked inside, stacks into the medium vessel 9. The small handle 13 locates into the upwardly facing recess in the medium handle 10 and is held in position by location details 20, 23. The medium lid 11 is placed onto the medium vessel 9 where the medium lid lifting element 28 interlocks with the small lid lifting element 30. The medium pan and lid assembly 3, preferably with small pan and lid assembly 4 and smallest pan and lid assembly 5 stacked inside, stacks into the large vessel 6. The medium handle 10 locates into the upwardly facing recess in the large handle 7 and is held in position by location details 18, 21. The large lid 8 is placed on the large vessel 6 where the large lid lifting element 26 interlocks with the medium lid lifting element 28.
Shown most clearly in
The pan bodies of the smaller pans 3, 4 and 5 of the set are progressively lower in their height to the top rim than the largest pan 6 in the set, and each of the handles 10, 13 and 16 of the smaller pans of the set has at its proximal end adjoining the associated pan body an upwardly inclined portion leading to the height of the rim recess 7B, 10B or 13B of the next larger pan of the set. Those inclined portions enable the smaller pans to sit flat inside the bodies of the larger pans as shown in
The pans can be stacked together as described above even when the lids 8, 11, 14 and 17 are in place, as shown in
It will be understood that the concave shape of the pan handles creates the location profile which provides positive location of the handles so that the conjoined handles can be used to lift the stacked pans as a set. Other shapes may be used. For example the pan handles (apart possibly from the largest pan in the set) may be convex in shape, with that convexity creating the location profile and establishing along the bottom of each handle a recess which receives wholly or partially the handle of the next larger pan in the set when the pans are stacked together for storage purposes.
There are only three pans in the second set 101 of pans as illustrated in
As with the first pan set of
The lids of the three pans of the second set have a number of features not present in the lids of the pans of the first set. Each lid has a vent hole 140 (see
Each retaining flange 143 is preferably deep enough to cover completely the rim recess 107B or 110B of its associated pan, which gives the user some additional control over the venting of steam during cooking. If the lid is rotated so that the flange 143 covers that rim recess, then there is no escape of steam through that rim recess, and that is usually desirable because such a lid alignment prevents the issuance of steam directly against the handle and the position where a user's hand could potentially be. A slight rotation of the lid from that alignment, however, permits additional venting of the steam which may occasionally be desirable but is in any case under the control of the user.
Another feature of this second embodiment is apparent from
Finally it will be observed from
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0612548.8 | Jun 2006 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2007/002360 | 6/25/2007 | WO | 00 | 12/19/2008 |