This application is a U.S. National Phase application of PCT International Application No. PCT/ES2003/000591 filed Nov. 24, 2003.
This present invention refers to a tenderiser machine applicable to the processing of pieces of boned meat that may or may contain fatty materials or other loads.
The machine in question is an auxiliary assembly in the process of preparing cooked ham and is intended to increase the effective surface area for the extraction of muscle proteins during subsequent massage processes. Its operation, performing a series of superficial or deep cuts in the piece of meat that passes through a series of tenderisers, such as rotating rollers located at a small distance, subjecting it to compression and stretching, improves muscle protein extraction, resulting in improved adhesion between the muscles and between the former and the pieces of fat or rind incorporated into the meat mass. It is also especially useful in treating pieces with a high content in nerves and Tendons, for example, pigs' trotters and turkey drumsticks. In those cases in which the cited pieces of meat include substances such as brine and/or other loads, for example, by injection, the processing provided by this machine, assists in improved distribution of the brine and/or loads in the meat mass.
The state of the art describes various meat mass tenderising machines applied to the explained function.
In particular, a machine is known that consists of a pair of parallel, tenderising rollers, located at a short distance and rotated in opposite directions by a motor with the said rollers fitted with a number of cutting members, such as prongs or blades emerging from their surfaces, defining an elongated aperture through which the pressed meat passes, driven by the said rollers and gravity. It has been arranged in this machine that one of the rollers is associated, by its support ends to some means of elastic load, with limited travel, so that it can move or give way, moving away from the other twin roller, mounted in a fixed manner on a bed of the machine, during the passage of the pieces of meat.
The invention proposes to improve the performance of such a machine, permitting a more efficient job on the meat mass to be treated and especially providing great variability of the operating conditions to achieve improved adaptation of the actual characteristics of each batch of meat product to be treated.
Essentially, this invention is based on the combination of at least two tenderising assemblies, each comprising a basic structure of two tenderising rollers, like that described in the background just described, although with the possibility of selective differentiated regulation of relative movement of one of the cited tenderising elements or rollers on each assembly, which can give way against some antagonist means or remain fixed in place, so that the meat material processing can be carried out under different conditions in each of the tenderising assemblies.
To this end, the invention, in a preferred embodiment example, comprises:
In particular, it has been arranged to fix the tenderiser element that can move of one or both A and B assemblies and also so the distance between the tenderiser element of the A and B assemblies is either the same or different.
Other characteristics of the invention will become clearer in the detailed explanation of some embodiment examples given below.
The foregoing summary, as well as the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention, will be better understood when read in conjunction with the appended drawings, which are incorporated herein and constitute part of this specification. For the purposes of illustrating the invention, there are shown in the drawings an embodiment that is presently preferred. It should be understood, however, that the invention is not limited to the precise arrangements and instrumentalities shown. In the drawings, the same reference numerals are employed for designating the same elements throughout the several figures. In the drawings:
a shows a partial diagrammatic elevation of one of the tenderiser elements in its installed layout associated with one of the end supports.
a are equivalent to
In accordance with the previous description and just as can be seen in
The machine includes some means for each of the said tenderiser assemblies A and B to regulate the distance between the cutting members 13 of each pair of rollers 11a-12a, 11b-12b and to selectively block the movement of at least one 12a, 12b of the movable rollers for each assembly A, B. In a preferred embodiment example, both tenderiser rollers 12a, 12b can be selectively blocked so that the machine allows combined processing of the two tenderiser assemblies A and B, with one or both rollers 12a, 12b of the corresponding blocking assemblies and also with the same or different distance between the rollers of each assembly. In a preferred embodiment example of the invention, the cited antagonistic means have an elastic nature.
In accordance with an embodiment example, at least one of the said rollers 11a-12a, 11b-12b for each assembly A, B is governed in rotation by some means of motor-drive, and in an embodiment example, all the rollers are rotated, with the two elements 11a-12a, 12a-12b of each assembly A and B, rotating in opposite directions and with different rotational speeds, so that they cooperate in the pull of the incoming pieces of meat and produce a stretching effect on them.
The mentioned means of motorised drive comprises at least one geared motor assembly 30, together with a flexible transmission 31. As can be seen from the elevation views in
In accordance with a preferred embodiment example shown in
As can be seen in
The said
Referring to
The illustrated and described embodiment example is merely for illustrative purposes and does not limit the scope of this invention, the scope of which is defined by the attached claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/ES03/00591 | 11/24/2003 | WO | 00 | 2/26/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2005/048723 | 6/2/2005 | WO | A |
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2243492 | Wilson | May 1941 | A |
3654664 | Fetzer et al. | Apr 1972 | A |
3716893 | Vogelsang | Feb 1973 | A |
4343067 | Shelton | Aug 1982 | A |
4437208 | Sampson | Mar 1984 | A |
4660252 | Blackburn et al. | Apr 1987 | A |
5114379 | Prosenbauer | May 1992 | A |
6257132 | Bifulco | Jul 2001 | B1 |
6601499 | Bifulco | Aug 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 478 221 | Apr 1992 | EP |
8406161 | Nov 1984 | ES |
628048 | Aug 1949 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070249274 A1 | Oct 2007 | US |