Method for rapidly cooking food

Food or edible material: processes – compositions – and products – Processes – Heating above ambient temperature

Patent

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Details

426466, A23L 100

Patent

active

054846218

DESCRIPTION:

BRIEF SUMMARY
splacement of the food pieces. Earlier forced air designs make use of large blowers and powerful motors to pressurize the air and force it as evenly as possible through the cooking chamber, usually through perforations or louvers in the interior walls of the cooking chamber. Such prior devices have not been effective to produce the results found in the present invention since they do not achieve the necessary velocities. Also such high power devices are not practical when designing a lightweight portable appliance, due to the excessive noise, added cost and space requirements of such a design.
Prior ovens with fans have not been able to get their fans to achieve high rates of speed for the two following reasons. Ovens with fans often disrupt or restrict their air flow in one or both of two ways: through a grease filter. The function of that filter is typically to protect the fan from grease. The present fan is self-cleaning and does not have the problem of having to restrict air velocities by forcing the air through a grease filter. elements so that the air coming off the fan blades passes over and around the heating element. This is done to heat the air, but it also severely disrupts the air flow making it more difficult to achieve higher, free-flow air velocities. The present invention disposes the heating element behind the fan in a position where it does not disrupt or restrict the air flow, thus achieving higher rates of air flow with better results.
Prior ovens with fans do not extend the fans down into the cooking chamber. The fans are generally recessed into the wall of the cooking chamber or into the roof of that cooking chamber. The fans are therefore covered by or partially blocked by either the wall, a filter, of some other enclosure or housing.
The fan blade in the present invention projects into the cooking chamber where it drives the air free and essentially unrestricted by any enclosure. It is the position of the present fan within or relative to the chamber that contributes to its ability to achieve the high air velocities and the attendant results.
Various means of heating the air are used, usually employing natural gas heat exchangers located in the sides of the oven or electrical tubular heating elements located in the lower portion of the oven.
A rapid cooking device has been the deep fat fryer. Such fryers are typically used to prepare French fries, breaded shrimp, fried chicken and the like. Deep fat fryers will typically cook food pieces in from one to five minutes. Deep fat fryers brown the product and develop desirable flavor characteristics. Deep fat fryers, however, also have inherent disadvantages. One such inherent disadvantage is the fact that the cooked food product has very high levels of fats, thus increasing the caloric content as well as the potential adverse effects of cholesterol on the consumer's circulatory system.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present cooking method provides very rapid and very high rate of heat exchange cooking using high velocity air streams. The present invention achieves results very similar to baking, frying, broiling, rotisserie cooking, toasting, boiling, microwave, range cooking, however, with improved results. One may simultaneously bake a cinnamon roll, fry bacon and boil an egg.
Any of a wide variety of foods may be cooked using the present method, for example, meats, eggs, various forms of potatoes (e.g., baked, american fries), breads (e.g., dough pieces for bread loaves, sweet rolls and the like). The air stream may be provided in any type of apparatus capable of producing the velocities while avoiding displacement of the food pieces. The necessary conditions of temperature and air velocities may be provided in a cylindrical cooking chamber of the type shown in U.S. Pat. No. 4,817,509. Such cooking device desirably has a patterned air current, e.g. cyclone shape, although a somewhat turbulent air flow is acceptable so long as the air velocities can be maintained at the necessary level. The air frier shown in U.S. Pat. No. 4,817,509 h

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