Composite pastry and ice confectionery article and...

Food or edible material: processes – compositions – and products – Surface coated – fluid encapsulated – laminated solid... – Isolated whole seed – bean or nut – or material derived therefrom

Reexamination Certificate

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C426S101000, C426S502000, C426S556000, C426S524000, C426S583000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06177112

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to composite confectionery articles which include a component made from a dough and an ice confectionery substance and their preparation and to preparation and use of brick and filo pastries.
As an example, composite ice cream confectionery articles consisting of an ice cream combined with a biscuit or a crisp wafer, in particular of the type such as cakes, bars and particularly cones, cigars or sandwiches made of wafer surrounding an ice cream or filled with ice cream, must include a system which makes the biscuit or the wafer impervious to the moisture coming from the ice cream, in order to prevent it from losing its crisp nature, either during storage or during consumption.
Preparation of the composite product is usually carried out by coating either the surface of the biscuit in contact with the ice cream, or the ice cream itself, with a fatty composition, for example with chocolate or with a coating containing chocolate. For example, according to European Patent Application Publication No. 0 023 152, a wafer cone can be lined with a covering layer of liquid fat having the required properties of fluidity and of spreadability by spraying, so as to establish a barrier against the moisture coming from the ice cream filling.
Another process consists, for example, as described in French Patent Application No. 2,574,250, in applying, by roller, a liquid fatty substance close to its solidification point onto a cooked wafer, before it is shaped.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The aim of the present invention is to provide a composite ice cream confectionery article comprising a thin cooked pastry and an ice cream filling, in which the thin cooked pastry is able to retain a particularly crunchy texture when stored in frozen form and on consumption.
According to the present invention, the cooked pastry is comprised of a superposition of very thin layers of pastry of brick or filo type, and of fat applied in liquid form, with or without addition of a layer of sugar.
The article according to the present invention comprises the combination of ice cream and the cooked pastry which has been shaped, cooked and coated with a barrier to moisture, at least on the parts liable to come into contact with the ice cream.
The present invention also provides a process for preparing the article described above wherein strips of brick or filo pastries are prepared, a liquid fat is applied to the surface of the pastry strips, a plurality of fat-applied strips are superposed or individual strips are folded to obtain layered products so that the applied fat is between strip layers, the layered products are shaped to obtain shaped products having a portion having a shape for containing an ice confectionery substance and the shaped products are supported for maintaining the shape during a cooking step which provides cooked shaped pastry products which retain their shape without support for containing an ice confectionery substance, a moisture-barrier substance is applied on the cooked shaped portion, and then an ice confectionery substance is introduced into the coated portion.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
In the present invention, layers of very thin pastry, of from 0.2 to 1 mm in thickness, can be brick pastry or filo pastry, strudel pastry or baklava pastry, these last three names in fact denoting the same type of pastry and differing only in their cultural origin. For simplicity, the term “filo pastry” will be used hereinbelow. Filo pastry is commonly used in pastry products of oriental type, such as, for example, baklavas. An important characteristic of this type of pastry is that it contains no sugar in its composition per se.
The term “ice confectionery” used here applies to any ice confectionery, but in particular, sorbet, “sherbet” or milk ice, water ice and ice cream which has been aerated to a greater or lesser extent. Such an article can contain inclusions, in particular marbling or bits or thin flakes, syrup, cooked sugar, fruit pulp, marshmallow, gums, dried or preserved fruit or sweet confectionery such as nougat, truffle or chocolate, where appropriately aerated, or flavoring ingredients, for example spices, alcohols or liqueurs.
Various manufacturing processes are used to manufacture the thin pastry, depending on the nature of the thin pastry used. Thus, brick pastry is cooked on a cylinder from a liquid pastry. Filo pastry is kneaded, rolled out and then dried.
In both cases, a continuous strip of pastry can be produced, which can be cut into the desired shape.
A sequence of one to three operations can be carried out to make the thin pastry, preferably a sequence of the following operations:
a liquid fat is applied, with or without sugar, preferably by spraying onto the upper surface of the piece, and
fat-applied pieces are layered for piece is folded onto so that layers of pastry are superposed, so as to imprison the fat, with or without sugar, between the layers of pastry.
From 2 to 10 layers of pastry, preferably about 6 layers, are thus obtained.
The piece made of thin pastry is then shaped by rolling it up on itself or by rolling it up partially around a mandrel or by stamping in order to give it the desired shape and to from a portion shaped for containing an ice confectionery substance. Depending on the nature of the mandrel, for example cylindrical or circular, oval, rounded and flattened or conical cross-section, a cigar, a tray, a pancake or a cone of circular or oval cross section can thus be made. Shaping can thus be carried out by partial rolling-up, for example of pieces in the shape of round pancakes in order to curve them into a “taco” shape. A dish or a tray serving as a container for the ice cream, generally of half-moon shape, can be formed, for example, by stamping.
Once it has been shaped, a layer of liquid sugar can be applied to the outer surface of the piece of pastry, preferably by spraying.
The impregnated piece of pastry is then taken up on a support for maintaining its shape, and it is then cooked on its support at about 160-200° C. for about 1-15 min. During this cooking, the pastry is made crunchy and its rigidity is ensured. The piece of pastry can be cooked between two heated elements, for example between a female matrix and a male punch.
After cooling, for example to room temperature or to a lower temperature, a moisture-barrier film, for example a fatty composition such as a liquid chocolate or a “compound”, is sprayed onto the part liable to come into contact with the ice cream filling, i,e., the portion shaped for containing an ice confectionery.
The thin cooked pastry is then filled with the ice cream. As a variant, the ice cream filling can be coated with an above barrier film and introduced into the thin cooked pastry.
The thin cooked pastry can also be used as a component of a product such as ice cream sweets, chocolates, bars or cakes in combination with or coated with a coating of chocolate or of “compound”.
The ice confectionery article thus produced differs from the known products by the type of pastry, brick pastry or filo pastry, as a superposition of very thin layers, which has never been used previously in combination with ice cream. This combination gives it particularly long-lasting crunchiness since the pastry confectionery article is particularly resistant to the uptake of moisture over time on account of its constitution. The article also has a complex flavour, giving novel organoleptic sensations associated with the combination of the specific cooked pastry and the ice cream.


REFERENCES:
patent: 4020188 (1977-04-01), Forkner
patent: 4171380 (1979-10-01), Forkner
patent: 4293572 (1981-10-01), Silva et al.
patent: 5182123 (1993-01-01), Edo et al.
patent: 5405626 (1995-04-01), Van der Graaf et al.
patent: 5693355 (1997-12-01), Haas
patent: 0023250 (1980-05-01), None
patent: 2167934 (1986-06-01), None
patent: 63-105632 (1988-05-01), None
patent: 930459 (1993-03-01), None
patent: 9507025 (1995-03-01), None
Martha Stewart's Hors D'oevvres Hand book pp. 296-297; pp. 82

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