GB1587194A - Fibrous protein food products - Google Patents

Fibrous protein food products Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB1587194A
GB1587194A GB36524/76A GB3652476A GB1587194A GB 1587194 A GB1587194 A GB 1587194A GB 36524/76 A GB36524/76 A GB 36524/76A GB 3652476 A GB3652476 A GB 3652476A GB 1587194 A GB1587194 A GB 1587194A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
film
food products
protein
process according
roller die
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
GB36524/76A
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Ernest Scragg and Sons Ltd
Original Assignee
Ernest Scragg and Sons Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Ernest Scragg and Sons Ltd filed Critical Ernest Scragg and Sons Ltd
Priority to GB36524/76A priority Critical patent/GB1587194A/en
Priority to DE19772738541 priority patent/DE2738541A1/en
Priority to FR7726320A priority patent/FR2363287A1/en
Priority to NL7709637A priority patent/NL7709637A/en
Priority to ZA00775310A priority patent/ZA775310B/en
Priority to JP10501477A priority patent/JPS5332152A/en
Priority to IT27214/77A priority patent/IT1086511B/en
Priority to DK392677A priority patent/DK392677A/en
Publication of GB1587194A publication Critical patent/GB1587194A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A23FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS; TREATMENT THEREOF, NOT COVERED BY OTHER CLASSES
    • A23JPROTEIN COMPOSITIONS FOR FOODSTUFFS; WORKING-UP PROTEINS FOR FOODSTUFFS; PHOSPHATIDE COMPOSITIONS FOR FOODSTUFFS
    • A23J3/00Working-up of proteins for foodstuffs
    • A23J3/22Working-up of proteins for foodstuffs by texturising
    • A23J3/225Texturised simulated foods with high protein content
    • A23J3/227Meat-like textured foods
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A23FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS; TREATMENT THEREOF, NOT COVERED BY OTHER CLASSES
    • A23JPROTEIN COMPOSITIONS FOR FOODSTUFFS; WORKING-UP PROTEINS FOR FOODSTUFFS; PHOSPHATIDE COMPOSITIONS FOR FOODSTUFFS
    • A23J3/00Working-up of proteins for foodstuffs
    • A23J3/22Working-up of proteins for foodstuffs by texturising
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A23FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS; TREATMENT THEREOF, NOT COVERED BY OTHER CLASSES
    • A23JPROTEIN COMPOSITIONS FOR FOODSTUFFS; WORKING-UP PROTEINS FOR FOODSTUFFS; PHOSPHATIDE COMPOSITIONS FOR FOODSTUFFS
    • A23J3/00Working-up of proteins for foodstuffs
    • A23J3/22Working-up of proteins for foodstuffs by texturising
    • A23J3/26Working-up of proteins for foodstuffs by texturising using extrusion or expansion
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A23FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS; TREATMENT THEREOF, NOT COVERED BY OTHER CLASSES
    • A23JPROTEIN COMPOSITIONS FOR FOODSTUFFS; WORKING-UP PROTEINS FOR FOODSTUFFS; PHOSPHATIDE COMPOSITIONS FOR FOODSTUFFS
    • A23J3/00Working-up of proteins for foodstuffs
    • A23J3/22Working-up of proteins for foodstuffs by texturising
    • A23J3/28Working-up of proteins for foodstuffs by texturising using coagulation from or in a bath, e.g. spun fibres

Description

(54) FIBROUS PROTEIN FOOD PRODUCTS (71) We, ERNEST SCRAGG & SONS LIMITED, a British Company of P.O. Box 16, Sunderland Street, Macclesfield, Cheshire, do hereby declare the invention, for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement: This invention relates to food products and has for its object to provide protein food products which simulate the texture of meat or other foods, the starting materials including any material which comprises protein.
It is already known that protein from many sources is convertible into products simulating meat or other foods, from starting materials such as groundnuts, soya beans, fish proteins, leaf proteins and casein. Many products are commercially available and are preferred to in general as "vegetable protein" when the source is of vegetable origin.
It is also known to treat protein source material to form a protein/liquid system, and then to form a gel precursor material before converting the precursor material into a chewy gel material.
According to the present invention a protein source material is treated to form an intermediate product of physical characteristics such that the product is formable into a film which is at least temporarily self-sustaining and forgable, the film being passed between a film support member and a rotating forging roller die having its periphery formed with alternate circumferential grooves and ridges.
The intermediate product may be a protein liquid system treated to have the required physical characteristic for film formulation as by adding other materials, such as thixotropic material, of which starch is an example, flour dough or gums, or by control of its water content and the temperature and pressure conditions under which it is formed into a film by extrusion.
The intermediate product may be a gel precursor material convertible into chewy gel material either by heating, or chemically as by immersion and impregnation in a treatment bath.
Heat-convertible gel precursor material may be delivered as a film, from a slot outlet of an extruder, onto a film support member in the form of a heated backing roller, which forms a nip with a grooved forging roller die, so that heat conversion of the gel precursor occurs during the forging step.
Alternatively the gel precursor material is converted chemically into chewy gel material by having a film-receiving backing roller and the forging roller die feeding the profiled film into a treatment bath through which the film runs preferably in a zig-zag path before withdrawal.
The gel precursor material may have the desired physical characteristics imparted to it by additives such as thixotropic materials, flour dough or gums.
The longitudinally grooved film of chewy gel material may be formed into food products simulating meat or other foods in many different ways, and before doing so the film may be wholly or partially coated or impregnated with such additives as colouring materials, flavouring materials and fat. The fat may be applied by running the film through a bath or molten fat.
Furthermore the film may be laminated at any time with one or more webs of other suitable edible materials.
The profiled film may be cut into lengths which are formed into blocks by stacking the lengths in layers and bonding the layers together, as by the coating of fat previously mentioned or by any other suitable binder, the block then being cut into slices across the grooves and ridges of the film layers. Furthermore the somewhat laborious steps of cutting and stacking can be circumvented by delivering the profiled film as by feed rolls onto a "creeper" moving surface such as a conveyor, i.e. a moving surface travelling at a predetermined lower speed than that of the film as it leaves the feed rolls, the object being to layer the film sinuously and with portions of the film overlapping adjacent portions in stack fashion.Thus a continuously advancing stack is formed, which is readily consolidated as by pressure rolls into a laminar structure which could be then fed directly into and through an oven or autoclave for cooking, if desired after repeating the sinuous layering step one or more times to form an advancing stack of predetermined thickness.
Alternatively the film may be rolled up to form bonded rods, with the grooves and ridges extending lengthwise, before cross cutting into slices.
It will be appreciated that present invention resides in the concept of profiling a film of protein material by means of a forging roller die, and is not concerned with methods per se of producing protein/liquid systems, gel precursor materials and chewy gel material, since such methods per se are well known in the art and to be found in text books and other literature, and in patent specification of which British Specification 746 859 is an example.
The invention provides food products of improved texture due to the ribs-and-grooves cross section of the profiled film which forms the basis of the food products, but primarily the invention provides for high production rates to be achieved by extruding and profiling films of considerably width, as by using a single long backing roller and several shorter forging roller dies forming nips with the backing roller and together covering substantially its whole length by being located in one or more series and in staggered overlapping rela tiorrship, the profiled film, with or without aforementioned additives, then being continuously stacked by sinuous layering and the stack continuously cooked so that the whole process is operated in the manner of a continuous production line.
Profiling of the film creates a greater surface area/mass ratio so that the material will dry out more rapidly, and by the same token will de-hydrate more easily when required.
WHAT WE CLAIM IS:- 1. Process for preparing protein food products simulating the texture of meat and other foods, comprising treating protein source material to form an intermediate product of physical characteristics such that the product is formable into a film which is at least temporarily self-sustaining and forgable, and passing the film between a film support member and a rotating forging roller die having its periphery formed with alternate circumferential grooves and ridges.
2. Process according to Claim 1, wherein the film is passed between the rotating forging roller die and a film support member in the form of a rotating heated backing roller which forms a nip with the forging roller die.
3. Process according to Claim 1, wherein the intermediate product is formed into film by extrusion from a slot outlet of an extruder, and the extruded film is delivered onto a rotating heated backing roller which forms a nip with the forging roller die.
4. Process according to Claim 1 wherein the film from the forging roller die is delivered by feed rolls onto a moving surface travelling at a predetermined lower speed than that of the film as it leaves the feed rolls, so that the film is layered sinuously with portions overlapping adjacent portions in stack fashion.
5. Process according to Claim 4 wherein the stack is consolidated as by pressure rolls into a laminar structure.
6. Process according to Claim 1 wherein the film is rolled up to form bonded rods with the grooves and ridges extending lengthwise.
7. Process for preparing protein food products simulating the texture of meat and other foods, substantially as herein described.
8. Protein food products simulating the texture of meat when prepared by the process claimed in any preceding claim.
**WARNING** end of DESC field may overlap start of CLMS **.

Claims (8)

**WARNING** start of CLMS field may overlap end of DESC **. and through an oven or autoclave for cooking, if desired after repeating the sinuous layering step one or more times to form an advancing stack of predetermined thickness. Alternatively the film may be rolled up to form bonded rods, with the grooves and ridges extending lengthwise, before cross cutting into slices. It will be appreciated that present invention resides in the concept of profiling a film of protein material by means of a forging roller die, and is not concerned with methods per se of producing protein/liquid systems, gel precursor materials and chewy gel material, since such methods per se are well known in the art and to be found in text books and other literature, and in patent specification of which British Specification 746 859 is an example. The invention provides food products of improved texture due to the ribs-and-grooves cross section of the profiled film which forms the basis of the food products, but primarily the invention provides for high production rates to be achieved by extruding and profiling films of considerably width, as by using a single long backing roller and several shorter forging roller dies forming nips with the backing roller and together covering substantially its whole length by being located in one or more series and in staggered overlapping rela tiorrship, the profiled film, with or without aforementioned additives, then being continuously stacked by sinuous layering and the stack continuously cooked so that the whole process is operated in the manner of a continuous production line. Profiling of the film creates a greater surface area/mass ratio so that the material will dry out more rapidly, and by the same token will de-hydrate more easily when required. WHAT WE CLAIM IS:-
1. Process for preparing protein food products simulating the texture of meat and other foods, comprising treating protein source material to form an intermediate product of physical characteristics such that the product is formable into a film which is at least temporarily self-sustaining and forgable, and passing the film between a film support member and a rotating forging roller die having its periphery formed with alternate circumferential grooves and ridges.
2. Process according to Claim 1, wherein the film is passed between the rotating forging roller die and a film support member in the form of a rotating heated backing roller which forms a nip with the forging roller die.
3. Process according to Claim 1, wherein the intermediate product is formed into film by extrusion from a slot outlet of an extruder, and the extruded film is delivered onto a rotating heated backing roller which forms a nip with the forging roller die.
4. Process according to Claim 1 wherein the film from the forging roller die is delivered by feed rolls onto a moving surface travelling at a predetermined lower speed than that of the film as it leaves the feed rolls, so that the film is layered sinuously with portions overlapping adjacent portions in stack fashion.
5. Process according to Claim 4 wherein the stack is consolidated as by pressure rolls into a laminar structure.
6. Process according to Claim 1 wherein the film is rolled up to form bonded rods with the grooves and ridges extending lengthwise.
7. Process for preparing protein food products simulating the texture of meat and other foods, substantially as herein described.
8. Protein food products simulating the texture of meat when prepared by the process claimed in any preceding claim.
GB36524/76A 1976-09-03 1976-09-03 Fibrous protein food products Expired GB1587194A (en)

Priority Applications (8)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB36524/76A GB1587194A (en) 1976-09-03 1976-09-03 Fibrous protein food products
DE19772738541 DE2738541A1 (en) 1976-09-03 1977-08-26 METHOD FOR PRODUCING A PROTEIN FOOD
FR7726320A FR2363287A1 (en) 1976-09-03 1977-08-30 PROCESS FOR THE PREPARATION OF PROTEIN FOOD PRODUCTS IMITATING THE TEXTURE OF MEAT
NL7709637A NL7709637A (en) 1976-09-03 1977-09-01 PROCESS FOR PREPARING PROTEIN FOOD PRODUCTS.
ZA00775310A ZA775310B (en) 1976-09-03 1977-09-02 Food products
JP10501477A JPS5332152A (en) 1976-09-03 1977-09-02 Method of producing protein food
IT27214/77A IT1086511B (en) 1976-09-03 1977-09-02 PROCEDURE TO PREPARE PROTEIN FOOD PRODUCTS SIMULATING MEAT
DK392677A DK392677A (en) 1976-09-03 1977-09-02 PROCESSING OF PROTEIN MATERIAL

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB36524/76A GB1587194A (en) 1976-09-03 1976-09-03 Fibrous protein food products

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB1587194A true GB1587194A (en) 1981-04-01

Family

ID=10388942

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB36524/76A Expired GB1587194A (en) 1976-09-03 1976-09-03 Fibrous protein food products

Country Status (8)

Country Link
JP (1) JPS5332152A (en)
DE (1) DE2738541A1 (en)
DK (1) DK392677A (en)
FR (1) FR2363287A1 (en)
GB (1) GB1587194A (en)
IT (1) IT1086511B (en)
NL (1) NL7709637A (en)
ZA (1) ZA775310B (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8293317B2 (en) 2001-10-03 2012-10-23 Fannon John E Puffed protein based snack food

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8293317B2 (en) 2001-10-03 2012-10-23 Fannon John E Puffed protein based snack food

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
JPS5332152A (en) 1978-03-27
NL7709637A (en) 1978-03-07
FR2363287A1 (en) 1978-03-31
DK392677A (en) 1978-03-04
ZA775310B (en) 1978-08-30
DE2738541A1 (en) 1978-03-09
IT1086511B (en) 1985-05-28

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4358468A (en) Process for preparing a marbled meat pet food
US3934050A (en) Process for the manufacture of a cooked fibrous restructured meat product
DE1300430B (en) Process for the production of shaped pieces from flour dough
DE2520596A1 (en) METHOD FOR MANUFACTURING CHIP-LIKE PRODUCTS
US5149555A (en) Method for forming an open textured product
EP0040361B1 (en) Method for producing dried dough adapted for instant use, system for implementing the method, and the product obtained thereby
US4824687A (en) Process for manufactring fabricated crab leg meat
KR980000064A (en) Food production method by extrusion and apparatus for carrying out the method
US4557940A (en) Fish slurry processing method
KR100361221B1 (en) Method and apparatus for linking coextruded foodstuffs
US20220151282A1 (en) Method and device for 3d-printing of food products
HUP9701126A2 (en) Process for the preparation of a foodstuff by extrusion
US3413177A (en) Apparatus for making laminated cellular panel
US4526795A (en) Method for producing croissants
GB1587194A (en) Fibrous protein food products
JPS62259565A (en) Boiled fish paste like crab leg meat and production thereof
US3772108A (en) Method of producing fur products and a device for carrying out the method
EP0554762A1 (en) Method of cutting dough to obtain different forms of pellets
JP2700167B2 (en) Manufacturing method of crab-flavored kneaded product
EP3790398A1 (en) Apparatus for production of snack food pellets
JPS6114786B2 (en)
JPS6144455B2 (en)
JPS6387962A (en) Production device for linear ground animal or fish meat and production of food having fibrous feeling from said ground animal or fish meat
JPS55150881A (en) Preparation of paste product like crab leg meat
JP2832161B2 (en) Split oil and fat food and method for producing the same

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PS Patent sealed
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee