US20090004357A1 - Methods and Apparatus to Mechanically Reduce Food Products into Irregular Shapes and Sizes - Google Patents

Methods and Apparatus to Mechanically Reduce Food Products into Irregular Shapes and Sizes Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20090004357A1
US20090004357A1 US12/206,551 US20655108A US2009004357A1 US 20090004357 A1 US20090004357 A1 US 20090004357A1 US 20655108 A US20655108 A US 20655108A US 2009004357 A1 US2009004357 A1 US 2009004357A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
cheese
knife
crumbles
cutting
knife assembly
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.)
Abandoned
Application number
US12/206,551
Inventor
Michael S. McCormick
Donald Atkinson
Russell Butalla
Carl Yessa
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.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
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 Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US12/206,551 priority Critical patent/US20090004357A1/en
Publication of US20090004357A1 publication Critical patent/US20090004357A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B26HAND CUTTING TOOLS; CUTTING; SEVERING
    • B26DCUTTING; DETAILS COMMON TO MACHINES FOR PERFORATING, PUNCHING, CUTTING-OUT, STAMPING-OUT OR SEVERING
    • B26D3/00Cutting work characterised by the nature of the cut made; Apparatus therefor
    • B26D3/18Cutting work characterised by the nature of the cut made; Apparatus therefor to obtain cubes or the like
    • B26D3/22Cutting work characterised by the nature of the cut made; Apparatus therefor to obtain cubes or the like using rotating knives
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01JMANUFACTURE OF DAIRY PRODUCTS
    • A01J27/00After-treatment of cheese; Coating the cheese
    • A01J27/04Milling or recasting cheese
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B26HAND CUTTING TOOLS; CUTTING; SEVERING
    • B26DCUTTING; DETAILS COMMON TO MACHINES FOR PERFORATING, PUNCHING, CUTTING-OUT, STAMPING-OUT OR SEVERING
    • B26D11/00Combinations of several similar cutting apparatus
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B26HAND CUTTING TOOLS; CUTTING; SEVERING
    • B26DCUTTING; DETAILS COMMON TO MACHINES FOR PERFORATING, PUNCHING, CUTTING-OUT, STAMPING-OUT OR SEVERING
    • B26D9/00Cutting apparatus combined with punching or perforating apparatus or with dissimilar cutting apparatus
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T83/00Cutting
    • Y10T83/04Processes
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T83/00Cutting
    • Y10T83/242With means to clean work or tool

Definitions

  • This disclosure relates generally to methods and apparatus for producing irregularly shaped and sized food pieces, more particularly irregularly shaped and sized cheese crumbles.
  • Cutting or slicing systems are often used for producing uniform and/or predetermined shapes and sizes of cheese.
  • Bulk cheese produces can be cut into evenly sized cubes or shreds suitable for consumer use.
  • An apparatus for cutting cheese into cubes can utilize small spaced wires to cut through larger blocks of cheese or knives to cut slices into cube shapes of generally predetermined sizes and shapes.
  • Cheese shredders can utilize a grating device into which cubes or blocks of cheese are placed and subsequently grated into numerous strips or shreds of generally predetermined sizes and shapes.
  • Irregularly shaped and sized cheese pieces, or crumbles can be used with various types of foods, such as in cooking or as a topping.
  • Certain types of cheeses naturally tend to crumble with a small degree of working. These types of naturally crumbly cheeses, such as feta and blue cheeses, are often have a higher acid and salt content that makes them softer.
  • the primary blade assembly can have a single blade for cutting the cheese in a transverse machine feed direction and the secondary blade assembly can have a plurality of blades for cutting the cheese in a parallel machine feed direction. Due to the malleable texture of the soft cheeses having higher acid and salt content, further processing can be unnecessary, and the cheese tends to naturally crumble or fall apart into small, irregularly shaped and sized cheese crumbles following cutting by the two blade assemblies.
  • the typical cheese cutting apparatus having two knife assemblies does not produce suitable cheese crumbles from cheeses having harder consistencies, such as semi-soft cheeses, because of the lower acid and salt content of the cheese which can make such cheese more firm and prevent natural crumbling.
  • the food product may comprise cheeses, such as semi-soft or natural cheese including types of cheddar, mozzarella, Monterey jack, Colby, pepper jack, provolone, Swiss, Mexican cheeses, low fat versions of such cheeses, and any other combinations of two or more varieties.
  • the apparatus preferably includes five knife assemblies that combine to reduce bulk food products, such as bulk cheese products, into irregularly shaped and sized food product crumbles in a high-speed commercial manufacturing process.
  • the apparatus includes one or more augers having flights configured for working or reshaping peripheral edges of the food product during the manufacturing process.
  • a cutting apparatus for use in a high speed commercial manufacturing operation for producing a regular shaped food product crumbles, such as cheese crumbles.
  • the apparatus includes a first, second, third, fourth and fifth knife assembly.
  • the first knife assembly has at least one knife blade positioned at generally transverse to the feed direction to cut a slice from a bulk food product.
  • the second knife assembly has a plurality of knife blade positioned generally parallel to the feed direction to cut a plurality of strips from the slice.
  • the third knife assembly has a least one knife blade positioned generally perpendicular to the feed direction to cut a plurality of food product portions from the plurality of strips.
  • a fourth knife assembly having at least one knife blade positioned generally transverse to the feed direction to cut a plurality of a regular food product pieces from the plurality of food product portions.
  • the fifth knife assembly has a plurality of knife blade positioned generally parallel to the feed direction to cut a plurality of a regular shaped food product crumbles from the plurality of a regular food product pieces.
  • At least one of the second and fifth knife assemblies may comprise a plurality of knife blades mounted to a shaft for rotation therewith.
  • the spacing between a first pair of adjacent knife blades may be different than the spacing between a second pair of knife blades on either the second or fifth knife assembly.
  • the difference is spacing between the knife blades of the second knife assembly may result in strips having different widths.
  • the difference in spacing between the knife blades of the fifth knife assembly may result in food product crumbles having different widths.
  • the third knife assembly may comprise a plurality of knife blades mounted to a shaft for rotation therewith.
  • a method is providing for producing irregular shaped food product crumbles using a food product cutting apparatus.
  • the method includes cutting a slice of bulk food product using a first knife assembly.
  • the method also includes cutting a plurality of strips from the slice using a second knife assembly.
  • the method further includes cutting a plurality of food product portions, which may be generally rectangular, from the plurality of strips using a third knife assembly.
  • the method also includes cutting a plurality of a regular food product pieces from the plurality of food product portions using a fourth knife assembly.
  • a fourth knife assembly is disposed after the first, second and third knife assemblies.
  • the method also includes cutting a plurality of a regular shaped food product crumbles from the plurality of a regular food product pieces using a fifth knife assembly.
  • the method may include cutting the food product during the manufacturing process using knife assemblies having the configurations described above with respect to the apparatus for use in producing irregular shaped food product crumbles.
  • the method of producing a regular shaped food product crumbles may further include the steps of feeding the slice in a feed direction to the second knife assembly in a generally planar orientation, feeding the strips in the feed direction to the third knife assembly in a generally planar orientation, and feeding the generally rectangular food product portions in the feed direction to the fourth knife assembly in a generally non-planar orientation.
  • the method of producing a regular shaped food product crumbles may include the steps of transporting the generally rectangular food product portions between the third and fourth knife assemblies using an auger having off-set flights. During the transporting of the generally rectangular food product portions using the auger, the edges of the generally rectangular food product portions may be worked using edges of the off-set flights.
  • the irregular shaped food product crumbles may be placed in a tumble drum and an anti-cake agent may be added to the food product crumbles in the tumble drum.
  • the food product crumbles may be weighed using a weighing mechanism. The weighing mechanism may dispense a predetermined weight of irregular shaped food product crumbles into a flexible package.
  • a method and apparatus of working peripheral edges of cut food product pieces to reshape the food product pieces, such as cheese includes advancing food product through an auger using a plurality of flights of the auger. The method also includes working the edges of the cut food product pieces using edges of the flights. The edges of the flights are formed between adjacent flights off-set by a predetermined amount. In one instance, the auger may comprise a plurality of flights that are off-set from each other by about 90°.
  • FIG. 1A is a flow chart of a method for producing irregularly sized and shaped cheese crumbles
  • FIG. 1B is a flow diagram of an apparatus for producing irregularly sized and shaped cheese crumbles
  • FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic side elevation view of an apparatus for producing irregularly sized and shaped cheese crumbles
  • FIG. 3 is a perspective view of a circular knife assembly for use in the apparatus of FIG. 2 ;
  • FIG. 4 is a view of an auger depicting only the screw conveyor portion with inverted flights
  • FIGS. 5A-5G are idealized perspective views of cheese before and after cutting by the apparatus of FIG. 2 ;
  • FIG. 6 is a chart showing cheese crumbles size distribution for cheese crumbles made using the apparatus and methods disclosed herein.
  • FIGS. 1-6 Methods and apparatus are disclosed herein and illustrated in FIGS. 1-6 for manufacturing irregularly shaped and sized products, and in particular cheese irregularly shaped and sized crumbles from cheeses, such as semi-soft cheeses including types of cheddar, mozzarella, Monterey jack, Colby, pepper jack, provolone, Swiss, Mexican cheeses and any other combinations of two or more varieties.
  • cheeses such as semi-soft cheeses including types of cheddar, mozzarella, Monterey jack, Colby, pepper jack, provolone, Swiss, Mexican cheeses and any other combinations of two or more varieties.
  • food products, such as cheese manufacturing using the methods and apparatus described herein.
  • the apparatus preferably includes five knife assemblies that combine to reduce bulk cheese products into irregularly shaped and sized cheese crumbles in a high-speed commercial manufacturing process.
  • the apparatus includes one or more augers having flights configured for working or reshaping peripheral edges of the cheese during the manufacturing process.
  • Bulk cheese blocks are first reduced into smaller, generally cube-shaped cheese portions, as shown in the flow chart in FIG. 1A , using typical bulk cheese reduction equipment.
  • the cube-shaped cheese portions are preferably at least about 3′′ ⁇ 3′′ ⁇ 3′′ or less, and more preferably are reduced to at least about 2′′ ⁇ 2′′ ⁇ 2′′.
  • the cheese varieties used may be cheddar cheeses (sharp, medium, mild), mozzarella, Monterey jack, reduced fat Monterey jack, reduced fat cheddar, Colby, reduced fat Colby, pepper jack, Mexican cheeses, provolone, Swiss, and any other natural or semi-soft cheese that has a lower acid and salt content such that its consistency is solid and firm and does not readily crumble, as compared to typical soft cheeses having higher acid and salt content, such as feta and blue cheeses.
  • the cheese cubes are transferred to an incline conveyor which transports the cheese to the cutting system in a process feed direction or downstream direction, where this direction is in the general direction of movement of the cheese through the cutting system at a particular point in the process.
  • the cutting system consists of five knife assemblies used in series.
  • the conveyor first transports the cheese cubes to the first cutting device or cutting machine, which consists of the first three knife assemblies.
  • the first cutting machine preferably produces cheese into preferably, though not necessarily, generally rectangular portions.
  • a second conveying device such as a conveyor, including a bucket conveyer, or an auger, as will be described in greater detail herein, transfers the cheese from the first cutting device to a second cutting device having the fourth and fifth knife assemblies.
  • the second cutting device produces cheese in a crumbled form.
  • a preferred type of cutting device is an Urschel Model RA-D, manufactured by Urschel Laboratories, Inc., Valparaiso, Ind., U.S.A., which may be modified in accordance with
  • Further processing of the cheese may include conveying with an auger, transferring the cheese to a tumble drum to apply an anti-cake agent and an antimicrobial agent, such as Natamycin.
  • the resulting cheese crumbles may be weighed in small bulks with the various bulks combining to provide for predetermined quantity weights or weight ranges for packaging into individual packages for retail sale.
  • the packages are preferably of the type disclosed in the U.S. patent application entitled “FLEXIBLE PACKAGES” and filed on May 3, 2005, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
  • the packages may be made using the methods and apparatus disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,357,914; 6,688,079 and 6,688,080, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
  • the cheese cubes are fed into a hopper on the top of the cutting device and fall into a centrifugal drum 1 which contains numerous impellers 2 attached around the interior circumference of the drum 1 .
  • the cheese cubes are generally held in place by these impellers 2 and by centrifugal force as the centrifugal drum 1 rotates.
  • the cheese cube is urged against a first knife assembly 3 comprising a knife blade orientated generally transverse to the feed direction of the apparatus, i.e., not precisely parallel, to cut a slice of cheese from the cheese cube.
  • Each revolution of the drum 1 generally results in the first knife assembly 3 cutting a slice for the cheese cubes.
  • the slice thickness may vary between approximately 1/16 inches and 1 ⁇ 2 inches, and preferably from between about 5/16 inches to 1 ⁇ 2 inches.
  • the thickness of the slice can be varied by changing the gap between the slicing knife 3 and the centrifugal drum 1 or by adjusting the angle of the slicing knife 3 .
  • the cheese slice then falls between a feed spindle 5 and the feed drum 4 , each of which is adapted for rotation above an axis generally transverse to the feed direction of the apparatus.
  • the second knife assembly 6 comprises a plurality of circular knife blades 22 mounted on a rotatable shaft 25 and are positioned in a direction that is generally parallel, i.e., not perpendicular, to the process feed direction.
  • the circular knife 6 cuts the cheese slices into strips.
  • the circular knife blades 22 are spaced to fit into grooves located on the feed drum 4 to minimize interference between the blades 22 and the feed drum 4 .
  • the feed drum 4 and/or feed spindle 5 may contain feed protrusions or spikes on their circumference to assist in advancing the cheese.
  • the feed protrusions of the spindle fit into gaps between the circular knives 6 and in the grooves on the feed drum 4 to minimize interference.
  • the second knife assembly 6 has a plurality of blades 22 that are unevenly spaced apart for cutting the cheese slice into strips of varying widths.
  • the second knife assembly 6 may consist of between one and fourteen blades 22 , and preferably fourteen blades 22 , depending upon the number of strips desired.
  • the fourteen blades in the circular knives 6 having different spacings therebetween to cut the slices into strips having varying widths. As illustrated in FIG.
  • the first spacer 23 creates a gap or space of length ‘a,’ and a second spacer 24 creates a gap of length ‘b.’
  • the spacers 23 , 24 can be alternated every other one, such that the spacing between blades 22 is also alternating between a space of length ‘a’ and ‘b.’
  • the blade spacing may be varied from 1 ⁇ 8 inches to 1 inch, and more preferably from 3 ⁇ 8 inches to 1 ⁇ 2 inches. Preferably not all fourteen blades will be at the same spacing.
  • seven blades may be spaced at 3 ⁇ 8 inches, or designated by a spacer 23 with a distance of ‘a’ between blades 22 , with the remaining six blades at 1 ⁇ 2 inches apart, or designated by spacers 24 with a distance of ‘b’ between blades 22 .
  • seven blades spaced at 1 ⁇ 2 inches and six blades spaced at 3 ⁇ 8 inches, or any other combination may be used.
  • the cheese strips will thus vary in width from either 3 ⁇ 8 inches or 1 ⁇ 2 inches depending on the spacing that was set between the circular knife blades 22 .
  • the third knife assembly includes one or more crosscut knife blades mounted on a rotatable shaft.
  • the blades may contain small teeth or sharp points along their periphery.
  • the blades of the crosscut knife 7 may be configured to fit into the grooves on the feed drum 4 .
  • the crosscut knife 7 may have a plurality of blades that are equidistantly spaced apart and contain anywhere from one to five knives on it. There are preferably four or five knife blades and the spacing or distance between the knives is equidistant and may vary between 1 ⁇ 8 inches to 1 1 ⁇ 2 inches.
  • the spacing between all four knives is set to 3 ⁇ 4 inches and if five knives are used the spacing between them is set to 1 ⁇ 2 inches.
  • four knives are used with the spacing set at 3 ⁇ 4 inches.
  • the crosscut knife 7 cuts the cheese strips into smaller generally rectangular cheese portions that are of various sizes; some are cube-like in shape and others are more rectangular.
  • the apparatus includes a conveying mechanism 15 for transporting the cheese portions to the second cutting device.
  • the conveying mechanism may comprise a conveyor.
  • the conveying mechanism comprises a screw auger having a plurality of flights 30 mounted to a square or round shaft.
  • the flights may each extend, for example, about 360 or 720 degrees.
  • One or more, and preferably all, of the flights are offset from adjacent flights, such as by about 90 degrees to expose a pair of edges 32 of the flights 30 , as illustrated in FIG. 4 .
  • the flights are arranged such that the screw surfaces 34 for advancing the food product are non-continuous.
  • the flights may be formed of a food grade plastic and housed in a metal, such as stainless steel, bin.
  • the flights 30 advance the cheese portions in the feed direction while the edges 32 of the auger flights 30 , and the gaps therebetween, work the edges and/or peripheral sides of the cheese portions to soften or smooth out the cheese portions.
  • the flights are approximately ten inch sections of the screw conveyor that can be disassembled from one another and reassembled. When reassembled, these sections, or flights, are offset from each other by rotating the flight one-quarter turn in either direction along the shaft of the conveyor such that the flights are in slightly inverted positions. Every other flight section is offset by a one-quarter turn along the shaft, while the remaining flights are placed in a common direction along the shaft.
  • the inverted flights create a resistance to flow because of the inverted positions cause the cheese portions to rub against each other and the surface of the auger bin, thereby causing the cheese portions to be softened or rounded off in appearance.
  • the residence time of the cheese inside the auger is between about eight to about twenty seconds, more preferably approximately fifteen seconds or less.
  • a top cover of the auger may be removable, with openings in the bottom and the top sections for feeding the cheese pieces into the auger and for pushing the pieces out of the auger, respectively.
  • An example of an auger used may be seven feet long set at an inclined angle of twenty-two degrees and with a seven inch diameter screw.
  • the second cutting device is made up of two knife assemblies, the fourth and fifth knife assembles 10 and 13 .
  • the fourth knife assembly is similar to the first knife assembly and the fifth knife assembly is similar to the second knife assembly, as discussed in greater detail above.
  • the generally rectangular cheese portions from the first machine are fed into the hopper of the second machine and enter the centrifugal drum 8 . From there the pieces encounter the slicing knife 10 , which instead of slicing just a single piece of generally planar cheese as in the first cutting device, now may be cutting a plurality of pieces at once and in a plurality of different orientations, such that when the slices are made a number of different size slices will be cut at the same time.
  • the second cutting machine creates more random and irregular slices that differ in size and shape than the first machine. After creating a plurality of irregular cheese pieces, the pieces are further cut by the circular knife 13 .
  • the fourth knife assembly 13 of the second cutting device cuts a plurality of pieces into more pieces that have different, irregular shaped and sized crumbles. Variations in the blade spacing of the second and fifth knife assembles can change the size of the resulting cheese crumbles.
  • the cheese pieces may be passed through a second auger in order to smooth out and shape the peripheral edges of the cut pieces, similar to the auger described above.
  • a second auger in order to smooth out and shape the peripheral edges of the cut pieces, similar to the auger described above.
  • it can be suitable to use only one of the augers depending upon the type of food product crumbles to be produced.
  • a dry powder dispenser or feeder adds an anticake agent to the cheese crumbles as they are being transferred along a conveyor. After the anticake is applied, the cheese crumbles are transferred into a tumble drum, which mixes the food products inside while minimizing the damage to the product.
  • An example of a tumble drum used in the process is inclined at a 5 degree angle, is 68 inches long and has a residence time from about 12 seconds to about 24 seconds, more preferably about 17 seconds.
  • Dry powder dispensers and liquid spray applicators may also be combined with the tumble drum for coating products inside of the drum with anticake agent and/or mold inhibitors.
  • a liquid spray applicator can add a mold inhibitor to the tumble drum.
  • an anticake agent is a solution made up of 69.99% potato starch, 20% cellulose powder, 10% calcium sulfate, and 0.01% sodium aluminum sulfate.
  • FIG. 1B illustrates an arrangement of equipment and shows the two cutting machines 14 , 16 which are separated by either an auger or a conveyor 15 .
  • the second cutting machine 16 there is another auger or conveyor 17 .
  • the cheese crumbles are transferred from the auger or conveyor 17 onto an inclined conveyor 18 (it is only used if the auger is used at reference numeral 17 ) where an anticake agent is applied.
  • the crumbles are then fed into a tumble drum 19 where a mold inhibitor is also added. From the tumble drum 19 the crumbles are weighed at bucket scales 20 and packaged 21 .
  • FIGS. 5A-5G show idealized diagrams of the different cheese sizes at various stages of the cutting process.
  • the cheese is initially fed into the first cutting machine in small cubes of cheese of at least 3′′ ⁇ 3′′ ⁇ 3′′ or less. After the cheese cube passes through the first knife, it is cut into a single slice, as shown at FIG. 5B . Then the slice is cut by the second knife which cuts the cheese into strips or rectangles of varying width, as shown in FIG. 5C , and designating the different widths by ‘a’ and ‘b.’ The width of the strips is equivalent to the spacing of the knives in FIG. 3 .
  • a spacer of length ‘a’ will create a strip of width ‘a,’ and similarly a spacer of length ‘b’ creates a strip of width ‘b.’
  • the cheese strips have been cut by the third knife and the cuts of the knife create generally rectangular cheese portions. Then the cheese portions may pass through an auger or conveyor and exit as a random clump or bunch of cheese, as shown in FIG. 5E . The clumps of cheese then pass through the fourth knife and the clumps are sliced by the knife which yields multiple slices of irregular cheese pieces, as shown in FIG. 5F . Finally, the cheese pieces are cut by the fifth knife and result in irregular sized and shaped cheese crumbles, as in FIG. 5G .
  • the final size of the irregular cheese crumbles preferably range in size from about 1/16 inches to about 1 ⁇ 2 inches, more particularly from about 3/16 inches to about 3 ⁇ 8 inches. As depicted in the graph of FIG. 6 , about 75% of the cheese crumbles manufactured according to one test using the apparatus and methods described hereinabove were between 4.75 ⁇ 4.75 mm and 9.5 mm ⁇ 9.5 mm.
  • Mozzarella cheese is precut into 2′′ ⁇ 2′′ ⁇ 2′′ cubes and is fed into a first Urschel RA-D cutting machine, manufactured by Urschel Laboratories, Inc., Valparaiso, Ind., U.S.A. All three cutting knives are utilized in the machine for the first pass of the cheese cubes through the machine.
  • the slicing knife had a gap setting of 3 ⁇ 8 inches
  • the circular knives consisted of thirteen blades, seven set at a 3 ⁇ 8 inch gap and six set at a 1 ⁇ 2 inch gap.
  • the final knife, the crosscut knife consisted of four knives set at a 3 ⁇ 4 inch gap.
  • the different size cheese strips are then placed on a conveyor and enter into the second Urschel RA-D cutting machine for the second pass of cutting.
  • the second Urschel machine consists of only two knives, the slicing knife and the circular knife.
  • the slicing knife and circular knives are set at the same settings as in the first Urschel machine.
  • the cheese strips are cut into irregular pieces with different shapes and sizes as they pass through the second machine.
  • the cheese pieces are sent into an auger with inverted flights and inclined at an angle of 25 degrees, which rounds out the edges of the cheese pieces. Upon exiting the auger the cheese pieces are placed onto a conveyor belt.
  • an anticake blend made up of a 1.75% custom anticake solution is added to the cheese pieces.
  • the cheese pieces are then placed into a tumble drum where natamycin is added at a concentration of 1.2% and the drum is rotated to mix everything together. After passing through the tumble drum the cheese pieces are weighed and packaged. The final product of cheese pieces are irregularly shaped and sized mozzarella cheese crumbles that have a more natural cut appearance.
  • Mozzarella cheese is cut similarly to the steps in example 1 , except that the slicing knife used is set at a gap of 5/16 inches, the remaining knives are as in example 1 .
  • the initial temperature of the cheese was at 38° F. when fed into both Urschel cutting machines.
  • the cheese was fed into the first Urschel machine through a feed hopper and the cheese was fed into the second machine through the hopper at a feed rate of 4000 lb/hr.
  • Anticake agent was added to the cheese pieces after exiting the second machine at an amount of 0.346 lbs of 1.75% custom anticake agent.
  • the residence time in the tumble drum was 5 minutes. The results were similar to those in example 1, with irregularly shaped and sized mozzarella cheese being produced.
  • Mild Cheddar cheese is precut into 2′′ ⁇ 2′′ ⁇ 2′′ cubes for a total amount of fifteen pounds of cheese.
  • the same knife set up as in example 1 for mozzarella is used for the mild cheddar.
  • the temperature of the cheese was about 38° F.
  • the cheese was fed into the first Urschel machine through a feed hopper and the cheese was fed into the second machine through the hopper at a feed rate of 4000 lb/hr. Again the crosscut knife was removed from the second machine. Irregular sized and shaped mild cheddar cheese crumbles was produced.
  • a three cheese mix was made comprising 50% Monterey jack cheese, 25% mild cheddar, and 25% Colby cheese, and with the cheese precut into 2′′ ⁇ 2′′ ⁇ 2′′ cubes. All three cheeses were blended into the Urschel RA-D machine to make a mixture of the three cheeses. The final total weight was 20 pounds; 10 pounds of Monterrey jack cheese and 5 pounds each of Colby and mild cheddar. The feed rate of the cheese was 4000 lb/hr. The knives were set up as in example 2. The samples were treated with 0.59 lbs of 1.75% custom anticake agent prior to entering the tumble drum and the residence time in the tumble drum was 5 minutes. The final product was irregularly sized and shaped mixed cheese crumbles.
  • a two cheese mix was made comprising half of 2% Monterey jack cheese and half of 2% Colby cheese, with the cheese being precut into 2′′ ⁇ 2′′ ⁇ 2′′ cubes.
  • the two cheeses were blended into the Urschel machine to make a mixture of the two cheeses, with one cube of Monterey jack being fed for every one cube of Colby cheese.
  • the knives were set up as in example 2. Temperature was kept at 38° F.
  • the feed into the hopper for the second machine was 4000 lb/hr. After the cheese passed through the second machine, 0.63 lbs of a 1.75% custom anticake agent was added. The result was irregularly sized and shaped mixed cheese.
  • Sharp cheddar cheese was precut into 2′′ ⁇ 2′′ ⁇ 2′′ cubes.
  • the knives in both cutting machines were set up as in example 2.
  • the temperature was maintained at about 38° F.
  • the cubes were fed into the feed hopper of the first machine and then into the feed hopper of the second machine at a feed rate of 4000 lb/hr. After passing through the second machine, 0.31 lbs of 1.75% custom anticake agent was added to the cheese. Then the cheese was sent to a tumble drum where it had a residence time of about five minutes. The results were irregularly sized and shaped sharp cheddar cheese.

Landscapes

  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Forests & Forestry (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Animal Husbandry (AREA)
  • Environmental Sciences (AREA)
  • Dairy Products (AREA)

Abstract

Apparatus and methods of using the apparatus for manufacturing irregularly shaped and sized products, and in particular cheese irregularly shaped and sized crumbles from cheeses, such as semi-soft cheeses including types of cheddar, mozzarella, Monterey jack, Colby, pepper jack, provolone, Swiss, Mexican cheeses and any other combinations of two or more varieties. The apparatus preferably includes five knife assemblies that combine to reduce bulk cheese products into irregularly shaped and sized cheese crumbles in a high-speed commercial manufacturing process. In addition, the apparatus includes one or more augers having flights configured for working or reshaping peripheral edges of the cheese during the manufacturing process.

Description

    FIELD
  • This disclosure relates generally to methods and apparatus for producing irregularly shaped and sized food pieces, more particularly irregularly shaped and sized cheese crumbles.
  • BACKGROUND
  • Cutting or slicing systems are often used for producing uniform and/or predetermined shapes and sizes of cheese. Bulk cheese produces can be cut into evenly sized cubes or shreds suitable for consumer use. An apparatus for cutting cheese into cubes can utilize small spaced wires to cut through larger blocks of cheese or knives to cut slices into cube shapes of generally predetermined sizes and shapes. Cheese shredders can utilize a grating device into which cubes or blocks of cheese are placed and subsequently grated into numerous strips or shreds of generally predetermined sizes and shapes.
  • Irregularly shaped and sized cheese pieces, or crumbles, can be used with various types of foods, such as in cooking or as a topping. Certain types of cheeses naturally tend to crumble with a small degree of working. These types of naturally crumbly cheeses, such as feta and blue cheeses, are often have a higher acid and salt content that makes them softer. To produce cheese crumbles from a block or cube of soft cheeses having higher acid and salt content, the cheese is passed through a cutting machine with two blades assemblies. The primary blade assembly can have a single blade for cutting the cheese in a transverse machine feed direction and the secondary blade assembly can have a plurality of blades for cutting the cheese in a parallel machine feed direction. Due to the malleable texture of the soft cheeses having higher acid and salt content, further processing can be unnecessary, and the cheese tends to naturally crumble or fall apart into small, irregularly shaped and sized cheese crumbles following cutting by the two blade assemblies.
  • The typical cheese cutting apparatus having two knife assemblies does not produce suitable cheese crumbles from cheeses having harder consistencies, such as semi-soft cheeses, because of the lower acid and salt content of the cheese which can make such cheese more firm and prevent natural crumbling.
  • SUMMARY
  • Methods and apparatus are disclosed for manufacturing irregularly shaped and sized food product crumbles, along with food product crumbles made according to the methods and with the apparatus described herein. The food product may comprise cheeses, such as semi-soft or natural cheese including types of cheddar, mozzarella, Monterey jack, Colby, pepper jack, provolone, Swiss, Mexican cheeses, low fat versions of such cheeses, and any other combinations of two or more varieties. The apparatus preferably includes five knife assemblies that combine to reduce bulk food products, such as bulk cheese products, into irregularly shaped and sized food product crumbles in a high-speed commercial manufacturing process. In addition, the apparatus includes one or more augers having flights configured for working or reshaping peripheral edges of the food product during the manufacturing process.
  • A cutting apparatus is provided for use in a high speed commercial manufacturing operation for producing a regular shaped food product crumbles, such as cheese crumbles. The apparatus includes a first, second, third, fourth and fifth knife assembly. The first knife assembly has at least one knife blade positioned at generally transverse to the feed direction to cut a slice from a bulk food product. The second knife assembly has a plurality of knife blade positioned generally parallel to the feed direction to cut a plurality of strips from the slice. The third knife assembly has a least one knife blade positioned generally perpendicular to the feed direction to cut a plurality of food product portions from the plurality of strips. A fourth knife assembly is provided having at least one knife blade positioned generally transverse to the feed direction to cut a plurality of a regular food product pieces from the plurality of food product portions. The fifth knife assembly has a plurality of knife blade positioned generally parallel to the feed direction to cut a plurality of a regular shaped food product crumbles from the plurality of a regular food product pieces.
  • At least one of the first, third and fourth knife assemblies includes at least one knife blade oriented in a generally transverse direction to the feed direction of the food product cutting apparatus. At least one of the second and fifth knife assemblies comprises at least one knife blade oriented in a generally parallel direction to the feed direction of the food product cutting apparatus. Preferably, though not necessarily, each of the first, third and fourth knife assemblies comprises at least one knife blade oriented in a generally transverse direction to the feed direction of the food product cutting apparatus. Preferably, though not necessarily, each of the second and fifth knife assemblies comprises a plurality of knife blades, such as circular blades oriented in a generally parallel direction to the feed direction of the food product cutting apparatus.
  • At least one of the second and fifth knife assemblies may comprise a plurality of knife blades mounted to a shaft for rotation therewith. The spacing between a first pair of adjacent knife blades may be different than the spacing between a second pair of knife blades on either the second or fifth knife assembly. The difference is spacing between the knife blades of the second knife assembly may result in strips having different widths. Similarly, the difference in spacing between the knife blades of the fifth knife assembly may result in food product crumbles having different widths. The third knife assembly may comprise a plurality of knife blades mounted to a shaft for rotation therewith.
  • A method is providing for producing irregular shaped food product crumbles using a food product cutting apparatus. The method includes cutting a slice of bulk food product using a first knife assembly. The method also includes cutting a plurality of strips from the slice using a second knife assembly. The method further includes cutting a plurality of food product portions, which may be generally rectangular, from the plurality of strips using a third knife assembly. The method also includes cutting a plurality of a regular food product pieces from the plurality of food product portions using a fourth knife assembly. A fourth knife assembly is disposed after the first, second and third knife assemblies. The method also includes cutting a plurality of a regular shaped food product crumbles from the plurality of a regular food product pieces using a fifth knife assembly.
  • The method may include cutting the food product during the manufacturing process using knife assemblies having the configurations described above with respect to the apparatus for use in producing irregular shaped food product crumbles.
  • The method of producing a regular shaped food product crumbles may further include the steps of feeding the slice in a feed direction to the second knife assembly in a generally planar orientation, feeding the strips in the feed direction to the third knife assembly in a generally planar orientation, and feeding the generally rectangular food product portions in the feed direction to the fourth knife assembly in a generally non-planar orientation.
  • The method of producing a regular shaped food product crumbles may include the steps of transporting the generally rectangular food product portions between the third and fourth knife assemblies using an auger having off-set flights. During the transporting of the generally rectangular food product portions using the auger, the edges of the generally rectangular food product portions may be worked using edges of the off-set flights.
  • Further manufacturing processes may be performed on the food product crumbles produced using the apparatus and methods described herein. For example, the irregular shaped food product crumbles may be placed in a tumble drum and an anti-cake agent may be added to the food product crumbles in the tumble drum. In another example, the food product crumbles may be weighed using a weighing mechanism. The weighing mechanism may dispense a predetermined weight of irregular shaped food product crumbles into a flexible package.
  • In another aspect, a method and apparatus of working peripheral edges of cut food product pieces to reshape the food product pieces, such as cheese, is provided. The method includes advancing food product through an auger using a plurality of flights of the auger. The method also includes working the edges of the cut food product pieces using edges of the flights. The edges of the flights are formed between adjacent flights off-set by a predetermined amount. In one instance, the auger may comprise a plurality of flights that are off-set from each other by about 90°.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • FIG. 1A is a flow chart of a method for producing irregularly sized and shaped cheese crumbles;
  • FIG. 1B is a flow diagram of an apparatus for producing irregularly sized and shaped cheese crumbles;
  • FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic side elevation view of an apparatus for producing irregularly sized and shaped cheese crumbles;
  • FIG. 3 is a perspective view of a circular knife assembly for use in the apparatus of FIG. 2;
  • FIG. 4 is a view of an auger depicting only the screw conveyor portion with inverted flights;
  • FIGS. 5A-5G are idealized perspective views of cheese before and after cutting by the apparatus of FIG. 2; and
  • FIG. 6 is a chart showing cheese crumbles size distribution for cheese crumbles made using the apparatus and methods disclosed herein.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION
  • Methods and apparatus are disclosed herein and illustrated in FIGS. 1-6 for manufacturing irregularly shaped and sized products, and in particular cheese irregularly shaped and sized crumbles from cheeses, such as semi-soft cheeses including types of cheddar, mozzarella, Monterey jack, Colby, pepper jack, provolone, Swiss, Mexican cheeses and any other combinations of two or more varieties. In addition, food products, such as cheese, manufacturing using the methods and apparatus described herein. The apparatus preferably includes five knife assemblies that combine to reduce bulk cheese products into irregularly shaped and sized cheese crumbles in a high-speed commercial manufacturing process. In addition, the apparatus includes one or more augers having flights configured for working or reshaping peripheral edges of the cheese during the manufacturing process.
  • Bulk cheese blocks are first reduced into smaller, generally cube-shaped cheese portions, as shown in the flow chart in FIG. 1A, using typical bulk cheese reduction equipment. The cube-shaped cheese portions are preferably at least about 3″×3″×3″ or less, and more preferably are reduced to at least about 2″×2″×2″. The cheese varieties used may be cheddar cheeses (sharp, medium, mild), mozzarella, Monterey jack, reduced fat Monterey jack, reduced fat cheddar, Colby, reduced fat Colby, pepper jack, Mexican cheeses, provolone, Swiss, and any other natural or semi-soft cheese that has a lower acid and salt content such that its consistency is solid and firm and does not readily crumble, as compared to typical soft cheeses having higher acid and salt content, such as feta and blue cheeses.
  • The cheese cubes are transferred to an incline conveyor which transports the cheese to the cutting system in a process feed direction or downstream direction, where this direction is in the general direction of movement of the cheese through the cutting system at a particular point in the process. The cutting system consists of five knife assemblies used in series. The conveyor first transports the cheese cubes to the first cutting device or cutting machine, which consists of the first three knife assemblies. The first cutting machine preferably produces cheese into preferably, though not necessarily, generally rectangular portions. A second conveying device, such as a conveyor, including a bucket conveyer, or an auger, as will be described in greater detail herein, transfers the cheese from the first cutting device to a second cutting device having the fourth and fifth knife assemblies. The second cutting device produces cheese in a crumbled form. A preferred type of cutting device is an Urschel Model RA-D, manufactured by Urschel Laboratories, Inc., Valparaiso, Ind., U.S.A., which may be modified in accordance with the present disclosure.
  • Further processing of the cheese may include conveying with an auger, transferring the cheese to a tumble drum to apply an anti-cake agent and an antimicrobial agent, such as Natamycin. The resulting cheese crumbles may be weighed in small bulks with the various bulks combining to provide for predetermined quantity weights or weight ranges for packaging into individual packages for retail sale. The packages are preferably of the type disclosed in the U.S. patent application entitled “FLEXIBLE PACKAGES” and filed on May 3, 2005, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. The packages may be made using the methods and apparatus disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,357,914; 6,688,079 and 6,688,080, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
  • Turning now to the details of the food product cutting devices, the cheese cubes are fed into a hopper on the top of the cutting device and fall into a centrifugal drum 1 which contains numerous impellers 2 attached around the interior circumference of the drum 1. The cheese cubes are generally held in place by these impellers 2 and by centrifugal force as the centrifugal drum 1 rotates. During rotation of the drum 1, the cheese cube is urged against a first knife assembly 3 comprising a knife blade orientated generally transverse to the feed direction of the apparatus, i.e., not precisely parallel, to cut a slice of cheese from the cheese cube. Each revolution of the drum 1 generally results in the first knife assembly 3 cutting a slice for the cheese cubes. The slice thickness may vary between approximately 1/16 inches and ½ inches, and preferably from between about 5/16 inches to ½ inches. The thickness of the slice can be varied by changing the gap between the slicing knife 3 and the centrifugal drum 1 or by adjusting the angle of the slicing knife 3.
  • The cheese slice then falls between a feed spindle 5 and the feed drum 4, each of which is adapted for rotation above an axis generally transverse to the feed direction of the apparatus. As the feed drum 4 and the feed spindle 5 rotate they combine to advance the slice through the cutting process via the nip or spacing between the feed drum 4 and the feed spindle 5 and into contact with a second knife assembly 6. The second knife assembly 6 comprises a plurality of circular knife blades 22 mounted on a rotatable shaft 25 and are positioned in a direction that is generally parallel, i.e., not perpendicular, to the process feed direction. The circular knife 6 cuts the cheese slices into strips. The circular knife blades 22 are spaced to fit into grooves located on the feed drum 4 to minimize interference between the blades 22 and the feed drum 4.
  • The feed drum 4 and/or feed spindle 5 may contain feed protrusions or spikes on their circumference to assist in advancing the cheese. The feed protrusions of the spindle fit into gaps between the circular knives 6 and in the grooves on the feed drum 4 to minimize interference.
  • The second knife assembly 6 has a plurality of blades 22 that are unevenly spaced apart for cutting the cheese slice into strips of varying widths. The second knife assembly 6 may consist of between one and fourteen blades 22, and preferably fourteen blades 22, depending upon the number of strips desired. The fourteen blades in the circular knives 6 having different spacings therebetween to cut the slices into strips having varying widths. As illustrated in FIG. 3, the first spacer 23 creates a gap or space of length ‘a,’ and a second spacer 24 creates a gap of length ‘b.’ The spacers 23, 24 can be alternated every other one, such that the spacing between blades 22 is also alternating between a space of length ‘a’ and ‘b.’ The blade spacing may be varied from ⅛ inches to 1 inch, and more preferably from ⅜ inches to ½ inches. Preferably not all fourteen blades will be at the same spacing. For example, seven blades may be spaced at ⅜ inches, or designated by a spacer 23 with a distance of ‘a’ between blades 22, with the remaining six blades at ½ inches apart, or designated by spacers 24 with a distance of ‘b’ between blades 22. Alternately, seven blades spaced at ½ inches and six blades spaced at ⅜ inches, or any other combination, may be used. Preferably, though not necessarily, the cheese strips will thus vary in width from either ⅜ inches or ½ inches depending on the spacing that was set between the circular knife blades 22.
  • Once the cheese slice is cut into multiple strips, the strips are then sent to the third knife assembly 7. The third knife assembly includes one or more crosscut knife blades mounted on a rotatable shaft. The blades may contain small teeth or sharp points along their periphery. The blades of the crosscut knife 7 may be configured to fit into the grooves on the feed drum 4. The crosscut knife 7 may have a plurality of blades that are equidistantly spaced apart and contain anywhere from one to five knives on it. There are preferably four or five knife blades and the spacing or distance between the knives is equidistant and may vary between ⅛ inches to 1 ½ inches. For example, if four knives are used, the spacing between all four knives is set to ¾ inches and if five knives are used the spacing between them is set to ½ inches. Preferably, four knives are used with the spacing set at ¾ inches. The crosscut knife 7 cuts the cheese strips into smaller generally rectangular cheese portions that are of various sizes; some are cube-like in shape and others are more rectangular.
  • Next, the apparatus includes a conveying mechanism 15 for transporting the cheese portions to the second cutting device. The conveying mechanism may comprise a conveyor. Preferably, however, the conveying mechanism comprises a screw auger having a plurality of flights 30 mounted to a square or round shaft. The flights may each extend, for example, about 360 or 720 degrees. One or more, and preferably all, of the flights are offset from adjacent flights, such as by about 90 degrees to expose a pair of edges 32 of the flights 30, as illustrated in FIG. 4. Thus, the flights are arranged such that the screw surfaces 34 for advancing the food product are non-continuous. The flights may be formed of a food grade plastic and housed in a metal, such as stainless steel, bin. During rotation of the auger, the flights 30 advance the cheese portions in the feed direction while the edges 32 of the auger flights 30, and the gaps therebetween, work the edges and/or peripheral sides of the cheese portions to soften or smooth out the cheese portions.
  • The flights are approximately ten inch sections of the screw conveyor that can be disassembled from one another and reassembled. When reassembled, these sections, or flights, are offset from each other by rotating the flight one-quarter turn in either direction along the shaft of the conveyor such that the flights are in slightly inverted positions. Every other flight section is offset by a one-quarter turn along the shaft, while the remaining flights are placed in a common direction along the shaft. The inverted flights create a resistance to flow because of the inverted positions cause the cheese portions to rub against each other and the surface of the auger bin, thereby causing the cheese portions to be softened or rounded off in appearance. The residence time of the cheese inside the auger is between about eight to about twenty seconds, more preferably approximately fifteen seconds or less. A top cover of the auger may be removable, with openings in the bottom and the top sections for feeding the cheese pieces into the auger and for pushing the pieces out of the auger, respectively. An example of an auger used may be seven feet long set at an inclined angle of twenty-two degrees and with a seven inch diameter screw.
  • As the cheese portions exit from the end of the auger, the cheese is transported directly into the feed hopper of the second cutting device. Optionally, the cheese may be transferred back onto the conveyor system and then proceed toward the second cutting device. The second cutting device is made up of two knife assemblies, the fourth and fifth knife assembles 10 and 13. The fourth knife assembly is similar to the first knife assembly and the fifth knife assembly is similar to the second knife assembly, as discussed in greater detail above.
  • The generally rectangular cheese portions from the first machine are fed into the hopper of the second machine and enter the centrifugal drum 8. From there the pieces encounter the slicing knife 10, which instead of slicing just a single piece of generally planar cheese as in the first cutting device, now may be cutting a plurality of pieces at once and in a plurality of different orientations, such that when the slices are made a number of different size slices will be cut at the same time. The second cutting machine creates more random and irregular slices that differ in size and shape than the first machine. After creating a plurality of irregular cheese pieces, the pieces are further cut by the circular knife 13. Instead of cutting one slice into strips, the fourth knife assembly 13 of the second cutting device cuts a plurality of pieces into more pieces that have different, irregular shaped and sized crumbles. Variations in the blade spacing of the second and fifth knife assembles can change the size of the resulting cheese crumbles.
  • After the second cutting device, the cheese pieces may be passed through a second auger in order to smooth out and shape the peripheral edges of the cut pieces, similar to the auger described above. However, it can be suitable to use only one of the augers depending upon the type of food product crumbles to be produced.
  • A dry powder dispenser or feeder adds an anticake agent to the cheese crumbles as they are being transferred along a conveyor. After the anticake is applied, the cheese crumbles are transferred into a tumble drum, which mixes the food products inside while minimizing the damage to the product. An example of a tumble drum used in the process is inclined at a 5 degree angle, is 68 inches long and has a residence time from about 12 seconds to about 24 seconds, more preferably about 17 seconds. Dry powder dispensers and liquid spray applicators may also be combined with the tumble drum for coating products inside of the drum with anticake agent and/or mold inhibitors. A liquid spray applicator can add a mold inhibitor to the tumble drum. Once the mold inhibitor has been introduced into the tumble drum then the drum begins to rotate in order to evenly distribute the anticake agent and the mold inhibitor. An example of a mold inhibitor is Natamycin. An example of an anticake agent is a solution made up of 69.99% potato starch, 20% cellulose powder, 10% calcium sulfate, and 0.01% sodium aluminum sulfate.
  • FIG. 1B illustrates an arrangement of equipment and shows the two cutting machines 14, 16 which are separated by either an auger or a conveyor 15. After the second cutting machine 16, there is another auger or conveyor 17. There is an option of using a single screw auger for both reference numerals 15 and 17, of using one auger and one conveyor system or of not having any augers and using only a conveyor system to transfer the cheese. If a conveyor system is utilized for reference numerals 15 and 17, then another conveyor system at numeral 18 may not be necessary. The cheese crumbles are transferred from the auger or conveyor 17 onto an inclined conveyor 18 (it is only used if the auger is used at reference numeral 17) where an anticake agent is applied. The crumbles are then fed into a tumble drum 19 where a mold inhibitor is also added. From the tumble drum 19 the crumbles are weighed at bucket scales 20 and packaged 21.
  • FIGS. 5A-5G show idealized diagrams of the different cheese sizes at various stages of the cutting process. In FIG. 5A, the cheese is initially fed into the first cutting machine in small cubes of cheese of at least 3″×3″×3″ or less. After the cheese cube passes through the first knife, it is cut into a single slice, as shown at FIG. 5B. Then the slice is cut by the second knife which cuts the cheese into strips or rectangles of varying width, as shown in FIG. 5C, and designating the different widths by ‘a’ and ‘b.’ The width of the strips is equivalent to the spacing of the knives in FIG. 3. Therefore, a spacer of length ‘a’ will create a strip of width ‘a,’ and similarly a spacer of length ‘b’ creates a strip of width ‘b.’ As shown in FIG. 5D, the cheese strips have been cut by the third knife and the cuts of the knife create generally rectangular cheese portions. Then the cheese portions may pass through an auger or conveyor and exit as a random clump or bunch of cheese, as shown in FIG. 5E. The clumps of cheese then pass through the fourth knife and the clumps are sliced by the knife which yields multiple slices of irregular cheese pieces, as shown in FIG. 5F. Finally, the cheese pieces are cut by the fifth knife and result in irregular sized and shaped cheese crumbles, as in FIG. 5G.
  • The final size of the irregular cheese crumbles preferably range in size from about 1/16 inches to about ½ inches, more particularly from about 3/16 inches to about ⅜ inches. As depicted in the graph of FIG. 6, about 75% of the cheese crumbles manufactured according to one test using the apparatus and methods described hereinabove were between 4.75×4.75 mm and 9.5 mm×9.5 mm.
  • EXAMPLES
  • The following examples illustrate presently preferred methods and should be understood to be illustrative of, but not limiting upon, the scope of the apparatus and methods which are set forth in the appended claims.
  • Example 1
  • Mozzarella cheese is precut into 2″×2″×2″ cubes and is fed into a first Urschel RA-D cutting machine, manufactured by Urschel Laboratories, Inc., Valparaiso, Ind., U.S.A. All three cutting knives are utilized in the machine for the first pass of the cheese cubes through the machine. The slicing knife had a gap setting of ⅜ inches, the circular knives consisted of thirteen blades, seven set at a ⅜ inch gap and six set at a ½ inch gap. The final knife, the crosscut knife, consisted of four knives set at a ¾ inch gap. The different size cheese strips are then placed on a conveyor and enter into the second Urschel RA-D cutting machine for the second pass of cutting. The second Urschel machine consists of only two knives, the slicing knife and the circular knife. The slicing knife and circular knives are set at the same settings as in the first Urschel machine. The cheese strips are cut into irregular pieces with different shapes and sizes as they pass through the second machine. After this second pass through a cutting machine the cheese pieces are sent into an auger with inverted flights and inclined at an angle of 25 degrees, which rounds out the edges of the cheese pieces. Upon exiting the auger the cheese pieces are placed onto a conveyor belt. While the cheese is being transported on the conveyor belt, an anticake blend made up of a 1.75% custom anticake solution is added to the cheese pieces. The cheese pieces are then placed into a tumble drum where natamycin is added at a concentration of 1.2% and the drum is rotated to mix everything together. After passing through the tumble drum the cheese pieces are weighed and packaged. The final product of cheese pieces are irregularly shaped and sized mozzarella cheese crumbles that have a more natural cut appearance.
  • Example 2
  • Mozzarella cheese is cut similarly to the steps in example 1, except that the slicing knife used is set at a gap of 5/16 inches, the remaining knives are as in example 1. The initial temperature of the cheese was at 38° F. when fed into both Urschel cutting machines. The cheese was fed into the first Urschel machine through a feed hopper and the cheese was fed into the second machine through the hopper at a feed rate of 4000 lb/hr. Anticake agent was added to the cheese pieces after exiting the second machine at an amount of 0.346 lbs of 1.75% custom anticake agent. The residence time in the tumble drum was 5 minutes. The results were similar to those in example 1, with irregularly shaped and sized mozzarella cheese being produced.
  • Example 3
  • Mild Cheddar cheese is precut into 2″×2″×2″ cubes for a total amount of fifteen pounds of cheese. The same knife set up as in example 1 for mozzarella is used for the mild cheddar. The temperature of the cheese was about 38° F. The cheese was fed into the first Urschel machine through a feed hopper and the cheese was fed into the second machine through the hopper at a feed rate of 4000 lb/hr. Again the crosscut knife was removed from the second machine. Irregular sized and shaped mild cheddar cheese crumbles was produced.
  • Example 4
  • A three cheese mix was made comprising 50% Monterey jack cheese, 25% mild cheddar, and 25% Colby cheese, and with the cheese precut into 2″×2″×2″ cubes. All three cheeses were blended into the Urschel RA-D machine to make a mixture of the three cheeses. The final total weight was 20 pounds; 10 pounds of Monterrey jack cheese and 5 pounds each of Colby and mild cheddar. The feed rate of the cheese was 4000 lb/hr. The knives were set up as in example 2. The samples were treated with 0.59 lbs of 1.75% custom anticake agent prior to entering the tumble drum and the residence time in the tumble drum was 5 minutes. The final product was irregularly sized and shaped mixed cheese crumbles.
  • Example 5
  • A two cheese mix was made comprising half of 2% Monterey jack cheese and half of 2% Colby cheese, with the cheese being precut into 2″×2″×2″ cubes. The two cheeses were blended into the Urschel machine to make a mixture of the two cheeses, with one cube of Monterey jack being fed for every one cube of Colby cheese. The knives were set up as in example 2. Temperature was kept at 38° F. The feed into the hopper for the second machine was 4000 lb/hr. After the cheese passed through the second machine, 0.63 lbs of a 1.75% custom anticake agent was added. The result was irregularly sized and shaped mixed cheese.
  • Example 6
  • Sharp cheddar cheese was precut into 2″×2″×2″ cubes. The knives in both cutting machines were set up as in example 2. The temperature was maintained at about 38° F. The cubes were fed into the feed hopper of the first machine and then into the feed hopper of the second machine at a feed rate of 4000 lb/hr. After passing through the second machine, 0.31 lbs of 1.75% custom anticake agent was added to the cheese. Then the cheese was sent to a tumble drum where it had a residence time of about five minutes. The results were irregularly sized and shaped sharp cheddar cheese.
  • From the foregoing, it will be appreciated that apparatus and methods are described herein for manufacturing irregularly shaped and sized food products. While the figures and description herein are illustrative of certain aspects of methods and apparatus for manufacturing irregularly shaped and sized food products, the apparatus and methods are not limited to the aspects illustrated in the figures and described hereinabove. For example, while the description generally refers to cheese as the product being produced in irregular shapes and sizes, it is understood that a process according to the present description may be used other suitable products.

Claims (15)

1. A plurality of irregular shaped cheese crumbles made using a cheese cutting apparatus having a feed direction and according to a method comprising:
cutting a slice from a bulk cheese product using a first knife assembly;
cutting a plurality of strips from the slice using a second knife assembly;
cutting a plurality of generally rectangular cheese portions from the plurality of strips using a third knife assembly;
cutting a plurality of irregular cheese pieces from the plurality of cheese portions using a fourth knife assembly after the cutting with the first, second and third knives; and
cutting a plurality of irregular shaped cheese crumbles from the plurality of irregular cheese pieces using a fifth knife assembly.
2. A plurality of irregular shaped cheese crumbles made according to the method of claim 1, wherein each of the first, third and fourth knife assemblies comprises at least one knife blade orientated in a generally transverse direction to the feed direction of the cheese cutting apparatus and each of the second and fifth knife assemblies comprises a plurality of knife blades orientated in a generally parallel direction to the feed direction of the cheese cutting apparatus, at least one of the second and fifth knife assemblies comprises a plurality of knife blades mounted to a shaft for rotation therewith, the spacing between a first pair of adjacent knife blades being different than the spacing between a second pair of adjacent knife blades, and the third knife assembly comprises a plurality of knife blades mounted to a shaft for rotation therewith.
3. A plurality of irregular shaped cheese crumbles made according to the method of claim 1, the method including the steps of: transporting the generally rectangular cheese portions between the third and fourth knife assemblies using an auger having offset flights; and
working edges of the generally rectangular cheese portions using edges of the offset flights.
4. A method of producing irregular shaped cheese crumbles using a cheese cutting apparatus having a feed direction, the method comprising:
forming cheese portions, including cutting a slice from a bulk cheese product using a first knife assembly, cutting a plurality of strips from the slice using a second knife assembly, and cutting a plurality of cheese portions from the plurality of strips using a third knife assembly; and
transporting the cheese portions using an auger having offset flights, and working edges of the cheese portions during transporting using edges of the offset flights to form a plurality of irregular shaped cheese crumble pieces.
5. The method of producing irregular shaped cheese crumbles in accordance with claim 4, wherein the second knife assembly comprises a plurality of knife blades mounted to a shaft for rotation therewith, the spacing between a first pair of adjacent knife blades being different than the spacing between a second pair of adjacent knife blades.
6. The method of producing irregular shaped cheese crumbles in accordance with claim 4, wherein the third knife assembly comprises a plurality of knife blades mounted to a shaft for rotation therewith.
7. The method of producing irregular shaped cheese crumbles in accordance with claim 4, including the steps of:
feeding the slice in the feed direction to the second knife assembly in a generally planar orientation; and
feeding the strips in the feed direction to the third knife assembly in a generally non-planar orientation.
8. The method of producing irregular shaped cheese crumbles in accordance with claim 4, wherein transporting the cheese portions using an auger occurs after the third knife assembly.
9. The method of producing irregular shaped cheese crumbles in accordance with claim 4, including the steps of:
placing the irregularly shaped cheese crumbles in a tumble drum; and
adding an anticake agent to the irregularly shaped cheese crumbles in the tumble drum.
10. The method of producing irregular shaped cheese crumbles in accordance with claim 4, including the step of:
advancing the cheese from at least one of the first knife assembly to the second knife assembly using a feed roller and a drum roller.
11. The method of producing irregular shaped cheese crumbles in accordance with claim 4, including the steps of:
advancing the cut cheese portions through an auger using a plurality of separate flights on a shaft of the auger; and
working peripheral edges of the cut cheese portions to reshape the cheese portions using radial edges of the flights, the radial edges of flights being formed between adjacent flights offset a predetermined amount.
12. The method of producing irregular shaped cheese crumbles in accordance with claim 11, wherein the auger comprises a plurality of flights that are offset from each other by ninety degrees.
13. The method of producing irregular shaped cheese crumbles in accordance with claim 4, wherein at least one of the first and third knife assemblies comprises at least one knife blade orientated in a generally transverse direction to the feed direction of the cheese cutting apparatus.
14. The method of producing irregular shaped cheese crumbles in accordance with claim 13, wherein the second knife assembly comprises at least one knife blade orientated in a generally parallel direction to the feed direction of the cheese cutting apparatus.
15. The method of producing irregular shaped cheese crumbles in accordance with claim 14, wherein each of the first and third knife assemblies comprises at least one knife blade orientated in a generally transverse direction to the feed direction of the cheese cutting apparatus and the second knife assembly comprises a plurality of knife blades orientated in a generally parallel direction to the feed direction of the cheese cutting apparatus.
US12/206,551 2005-05-16 2008-09-08 Methods and Apparatus to Mechanically Reduce Food Products into Irregular Shapes and Sizes Abandoned US20090004357A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US12/206,551 US20090004357A1 (en) 2005-05-16 2008-09-08 Methods and Apparatus to Mechanically Reduce Food Products into Irregular Shapes and Sizes

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US11/130,813 US7429010B2 (en) 2005-05-16 2005-05-16 Methods and apparatus to mechanically reduce food products into irregular shapes and sizes
US12/206,551 US20090004357A1 (en) 2005-05-16 2008-09-08 Methods and Apparatus to Mechanically Reduce Food Products into Irregular Shapes and Sizes

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US11/130,813 Continuation US7429010B2 (en) 2005-05-16 2005-05-16 Methods and apparatus to mechanically reduce food products into irregular shapes and sizes

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20090004357A1 true US20090004357A1 (en) 2009-01-01

Family

ID=37450497

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US11/130,813 Expired - Fee Related US7429010B2 (en) 2005-05-16 2005-05-16 Methods and apparatus to mechanically reduce food products into irregular shapes and sizes
US12/206,551 Abandoned US20090004357A1 (en) 2005-05-16 2008-09-08 Methods and Apparatus to Mechanically Reduce Food Products into Irregular Shapes and Sizes

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US11/130,813 Expired - Fee Related US7429010B2 (en) 2005-05-16 2005-05-16 Methods and apparatus to mechanically reduce food products into irregular shapes and sizes

Country Status (3)

Country Link
US (2) US7429010B2 (en)
CA (1) CA2546257A1 (en)
MX (1) MXPA06005498A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20120219676A1 (en) * 2011-02-28 2012-08-30 Davor Juravic Apparatus, Systems and Methods for Manufacturing Food Products

Families Citing this family (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7540221B1 (en) * 2005-05-24 2009-06-02 Marchant Schmidt, Inc. Exact weight cutting and destacking system for food products
US9848631B2 (en) 2008-11-07 2017-12-26 Kraft Foods Group Brands Llc Home-style meat product and method of producing same
US9675089B2 (en) * 2008-11-07 2017-06-13 Kraft Foods Group Brands Llc Method and apparatus to mechanically reduce food products into irregular shapes and sizes
US9629374B2 (en) 2008-11-07 2017-04-25 Kraft Foods Group Brands Llc Home-style meat product and method of producing same
US8091810B2 (en) * 2008-12-14 2012-01-10 Ira Harris Leventhal Cheese crumbling device
US20170361485A9 (en) * 2011-02-28 2017-12-21 Big Heart Pet Brands Apparatus for manufacturing food products
US9511504B2 (en) 2013-01-25 2016-12-06 Edlund Company, Llc Food-product slicers having a double-beveled blade arrangement, and features usable therewith
GB2585324B (en) * 2018-09-26 2023-06-14 Kraft Foods Schweiz Holding Gmbh Methods and apparatus for manufacturing confectionery pieces
EP4056042A1 (en) 2021-03-08 2022-09-14 DSM IP Assets B.V. Antifungal in pasta filata
CN113693947B (en) * 2021-08-19 2023-11-14 张家港江苏科技大学产业技术研究院 Crushing rod for assisting feeding device
BE1029403B1 (en) * 2021-12-23 2022-12-09 Flanders Food Productions Process for grating cheese in an industrial way

Citations (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3505085A (en) * 1968-06-17 1970-04-07 Gen Mills Inc Apparatus for processing food products
US3980235A (en) * 1974-11-06 1976-09-14 Kuhlman Harvey G Food cutting apparatus
US4599928A (en) * 1985-04-10 1986-07-15 Tom Oker Sales & Mfg., Inc. Apparatus for forming cubes from a product such as a loaf of cheese
US4646602A (en) * 1985-10-07 1987-03-03 Bleick Robert O Cheese cutter
US5425307A (en) * 1993-05-17 1995-06-20 Carruthers Equipment Co. Dicing machine
US5932159A (en) * 1997-11-07 1999-08-03 Rauwendaal Extrusion Engineering, Inc. Screw extruder with improved dispersive mixing
US6314849B1 (en) * 1997-09-19 2001-11-13 Urschel Laboratories Inc. Dicing machine with improved cutting squareness
US6403138B1 (en) * 2000-07-28 2002-06-11 Kraft Foods Holdings, Inc. Method for reforming dairy products
US6415711B1 (en) * 2000-05-02 2002-07-09 Angelo Penta Cheese shredder apparatus
US6549823B1 (en) * 1998-12-17 2003-04-15 Marchant Schmidt, Inc. Apparatus and methods for cutting cheese
US6575725B1 (en) * 1999-02-17 2003-06-10 Foremost Farms Usa, Cooperative Direct shredding process and apparatus
US6942888B2 (en) * 2003-01-24 2005-09-13 Minerva Dairy, Inc. Cheese extruding machine and process for producing pieces of cheese

Patent Citations (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3505085A (en) * 1968-06-17 1970-04-07 Gen Mills Inc Apparatus for processing food products
US3980235A (en) * 1974-11-06 1976-09-14 Kuhlman Harvey G Food cutting apparatus
US4599928A (en) * 1985-04-10 1986-07-15 Tom Oker Sales & Mfg., Inc. Apparatus for forming cubes from a product such as a loaf of cheese
US4646602A (en) * 1985-10-07 1987-03-03 Bleick Robert O Cheese cutter
US5425307A (en) * 1993-05-17 1995-06-20 Carruthers Equipment Co. Dicing machine
US6314849B1 (en) * 1997-09-19 2001-11-13 Urschel Laboratories Inc. Dicing machine with improved cutting squareness
US6561067B2 (en) * 1997-09-19 2003-05-13 Urschel Laboratories, Inc. Food dicing machine with adjustable stripper
US5932159A (en) * 1997-11-07 1999-08-03 Rauwendaal Extrusion Engineering, Inc. Screw extruder with improved dispersive mixing
US6549823B1 (en) * 1998-12-17 2003-04-15 Marchant Schmidt, Inc. Apparatus and methods for cutting cheese
US6575725B1 (en) * 1999-02-17 2003-06-10 Foremost Farms Usa, Cooperative Direct shredding process and apparatus
US6652899B1 (en) * 1999-02-17 2003-11-25 Foremost Farms Direct shredding process
US6415711B1 (en) * 2000-05-02 2002-07-09 Angelo Penta Cheese shredder apparatus
US6403138B1 (en) * 2000-07-28 2002-06-11 Kraft Foods Holdings, Inc. Method for reforming dairy products
US6942888B2 (en) * 2003-01-24 2005-09-13 Minerva Dairy, Inc. Cheese extruding machine and process for producing pieces of cheese

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20120219676A1 (en) * 2011-02-28 2012-08-30 Davor Juravic Apparatus, Systems and Methods for Manufacturing Food Products
US8679560B2 (en) * 2011-02-28 2014-03-25 Del Monte Corporation Apparatus, systems and methods for manufacturing food products

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CA2546257A1 (en) 2006-11-16
US20060266175A1 (en) 2006-11-30
US7429010B2 (en) 2008-09-30
MXPA06005498A (en) 2008-12-18

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US7429010B2 (en) Methods and apparatus to mechanically reduce food products into irregular shapes and sizes
US10632639B2 (en) Machines and methods for cutting products
AU696933B2 (en) Rotary apparatus for cutting a food product
US9119407B2 (en) Apparatus, systems and methods for manufacturing food products
US10456943B2 (en) Machines and methods for cutting products and impellers therefor
US8679560B2 (en) Apparatus, systems and methods for manufacturing food products
US9675089B2 (en) Method and apparatus to mechanically reduce food products into irregular shapes and sizes
AU2008216697B2 (en) Apparatus and method for slicing food products
KR101853183B1 (en) Cutting device for manufactured
US5035915A (en) Helical split ring french fry
US10442102B2 (en) Machines and methods for cutting products to produce reduced-size products therefrom
JPH04226890A (en) Food slicing device provided with multilayer cutting planar blade
US20170361485A9 (en) Apparatus for manufacturing food products
GB2526651A (en) Manufacture of potato chips
US11491670B1 (en) Bacon portioner/trimmer
JP5221800B1 (en) Nuts cutting method and apparatus
US10617141B2 (en) Slicing apparatus and method for making vegetable slices
FI72895C (en) FOERFARANDE OCH ANORDNING FOER DISINTEGRERING AV MATERIAL.
Odior Development of a meat slicing machine using locally sourced materials
JP2023523535A (en) Apparatus and method for longitudinally cutting ribbon-like food products, particularly ribbon-like cheese, into strips
EP2757900B1 (en) A process for manufacturing an animal feed or foodstuff
EP0353446A2 (en) Apparatus for sizing elongated food pieces
AU2021201541A1 (en) Dog food strip and use thereof in weight management

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION