Patents by Inventor Hubert Harris

Hubert Harris has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 4671965
    Abstract: A method for the rapid removal of the peelings or outer coverings from certain food products with minimal loss of or damage to the other portions thereof, by a thermal shock treatment comprising a brief exposure of said products simultaneously to high intensity radiant heat from a vessel and high temperature, low pressure superheated steam or other fluid or gaseous medium inside the vessel.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 25, 1986
    Date of Patent: June 9, 1987
    Inventors: Hubert Harris, Durward A. Smith
  • Patent number: 4569850
    Abstract: This disclosure embodies an apparatus and process for the rapid removal of outer coverings and other unedible portions from food products with minimal loss of or damage to edible portions. The process has proven to be effective in the peeling of fruit and vegetable crops, coring peppers, shelling of legume seed pods, shucking and silking corn, popping corn, skinning onions, shelling of nut crops, scaling and skinning of fish, and removal of shells from shellfish. These processes are accomplished with an apparatus which heats the surface of the product very rapidly in an atmosphere of superheated steam under elevated pressure, supplemented with radiant heat from a vessel wall, and then flashes to atmospheric pressure by instantaneous opening of the vessel cover. The result is an explosion which blows the product from the vessel and simultaneously blasts the covering from the product by violent action of highly energized moisture beneath the product covering.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 23, 1983
    Date of Patent: February 11, 1986
    Assignee: Auburn Research Foundation
    Inventors: Hubert Harris, Durward A. Smith
  • Patent number: 4524681
    Abstract: This disclosure embodies an apparatus and process for the rapid removal of outer coverings and other unedible portions from food products with minimal loss of or damage to edible portions. The process has proven to be effective in the peeling of fruit and vegetable crops, coring peppers, shelling of legume seed pods, shucking and silking corn, popping corn, skinning onions, shelling of nut crops, scaling and skinning of fish, and removal of shells from shellfish. These processes are accomplished with an apparatus which heats the surface of the product very rapidly in an atmosphere of superheated steam under elevated pressure, supplemented with radiant heat from a vessel wall, and then flashes to atmospheric pressure by instantaneous opening of the vessel cover. The result is an explosion which blows the product from the vessel and simultaneously blasts the covering from the product by violent action of highly energized moisture beneath the product covering.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 18, 1984
    Date of Patent: June 25, 1985
    Assignee: Auburn Research Foundation
    Inventors: Hubert Harris, Durward A. Smith
  • Patent number: 4476148
    Abstract: Crop foods such as peanuts, soybeans, peas, and the like, are ground and processed in a rapid, continuous, in-line production system. The food material is converted into a thermally processed slurry rapidly by mixing the ground food with hot water and steam and then quickly cooling the slurry, preferably in a vacuum chamber. The heat treatment stops the activity of enzymes which normally produce undesirable flavors and odors in mixtures of water and ground peanuts and other foods. The rapid cooling treatment prevents damage to protein content and simultaneously strips away any raw peanut flavor that may have developed. The continuous process produces a slurry of peanuts, or the like, without the characteristic raw peanut flavor, and the bland slurry can be further processed by drying to produce a useful food product such as flour, food extender, or the like.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 2, 1982
    Date of Patent: October 9, 1984
    Assignee: Peanut Research & Testing Labs, Inc.
    Inventor: Hubert Harris
  • Patent number: 4362759
    Abstract: Crop foods such as peanuts, soybeans, peas, and the like, are ground and processed in a rapid, continuous, in-line production system. The food material is converted into a thermally processed slurry rapidly by mixing the ground food with hot water and steam and then quickly cooling the slurry, preferably in a vacuum chamber. The heat treatment stops the activity of enzymes which normally produce undesirable flavors and odors in mixtures of water and ground peanuts and other foods. The rapid cooling treatment prevents damage to protein content and simultaneously strips away any raw peanut flavor that may have developed. The continuous process produces a slurry of peanuts, or the like, without the characteristic raw peanut flavor, and the bland slurry can be further processed by drying to produce a useful food product such as flour, food extender, or the like.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 19, 1981
    Date of Patent: December 7, 1982
    Assignee: Peanut Research & Testing Labs., Inc.
    Inventor: Hubert Harris
  • Patent number: 4302111
    Abstract: Crop foods such as peanuts, soybeans, peas, and the like, are ground and processed in a rapid, continuous, in-line production system. The food material is converted into a thermally processed slurry rapidly by mixing the ground food with hot water and steam and then quickly cooling the slurry, preferably in a vacuum chamber. The heat treatment stops the activity of enzymes which normally produce undesirable flavors and odors in mixtures of water and ground peanuts and other foods. The rapid cooling treatment prevents damage to protein content and simultaneously strips away any raw peanut flavor that may have developed. The continuous process produces a slurry of peanuts, or the like, without the characteristic raw peanut flavor, and the bland slurry can be further processed by drying to produce a useful food product such as flour, food extender, or the like.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 1, 1979
    Date of Patent: November 24, 1981
    Assignee: Peanut Research and Testing Laboratories, Inc.
    Inventor: Hubert Harris