Treating A Hydrated Wheat Flour System Containing Saccharomyces Cerevesiae Patents (Class 426/27)
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Patent number: 5759596Abstract: The present invention provides refrigeratable yeast-leavened dough compositions and methods of making such doughs. In a first embodiment, a dough composition of the invention is made by rehydrating dried yeast at chilled temperatures, which causes selective lysing (a loss in the selectivity of the yeast plasma membrane). Such a dough composition exhibits a cold sensitivity in that the yeast is capable of leavening the dough at elevated temperatures, but becomes inactive at refrigeration temperatures. In another embodiment, the dough composition and the strain of yeast used therein are chosen to limit the total leavening action of the yeast by controlling the amount of substrate in the dough fermentable by the yeast. In a third embodiment, a dough comprises a mixture of flour, water and a mutant yeast which is low temperature sensitive. Such an "lts" yeast is active at elevated temperatures, but becomes substantially inactive at refrigeration temperatures.Type: GrantFiled: October 24, 1996Date of Patent: June 2, 1998Assignee: The Pillsbury CompanyInventors: David J. Domingues, William A. Atwell, William P. Pilacinski
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Patent number: 5698245Abstract: A bread quality-improving composition and a process for the production of bread using the composition. More particularly, a bread quality-improving composition which contains a maltotriose-forming enzyme or a maltotriose-forming enzyme, glucose oxidase and/or hemicellulase and a process for the production of dough and bread using the composition. The bread quality-improving composition renders possible the easy handling of dough without covering it with wheat flour and the like, the exclusion of additives for use in the control of water content, an improvement in elasticity and ductility of bread when baked, the prevention of bread solidification and other problems such as a reduction in bread volume when frozen dough is used and the elimination or reduction of emulsifying agents.Type: GrantFiled: May 30, 1995Date of Patent: December 16, 1997Assignee: Amano Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.Inventors: Noriaki Tanaka, Kuniharu Nakai, Kenichi Takami, Yoshiyuki Takasaki
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Patent number: 5560944Abstract: This invention relates to a process for the industrial preparation of pizzeria pizzas. The process comprises the following stages: a) dough preparation, b) kneading, c) raising, d) portioning, e) topping, and f) baking.Type: GrantFiled: September 28, 1994Date of Patent: October 1, 1996Assignee: M. G. Braibanti S.p.A.Inventors: Alessandro D. Angeli, Dalbon Gerardo
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Patent number: 5514386Abstract: The present invention includes a method of making a refrigeratable dough composition that includes a step of heating the dough to at least a threshold inactivation temperature of yeast in the dough to substantially inactivate the yeast substantially without baking dough. The present invention also includes a yeast strain of the genus-species Saccharomyces cerevisiae characterized by a thermally labile pyruvate kinase enzyme activity that substantially prevents anaerobic growth by the yeast strain at or above about 36.degree. C.Type: GrantFiled: October 26, 1994Date of Patent: May 7, 1996Assignee: The Pillsbury CompanyInventor: David J. Domingues
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Patent number: 5510126Abstract: The quality of wheat flour tortillas is improved by using a yeast derivative in the tortilla dough.Type: GrantFiled: April 8, 1994Date of Patent: April 23, 1996Assignee: Gist-Brocades N.V.Inventors: Johannes H. Van Eijk, Merna Legel
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Patent number: 5510127Abstract: Bread is produced in a bread maker by first mixing/kneading the bread ingredients into a dough, allowing the dough to rest and then kneading the dough for a second cycle. During both kneading cycles, a motor driving a kneading blade is repeatedly bi-directionally rotated with intermittent pulses to give a randomness to the flight of the dough. After kneading, the dough is fermented during a first rise cycle. Next, the dough is preheated and degassed before it is fermented for a second rise cycle. After rising, the dough is baked at a high temperature for proper browning of the crust and then the temperature is lowered to complete the baking of the bread. Lastly, the bread is cooled at a gradual rate by intermittently actuating a heater and a fan.Type: GrantFiled: January 13, 1995Date of Patent: April 23, 1996Assignees: Raymond Industrial Ltd., Sunbeam CorporationInventors: John Wong, Raymond Sze, Thomas H. Tompkins, Randall S. Ward
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Patent number: 5508047Abstract: A dough product which contains a yeast cell of the genus-species SACCHAROMYCES CEREVISIAE, that is catabolite non-repressed, and utilizes only galactose as a carbohydrate source in the presence of glucose. The yeast is interspersed into a dough matrix and proofed in a container. This method decreases the proof time of bread dough by about one-half the normal time than by using a conventional galactose substrate limited yeast. The yeast cells in the dough stop growing when the temperature is less than about 10.degree. C.Type: GrantFiled: November 8, 1994Date of Patent: April 16, 1996Assignee: The Pillsbury CompanyInventor: David J. Domingues
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Patent number: 5494686Abstract: A refrigeratable yeast-leavened dough composition and methods of making such dough. The dough composition and the strain of yeast used are chosen to limit the total leavening action of the yeast by controlling the amount of substrate in the dough fermentable by the yeast. The dough compositions are capable of being leavened at elevated temperatures, yet stored in a sealed container at refrigeration temperatures for extended periods of time. A maltose negative yeast is used and sucrose or the like is added to the dough to serve as a fermentable substrate for the dough; this dough is suitable for storage times of up to 30 days or so. At refrigeration temperatures, the yeast used in the dough is substantially incapable of fermenting carbohydrates native to the dough and a predetermined quantity of a non-native carbohydrate fermentable by the yeast (e. g. galactose) is added to the dough to provide the desired amount of proofing.Type: GrantFiled: October 27, 1993Date of Patent: February 27, 1996Assignee: The Pillsbury CompanyInventor: David J. Domingues
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Patent number: 5441751Abstract: A precooked, partially risen, storage stable pan pizza dough, and a method for producing the same is described. The ingredients of the pizza dough, including at least flour, water, yeast and oil, are mixed, and the mixed dough is then cut into sections. The sectioned dough is then recombined and mixed and cut at least two additional times. After the dough as has been mixed and cut a plurality of times, it is allowed to rest for at least twenty minutes, during which time, the pizza dough partially rises. The partially risen pizza dough is then divided into portions, and precooked to a point at which the dough is not completely cooked, cooled, and packaged for storage in either the refrigerator, or by freezing.Type: GrantFiled: June 29, 1994Date of Patent: August 15, 1995Inventor: Osvaldo E. Vagani
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Patent number: 5417989Abstract: Applicants have devised a new and improved method of making bialys that reduces the cost of production by eliminating the relatively expensive step of shaping each piece of dough manually and also insures greater uniformity in the shape of the bialys. After each piece of dough is relaxed by first proofing, it is positioned under a heated die that is shaped to press the dough into a form which becomes the basis of the bialy shape, with a flat, relatively dense center portion completely surrounded by a softer outer rim portion. The heat and pressure applied to the flat center portion of the bialy kills all the yeast cells in that portion of the bialy, while permitting yeast growth to continue within the outer rim portion. The density of the flat center portion becomes sufficient to prevent the outer rim from shrinking back on to the center, as the outer rim expands due to the induced growth from the yeast.Type: GrantFiled: July 21, 1994Date of Patent: May 23, 1995Assignee: AM Manufacturing CompanyInventors: Harold Atwood, Thomas A. Atwood
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Patent number: 5385742Abstract: A dough for the preparation of yeast-leavened flour products whereby the dough comprises a yeast not capable of fermenting malto and an amount of sugar(s) fermentable by the yeast wherein the maximal amount of CO.sub.2 gas produced during the proof is controlled and limited by the amount of fermentable sugar(s) present in the dough.Type: GrantFiled: September 23, 1993Date of Patent: January 31, 1995Assignee: Gist-Brocades N.V.Inventor: Johannes H. Van Eijk
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Patent number: 5362512Abstract: Liquid bread-improving compositions with improved stability that contain: 75-95 wt. % vegetable oil having an N.sub.2 less than 2.0, 1-5 wt. % hydrogenated vegetable oil having a melting point between 60.degree. and 70.degree. C., 1-5 wt. % partly hydrogenated vegetable oil having a melting point between 35.degree. and 45.degree. C., 2-20 wt. % emulsifiers, at least including DATA-esters, 0-0.2 wt. % flavors, 0.1-1.0 wt. % bread-improving enzymes, and 0.1-0.5 wt. % oxidants. The oil present in a crystallized form has the crystal size less than 25 mm and the average particle size of all particles present in the composition is less than 50 mm.Type: GrantFiled: April 14, 1993Date of Patent: November 8, 1994Assignee: Van den Bergh Foods Co., Division of Conopco, Inc.Inventors: Jorge A. Cabrera, Caesar W. Heeren
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Patent number: 5354566Abstract: An improved process for preparing thin, yeast-leavened dough crusts provides improved products with reduced fragility. The process comprises: preparing a dough, preferably including an antimycotic; holding the dough at a suitably low temperature which is effective to develop the dough while maintaining good forming characteristics; dividing the dough into weighed pieces; finally proofing the weighed dough pieces; pressing the weighed dough pieces between upper and lower, differentially-heated platens to form and condition a flat dough preform, the starch in the upper surface being partially gelatinized and the lower surface being strengthened. Preferably, the product baked and then packaged in a heat-sealed plastic covering.Type: GrantFiled: June 2, 1993Date of Patent: October 11, 1994Assignee: Kraft General Foods, Inc.Inventors: Anne M. Addesso, Robert J. Martin, Lysandros S. Mitsotakis, Robert W. Wood
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Patent number: 5275829Abstract: A cracker having a bread-like taste is formed from a dough for crackers which incorporates an aqueous suspension of a mixture of flour and yeast and a fermented mixture comprising flour and yeast.Type: GrantFiled: September 30, 1991Date of Patent: January 4, 1994Assignee: Barilla G.E.R. F.LLI-Societa per AzioniInventors: Noel Haegens, Stefano Righi, Romeo Signani
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Patent number: 5260075Abstract: A breadstick tasting bread-like is formed from a dough for breadstick making which incorporates an aqueous suspension of a mixture of flour and yeast. After said dough has been allowed to rise, and rolled, from the resulting sheet dough preforms are prepared which are then subjected to a preliminary, quick baking heat treatment step followed by baking to completion.Type: GrantFiled: October 2, 1991Date of Patent: November 9, 1993Assignee: Barilla G.E.R. F.LLI - Societa per AzioniInventors: Noel Haegens, Romeo Signani
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Patent number: 5182124Abstract: A method and apparatus for producing a sheet of dough, wherein powdered materials, including flour, yeast, sugar, and fats and oils, for making bread, are mixed with particles of ice, such that the particles of ice do not melt, to make them into a dough mixture. The dough mixture is formed into a continuous belt-like dough mixture having a uniform width and thickness such that the particles of ice do not melt, and then the particles of ice are melted to make the belt-like dough mixture hydrated. Finally continuous hydrated belt-like dough mixture is stretched so that a continuous sheet of dough having a gluten network is provided.Type: GrantFiled: April 22, 1991Date of Patent: January 26, 1993Assignee: Rheon Automatic Machinery Co., Ltd.Inventors: Minoru Kageyama, Yasuo Torikata
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Patent number: 5047257Abstract: A novel procedure for the preparation of a protein which is an inhibitor of alpha-amylase II is described. The protein may be prepared by extracting barley meal with a Tris-HCl buffer and purifying the crude inhibitor thus obtained by a chromatographic procedure. Alternatively, the protein may be prepared by recombinant DNA techniques. The protein can be applied as an additive to sprout-damaged wheat flour which can then be used to provide improved quality bread.Type: GrantFiled: January 8, 1990Date of Patent: September 10, 1991Assignee: ABI Biotechnology, Inc.Inventor: Urszula Zawistowska
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Patent number: 5030466Abstract: A method is provided for producing bread of a good quality from frozen dough. In this method dough is stretched while being subjected to vibrations so that the dough can be stretched without imparting pressure exceeding the yield point of its elasticity. Thus during the stretching step the gluten network of the dough is unharmed. Further, the dough is rested at least five minutes within a temperature range of 0.degree. C. to 16.degree. C., before it is stretched. Such a dough rested at such a cool condition can be readily stretched, and the stability of the stretched dough is improved over the prior art.Type: GrantFiled: July 20, 1989Date of Patent: July 9, 1991Assignee: Rheon Automatic Machinery Co., Ltd.Inventors: Minoru Kageyama, Mikio Kobayashi
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Patent number: 4966778Abstract: A leavened and unleavened frozen dough composition is prepared comprising wheat protein in an amount greater than 16% protein based on the total weight of flour. The frozen dough can withstand less than ideal commercial distribution temperatures and storage in home freezers for more than 16 weeks with good baked, end-product results. A preferred embodiment is a yeast-leavened dough which is proofed before freezing to minimize consumer preparation time from freezer to point of consumption. The proofed, frozen dough maintains a commercially satisfactory quality after more than 16 weeks frozen storage.Type: GrantFiled: July 22, 1986Date of Patent: October 30, 1990Assignee: Kraft General Foods, Inc.Inventors: Earl J. Benjamin, Charles H. Ke, Richard B. Hynson, Chi Ming L. Hsu
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Patent number: 4950489Abstract: A dried granular form of a whole grain leavening barm containing viable cells of a maltosa-fermenting Lactobacillus and viable cells of a non-maltose-fermenting Saccharomyces has now been produced. The product of the drying process in preferred embodiments contains an admixture of Saccharomyces dairensis (ATCC 20782) and Lactobacillus brevis (ATCC 53295), whole grain flour, nonvolatile products of fermentation, and 5-12% water. Soybean oil containing the emulsifying agent lecithin and antioxidant tocopherols and malted whole grain flour are optional additives. The process of drying provided by this invention employs whole grain flour as a partial drying agent and also employs a sequential method for drying in which the microorganisms are supported on flour in the form of granules for the final warm air-drying stage.Type: GrantFiled: January 31, 1989Date of Patent: August 21, 1990Assignee: Alton Spiller, Inc.Inventor: Monica A. Spiller
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Patent number: 4910297Abstract: A novel procedure for the preparation of a protein which is an inhibitor of alpha-amylase II is described. The protein may be prepared by extracting barley meal with a Tris-HCl buffer and purifying the crude inhibitor thus obtained by a chromatographic procedure. Alternatively, the protein may be prepared by recombinant DNA techniques. The protein can be applied as an additive to sprout-damaged wheat flour which can then be used to provide improved quality bread.Type: GrantFiled: June 16, 1988Date of Patent: March 20, 1990Assignee: ABI Biotechnology Inc.Inventor: Urszula Zawistowska
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Patent number: 4885176Abstract: Bread ingredients and water are kneaded at the start of a bread making process, and the dough is rested. Susequently, dry yeast is added to the dough, and the dough with the added dry yeast is kneaded again. The dough is then allowed to ferment during which time a gas is released from the dough several times, the fermentation stage being followed by baking the dough. An automatic bread making apparatus has a yeast charger for charging dry yeast into a kneading container. Thus, dry yeast can automatically be added to the kneaded dough without manual intervention.Type: GrantFiled: June 19, 1987Date of Patent: December 5, 1989Assignee: Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd.Inventors: Hirofumi Nakakura, Morio Shibata, Haruo Ishikawa, Akihisa Nakano, Hiromi Hiroto, Hajime Oyabu
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Patent number: 4882178Abstract: A process for preparing a yeast raised doughnut comprising fermenting a dough, degassing the same, cutting and forming the dough and then frying the same in oil.Type: GrantFiled: May 25, 1988Date of Patent: November 21, 1989Assignee: Nisshin-DCA Foods, Inc.Inventor: Akira Shimamura
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Patent number: 4849230Abstract: A low water content (lower than 40% bulk based on the flour bulk) breadmaking dough prepared from a high gluten content (proteins in excess of 12%) flour, is rolled until a visco-elastic characteristic breadmaking dough is obtained; metered amounts of the breadmaking dough are then pressed into respective molds to yield a compressed, flat bun blank.The flat bun blank is rolled up, given a desired shape, allowed to leaven, and following a baking step, dried down to a moisture content lower than 10%.Type: GrantFiled: June 3, 1988Date of Patent: July 18, 1989Assignee: Super S.P.A.Inventor: Angelo Varvello
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Patent number: 4828846Abstract: A food product suitable for human consumption, having acceptable flavor and nutritional value, is recovered from cereal grain residues remaining after alcohol fermentation. The food product of the invention is produced by controlling the pH at a range of 4.0-5.0 of the various enzymic conversions of starch to alcohol using only certain organic and inorganic acids which avoid imparting unacceptable mineral acid tastes to the finished product. The preferred acid is citric acid. The pH of the slurry residues before drying to a finished product must be neutralized to about 5.0-8.0. Again, satisfactory taste of the finished product is achieved by carefully selecting the neutralizing agent, typically hydroxides or oxides of Na, K or Ca. Resulting products are characterized as containing only salts from acids used to adjust pH which are taste acceptable. The product forms a 1:10 aqueous suspension having a pH of about 5.0-8.0.Type: GrantFiled: January 11, 1988Date of Patent: May 9, 1989Assignee: Washington Research FoundationInventors: Barbara A. Rasco, William J. McBurney
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Patent number: 4732768Abstract: An improved process for producing baked products such as breads and rolls is provided which gives the products an extremely long shelf life and essential batch-to-batch uniformity. Moreover, the process is susceptible to a high degree of automation, thereby lowering costs. Broadly speaking, the process of the invention is an improvement over conventional sponge methods and involves initially setting the sponge fraction at a temperature of about 72.degree.-80.degree. F. and a pH of 5.2-5.6; the sponge is fermented for a period of about 11/2-21/2 hours in order to elevate the temperature and reduce the pH of the sponge. The sponge is then cooled to eliminate yeast activity, and is mixed with dough fraction components to yield a final dough. The final mixed dough is quiescently held and proofed in an intermediate proofer for 6-8 minutes. Final processing involves molding, baking, cooling and packaging. The process is also characterized by a complete absence of synthetic yeast foods in the sponge fraction.Type: GrantFiled: September 23, 1986Date of Patent: March 22, 1988Assignee: Interstate Brands CorporationInventor: Nickolas C. Kovach
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Patent number: 4711786Abstract: A high fiber bread or an extruded edible product that is made from a dough that includes wheat flour, pea flour and advantageously includes two or more of isolated pea protein, ground triticale hulls and ground pea hulls, or alternately includes wheat or various other cereal grain flours, ground triticale hulls and ground pea hulls with or without ground pea cotyledons.Type: GrantFiled: July 17, 1985Date of Patent: December 8, 1987Assignee: E.D.S. CompanyInventor: Edward D. Schmidt
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Patent number: 4680182Abstract: The present invention relates to a dough which includes a yeast of the genus Saccharomyces resistant to polyene antibiotics. These yeasts have been found to be particularly useful in the preparation of doughs which are frozen and subsequently defrosted for use. The doughs according to the invention when used after freezing and defrosting provide comestible products of a higher quality than previously known for such products.Type: GrantFiled: April 24, 1984Date of Patent: July 14, 1987Inventor: Masanobu Kawai
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Patent number: 4622225Abstract: A method of preparing yeast-leavened bread crumbs suitable for use in a stuffing mix. A fully developed bread dough which has a generally low water content of not more than 60% based on flour weight, is sheeted and baked in sheet form. The dough sheet has a thickness of 1/4 to 3/4 inches. Proofing of the dough is limited to provide a baked sheet having a density of from 17 to 36 pounds per cubic feet. After cooling, the baked bread sheet is subjected to staling for a maximum of ten hours. The staled sheet is then divided into bread crumbs. The entire process, after providing the developed dough, is preferably carried out in not more than twelve hours. The short processing time is largely attributable to the relatively short staling period.Type: GrantFiled: November 4, 1985Date of Patent: November 11, 1986Assignee: General Foods CorporationInventors: Chia-Chi Tu, Ronald P. Wauters, Ralph E. Kenyon
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Patent number: 4578272Abstract: A method of preparing a yeast bread flavor composition and concentrate which comprises mixing breadmaking yeast with a dilute aqueous sugar solution of not more than about 0.5% sugar and allowing the yeast and sugar to react at 35.degree.-40.degree. C. to form a solution of yeast enzymes. The yeast cells are then removed from the solution and the enzyme solution is mixed with bread making flour and permitted to react at about 35.degree.-40.degree. C. so as to create a bread flavored solution portion and a spent flour portion, both of which are adapted to be freeze-dried and stored. The spent flour and flavor concentrate may also be mixed with each other to provide another flavoring material.Type: GrantFiled: May 17, 1985Date of Patent: March 25, 1986Assignee: Quaker Oats CompanyInventor: Hideo Tomomatsu
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Patent number: 4560559Abstract: Yeast-raised wheat-based food products having improved resistance to deterioration caused by microwave heating are prepared from formulations comprising wheat flour, yeast and an effective amount of at least one starch, such as a rice starch, corn starch or wheat starch, of average crystal size less than about 20 microns and sufficiently small to reduce deterioration in the palatability of the food product caused by microwave energy. The food products are made by mixing such a formulation into a dough and baking the dough formulation for a time and at a temperature sufficient to form a yeast-raised wheat-based food product.Type: GrantFiled: June 3, 1983Date of Patent: December 24, 1985Assignee: Lee OttenbergInventor: Ray Ottenberg
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Patent number: 4500548Abstract: A fermentation aid for yeast-raised bakery goods comprising a fermented mixture of flour, sugar, water and a yeast of the species Saccharomyces cereviseae wherein the mixture is fermented for a period of time sufficient in the absence of other ingredients to decrease the pH of the mixture from the initial pH to a pH below about 4.75 and dried under conditions such that a major amount of the volatile components of the mixture with the exception of water remain in the fermented aid after drying.Type: GrantFiled: March 15, 1982Date of Patent: February 19, 1985Assignee: Stauffer Chemical CompanyInventor: Roy F. Silva
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Patent number: 4463020Abstract: Yeast-raised wheat-based food products comprising wheat flour, yeast and an amount of long-grain rice flour effective to reduce deterioration in the palatability of the food product caused by microwave energy. The food products are made by preparing a formulation including the above mentioned ingredients, mixing the formulation into a dough and baking the dough formulation for a time and a temperature sufficient to form a yeast-raised wheat-based food product. The yeast-raised wheat-based food products show vast improvement in palatability over conventionally prepared yeast-raised wheat-based food products upon exposure to microwave energy.Type: GrantFiled: August 12, 1982Date of Patent: July 31, 1984Assignee: Lee OttenbergInventor: Ray Ottenberg
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Patent number: 4452859Abstract: A baking and cooking tray sheet comprises a base stock of neutral paper or cardboard weighing 150 to 500 g/m.sup.2 on the dry basis, and a barrier layer provided thereon and composed mainly of a polyvinyl alcohol and/or starch and a water-resisting agent. A coating layer of silicone resin is further applied on the barrier layer. The tray sheet should have a water vapor permeability of greater than 100 g/m.sup.2 for 24 hours and an air permeability of greater than 5,000 seconds. The tray sheet is prepared by the steps of coating one or both sides of the base stock with a coating liquid composed mainly of a polyvinyl alcohol and/or starch and a water-resisting agent, followed by drying, and of applying one side of the resultant sheet with a coating liquid of silicone resin, followed by drying.Type: GrantFiled: August 26, 1981Date of Patent: June 5, 1984Assignee: Sanyo-Kokusaku Pulp Co., Ltd.Inventors: Masayuki Nishijima, Morimasa Koizumi, Minoru Matsuda
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Patent number: 4366178Abstract: After baking bread dough goods in an oven at about 375.degree. F., their temperature is lowered to at least about 120.degree. F., and they are then cryogenically cooled to about 45.degree. F. or below in about 5 to about 15 minutes. The baked goods are then maintained at a temperature of about 37.degree. F. to about 45.degree. F. for at least about 25 minutes to effect substantial starch crystallization; after which time, slicing, bagging and freezing are carried out. Cryogenic cooling is preferably effected in a CO.sub.2 cooler, and the cooled baked goods are maintained at about 40.degree. F. for between about 25 and about 60 minutes prior to freezing by movement along an insulated conveyor which is cooled by circulation therethrough of cold CO.sub.2 vapor exhaust from the CO.sub.2 cooler.Type: GrantFiled: April 27, 1981Date of Patent: December 28, 1982Assignee: Liquid Carbonic CorporationInventors: Martin M. Reynolds, Linda Young-Bandala
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Patent number: 4350710Abstract: The application relates to a baking method, wherein the quantity of dough necessary for the making of a one-piece baked product is primarily divided into small-sized, approximately round dumplings having a diameter up to 34 millimeters and thereafter subjected to piece fermentation and to a primary baking process a time sufficient to permit the formation of a skin-like coating or of a beginning crust. These dumplings, if desired, after intermediate deep-freezing, storage and defrosting, respectively, are transformed into a single-layer or multi-layer heap arrangement or heap of bulk goods and exposed to the flowing action of hot gases and/or vapors in a second baking process until they are baked together, the gaps between the same are at least partially closed and crust formation has been completed.Type: GrantFiled: February 8, 1980Date of Patent: September 21, 1982Assignee: Perfluktiv-Consult AGInventor: Erich Sundermann
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Patent number: 4303677Abstract: A prepared specialty frozen food product and method. The product is a frozen pizza with a filling-receiving crust portion made from a bread dough and a filling portion received within the crust. The method comprises preparing a bread dough product, subdividing the bread dough into individual dough elements, permitting the dough elements to rise, placing the dough elements within a forming pan having a flat, lower surface portion and an upwardly and outwardly tapering sidewall surface and pressing the dough elements within the pan so as to form the dough elements into flat sheets substantially co-extensive with the lower pan surface portion. Next, the dough sheets are allowed to rise, and are re-pressed so as to further exclude the dough radially. This causes the dough sheet to assume the contours of the pan bottom and sidewall and causes the crust to assume substantially uniform thickness in the bottom and sidewall areas of the pan.Type: GrantFiled: September 18, 1979Date of Patent: December 1, 1981Assignee: The Quaker Oats CompanyInventor: James De Acetis
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Patent number: 4285979Abstract: A process for making a bread-like product comprising the steps of frying in hot oil at a temperature of 360.degree.-370.degree. F. pieces of dough which have been formed into a desired shape and thickness for a predetermined period of time to only partially cook the same. The frying step is followed by a subsequent step of baking the fried bread pieces at a temperature of, for example, 375.degree. F., for 15-25 minutes to complete the cooking thereof. Also, the product, i.e., the bread-like pieces, obtained by carrying out the above-described process, may be consumed as regular bread, bread sticks, or used to produce products such as pizzas, garlic bread, pastry hors d'oeuvres or sandwiches (frozen or otherwise). The bread product resulting from the combined steps of frying and baking is undistorted.Type: GrantFiled: June 3, 1980Date of Patent: August 25, 1981Inventor: Edmund F. Izzi
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Patent number: 4271200Abstract: A frozen pizza and method. The pizza includes a frozen crust portion and a filling portion for receiving the pizza sauce or other filling. The crust includes a generally flat filling-receiving center section of predetermined thickness, height and density, and this center section is surrounded by an edge portion which is formed integrally with the center section portion. The edge portion is of increased height and decreased density with respect to the respective height and density of the center section portion. The edge portion has an inner sidewall which serves to confine the filling portion to the center section of the pizza product. The method includes the steps of permitting limited rise of the dough during crust formation, and then depressing or debossing the center section of the dough sheet to increase its density and reduce its height, while permitting the outer margin of the sheet to rise naturally to greater height and to assume a reduced density.Type: GrantFiled: August 6, 1979Date of Patent: June 2, 1981Assignee: The Quaker Oats CompanyInventors: Walter L. Hempenius, June E. Yantis
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Patent number: 4223042Abstract: A dough composition including flour, water, yeast, a starch digesting agent or digested starch, salt, sugar, shortening, milk, a yeast nutient and monosodium glutamate is used to prepare baked products such as bread and rolls. After mixing, the dough is allowed to relax and is then machined, proofed and baked. The monosodium glutamate acts as a gluten reducing agent for a short period during mixing and subsequently accounts for an oxidizing effect over an extended period.Type: GrantFiled: March 13, 1978Date of Patent: September 16, 1980Inventor: George P. Sternberg
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Patent number: 4216241Abstract: A method for the production of a new and novel English muffin on a mass production basis is provided wherein the English muffin is produced by the use of a conventional bun oven and an insulated baking pan which prevents an overbaking of the bottom of the English muffin and a perforated cover plate which permits an even baking of the top surface and imparts a pattern effect on the top surface of the English muffin corresponding to the perforations in the cover plate. The resulting English muffin is new and novel, and in addition to the pattern effect on the top surface thereof, will possess a uniform color on the top and bottom surfaces thereof.Type: GrantFiled: November 29, 1978Date of Patent: August 5, 1980Inventor: Jerome B. Thompson
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Patent number: 4157403Abstract: Brown and serve products are produced by a microwave process in substantially less time than the current conventional production time. These products are baked directly in the sales carton which eliminates most handling and transfer. In addition, the shelf life of brown and serve rolls is increased by microwave baking in the sales carton and immediately overwrapping while hot with a shrink film overwrap. The process of microwave proofing of brown and serve rolls also reduces the overall processing time.Type: GrantFiled: July 12, 1976Date of Patent: June 5, 1979Assignee: International Telephone & Telegraph CorporationInventors: Robert F. Schiffmann, Alfred H. Mirman, Richard J. Grillo, Sally A. Wouda
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Patent number: 4093749Abstract: A dough composition including flour, water, yeast, a starch digesting agent, a yeast nutrient and monosodium glutamate is used to prepare baked products such as bread and rolls. After mixing, the dough is allowed to relax and is then machined, proofed and baked. The monosodium glutamate acts as a gluten reducing agent for a short period during mixing and subsequently accounts for an oxidizing effect over an extended period.Type: GrantFiled: August 9, 1976Date of Patent: June 6, 1978Inventor: George P. Sternberg
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Patent number: 3976717Abstract: Powder coating compositions are disclosed which comprise a blend of coreactable, thermosettable copolymers each of which have at least two different functional groups. Ordinarily, these polymers will be qualitatively difunctional, although they may contain more than two different functional groups, and quantitatively polyfunctional. At least one of the copolymers has epoxy functionality as one of its two or more different functionalities. Thus, in the preferred embodiments, the first copolymer of the blend has epoxy functionality and a second functionality selected from amide functionality, anhydride functionality and hydroxy functionality and is crosslinkable with the second copolymer through at least two different types of functional groups on the first copolymer.Type: GrantFiled: August 21, 1975Date of Patent: August 24, 1976Assignee: Ford Motor CompanyInventors: Santokh S. Labana, Ares N. Theodore
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Patent number: 3976791Abstract: A process is disclosed for producing a pretzel which upon cooking will remain soft for an extended period of time, i.e., for a time period greater than 12 hours, with the process consisting essentially of mixing about 51 parts by weight water, sufficient yeast to cause a flour mixture to rise; mixing the water and yeast with about 100 parts by weight wheat flour with the wheat flour being present in an amount sufficient to prevent substantial cooling and moisture loss in the mixture; blending the ingredients for at least 8 minutes; forming the mixture into the shape of a pretzel or other shape; saturating the outside of the formed, uncooked pretzel with a sodium hydroxide solution; and cooling the sodium hydroxide coated, uncooked pretzel until the temperature thereof is below -15.degree.F. for at least 1 hour.Type: GrantFiled: November 24, 1975Date of Patent: August 24, 1976Inventor: Richard R. Seiberlich
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Patent number: 3947597Abstract: Scrap dough having connected areas and resulting from cutting spaced dough shapes from a continuous sheet of dough is continuously returned to the mixer after additional new dough ingredients are added to the mixer and before full development of the new dough. The scrap dough is continuously mixed with the new dough until full development of the new dough occurs.Type: GrantFiled: October 10, 1974Date of Patent: March 30, 1976Assignee: Marion CorporationInventor: Clarence A. Kieffaber