FOOD CONTAINER AND METHOD
Disclosed herein is a food box that includes an outer box and an inner bag located within the outer box configured to preserve food contents within the inner bag by preventing air from entering into the inner bag. The cereal box further includes an opening in the inner bag and a cap configured to seal the opening. The cap is attachable and unattachable to the opening. Air is prevented from entering into the inner bag through the opening when the cap is attached. The outer box includes a perforated portion that is removable from the outer box, and when the removable portion is removed, the cap is exposed. Further included herein is a method of forming the food box.
This Non-Provisional application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/922,515, filed Dec. 31, 2013, the disclosure of which is herein incorporated by reference to the extent that it is consistent with the present application.
FIELD OF THE DISCLOSUREThe subject matter disclosed herein relates generally to food containers. More particularly, the subject matter relates to a fully sealable and resealable cereal box having a resealable opening.
BACKGROUND OF THE DISCLOSUREFood packaging, and more particularly cereal packaging, has been around for decades. It has not changed, and includes an outer box, which is opened from the top by separating two flaps. The flaps are adhered together prior to purchase. Once the top flaps are opened, an internal bag (also sometimes referred to as a “liner”) which contains the cereal becomes accessible. The bag is contained within the box and is opened by pulling a top seam or edge apart which was adhered together with heat during packaging. The internal bag may or may not be adhered to the box at the bottom of the box. This type of packaging is also utilized for other types of food including chips, crackers, and the like. It is difficult to prevent air from reaching and turning the food stale within this type of packaging. As such, many consumers prefer to open their cereal and pour it into a fully sealable plastic container and simply throw out the box.
Thus, an improved resealable food container would be well received in the art.
BRIEF DESCRIPTIONAccording to one embodiment, a food container comprises: an outer box; an inner bag located within the outer box configured to preserve food contents within the inner bag by preventing air from entering into the inner bag; an opening in the inner bag; and a cap configured to seal the opening, wherein the cap is attachable and unattachable to the opening, wherein air is prevented from entering into the inner bag through the opening when the cap is attached; wherein the outer box includes a perforated portion that is removable from the outer box, and wherein when the removable portion is removed, the cap is exposed.
According to another embodiment, a food container comprises: an outer box; an inner bag located within the outer box configured to preserve food contents within the inner bag by preventing air from entering into the inner bag; a first opening in the inner bag; a second opening in the outer box; a cap attached to the first opening in the inner bag, the cap configured to seal the first opening, wherein air is prevented from entering into the inner bag through the opening when the cap is attached, and wherein the cap is exposed through the second opening of the outer box.
According to another embodiment, a method of constructing a food container comprises providing a roll of an inner bag material to a packaging machine, the roll of the inner bag material including a length; attaching a cap to the length of the inner bag material with the packaging machine; enclosing a bottom edge of the length of the inner bag material; filling the length of the inner bag material with food with the packaging machine; enclosing a top edge of the length of the inner bag material to form an enclosed inner bag, wherein the enclosed inner bag is sealed from the exterior environment; and locating the length of the inner bag material within an outer box.
According to another embodiment, a food container comprises: a box filled with pourable food, the box having a sealed gable top having a first gable and a second gable; wherein the gable top includes a resealable zip-top located on an inner surface of the first and second gables.
According to another embodiment, a cereal box comprises: a box filled with cereal, the box not including an inner bag, the box having a sealed gable top having a first gable and a second gable unsealable by pulling the first gable and the second gable apart and pulling a spout out of the first and second gables; wherein the gable top includes a resealable zip-top located on an inner surface of the first and second gables, the resealable zip-top configured to create an air-tight seal in the box.
According to another embodiment, a method of constructing a food container comprises: providing a box; filling the box with a pourable food; fashioning a gable into a top of the box having a first gable and a second gable; sealing the gable; and fashioning a resealable zip-top onto an inner surface of each of the first and second gables.
The subject matter which is regarded as the invention is particularly pointed out and distinctly claimed in the claims at the conclusion of the specification. The foregoing and other features and advantages of the invention are apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
A detailed description of the hereinafter described embodiments of the disclosed apparatus and method are presented herein by way of exemplification and not limitation with reference to the Figures.
Referring to
The food container 10 may be made primarily from card board in one embodiment. In the embodiment shown, the food container 10 does not include a liner or internal bag. This is because the outer box 11 may act as the liner in that the outer box 11 may ensure that the product maintains its freshness. The outer box 11 may prevent the product from becoming stale both prior to and after purchase by the consumer. Thus, care may be taken during the forming process of the outer box 11 to ensure that the outer box 11 is air tight after receiving the product and after sealing.
Referring now to
Referring back to
The opening 16 may further include a protective seal layer 28 or layer of plastic and/or metallic or aluminum material which is fully adhered to the opening 16 to seal the opening. The protective seal layer 28 must be pulled off or otherwise removed by a consumer after purchase of the product in order to access the product through the opening 16. The protective seal layer 28 may be utilized in order to prevent tampering with the contents of the food prior to purchase, and may create confidence in the consumer that the product was sufficiently sealed during distribution prior to sale and not tampered with.
The outer flap 20 may be connected to the raised outer ring 18 or the resealable opening 16 with a hinge 26. The hinge 26 may be a plastic hinge which allows the outer flap 20 to remain attached to the cereal box 10 both in an opened and sealed position. Other materials are contemplated such as rubber, or a composite. The hinge 26 and the outer flap 20 and/or the male raised outer ring 18 may further be recessed into the outer box 11, as shown in
In another embodiment shown in
As shown in
To fashion the food container 200, the inner bag 220 may be first supplied to a packaging machine either before or after being filled with food product. The bag 220 may then be adhered, with heat or an adhesive or otherwise, to the bottom surface 230 of the interior of the outer box 222. Similarly, the bag 220 may be adhered, with heat or an adhesive or otherwise, to the side surface 232 of the interior of the outer box 222. With the bag 220 adhered to the side surface 232 of the outer box 222, another heat or cutting process may be exacted on the food container 200 by the packaging machine. In one embodiment, a cut may be made with a sharp or heated blade into the side surface 232 and the inner bag 220 simultaneously or one after the other. Once the opening has been fashioned, the cap 110 may be inserted into the opening. In one embodiment, the heat from heated blade that makes the cut also heats the inner bag 220 so that it remains melted when the cap 110 is applied. Thus, when the cap 110 is applied in this manner, the residual heat from the inner bag 220 may melt the bag to the cap 110 thereby creating a seal. In other embodiments, exterior edges of the cap 110 may be heated prior to application into the opening to further melt the inner bag 220 to the cap to create a seal. It should be understood that the same process could be applied to attaching a flap style cap such as the foldable flap opening cap 16.
Referring now to
In one embodiment, a method 500 of creating the food box 300 is contemplated, as shown in
Still another embodiment is shown in
Moreover, the gable top 412 of this embodiment may be replaced with other style tops. However, in any embodiment, the concept of applying a zip-top style sealing onto a paperboard or cardboard box that has been opened is contemplated. Further, it is contemplated that the paperboard box would first be unsealable by breaking an adhesive. This unsealing or opening of the box would then reveal the resealable zip top sealing zipper.
Furthermore, as shown in
In yet another embodiment, a method of constructing a food container is contemplated. The method may include first providing a box, such as the box 410. The method may include filing the box with a pourable food and fashioning a gable into a top of the box, such as the gable 412. The gable may include a first and a second gable, such as the first and second gables 414, 416. The method may include sealing the gable, for example, with the original seal 422. The method may further include fashioning a resealable zip-top, such as the zip-tops 424, 418, onto an inner surface of each of the first and second gables. The method may further include unsealing the gable by pulling open the first gable and the second gable half way along an entire width of the sealed gable and pulling a spout, such as the spout 420, out of the first and second gables. The method may further include layering an outer polyethylene layer, a middle paperboard layer, and an inner polyethylene layer to create the box. The method may still further include heat pressing the first and second gable together to seal the gable. Moreover, the method may include fashioning the resealable zip-top above a seal of the sealed gable top. The method still further may include fashioning the resealable zip-top below a seal of the sealed gable top. The method may also include zipping the zip top closed and creating an air tight seal by the zip-top within the food container. The method may still further include fashioning a resealable zip-top onto an outer surface of the spout.
Elements of the embodiments have been introduced with either the articles “a” or “an.” The articles are intended to mean that there are one or more of the elements. The terms “including” and “having” and their derivatives are intended to be inclusive such that there may be additional elements other than the elements listed. The conjunction “or” when used with a list of at least two terms is intended to mean any term or combination of terms. The terms “first” and “second” are used to distinguish elements and are not used to denote a particular order.
While the invention has been described in detail in connection with only a limited number of embodiments, it should be readily understood that the invention is not limited to such disclosed embodiments. Rather, the invention can be modified to incorporate any number of variations, alterations, substitutions or equivalent arrangements not heretofore described, but which are commensurate with the spirit and scope of the invention. Additionally, while various embodiments of the invention have been described, it is to be understood that aspects of the invention may include only some of the described embodiments. Accordingly, the invention is not to be seen as limited by the foregoing description, but is only limited by the scope of the appended claims.
Claims
1. A food container comprising: an inner bag located within the outer box configured to preserve food contents within the inner bag by preventing air from entering into the inner bag;
- an outer box;
- an opening in the inner bag; and
- a cap configured to seal the opening, wherein the cap is attachable and unattachable to the opening, wherein air is prevented from entering into the inner bag through the opening when the cap is attached;
- wherein the outer box includes a perforated portion that is removable from the outer box, and wherein when the removable portion is removed, the cap is exposed.
2. The food container of claim 1, wherein the cap is a female threaded cap and wherein the opening includes a threaded male base.
3. The food container of claim 1, wherein the opening includes an outer base component and wherein the cap is a flap that is hingedly attached to the outer base component and snaps together to the outer base component.
4. The food container of claim 1, wherein the opening includes a base component that integrates with the inner bag to create an airtight seal between the base component and the inner bag.
5. The food container of claim 1, wherein the perforated portion is located proximate a lower edge of the outer box relative to the orientation of printed writing located on an external surface of the box, and wherein the perforated portion is located on a narrow side of the outer box.
6. The food container of claim 1, wherein the inner bag is adhered to an interior bottom surface of the outer boxy.
7. The food container of claim 1, wherein the opening is large enough for cereal to flow freely out of the opening.
8. The food container of claim 3, wherein the opening is non-circular in shape.
9. The food container of claim 1, wherein the cap is configured to be fixedly attached into a second opening in the outer box created by removal of the perforated portion.
10. A food container comprising: an inner bag located within the outer box configured to preserve food contents within the inner bag by preventing air from entering into the inner bag;
- an outer box;
- a first opening in the inner bag;
- a second opening in the outer box;
- a cap attached to the first opening in the inner bag, the cap configured to seal the first opening, wherein air is prevented from entering into the inner bag through the opening when the cap is attached, and wherein the cap is exposed through the second opening of the outer box.
11. The food container of claim 10, wherein the cap is a female threaded cap and wherein the first opening includes a threaded male base.
12. The food container of claim 10, wherein the first opening includes an outer base component and wherein the cap is a flap that is hingedly attached to the outer base component and snaps together to the outer base component.
13. The food container of claim 10, wherein the first opening includes a base component that integrates with the inner bag to create an airtight seal between the base component and the inner bag.
14. The food container of claim 10, wherein the second opening of the outer box is created by the removal of a perforated portion of the outer box, and wherein the perforated portion is located proximate a lower edge of the outer box relative to the orientation of printed writing located on an external surface of the box, and wherein the perforated portion is located on a narrow side of the outer box.
15. The food container of claim 10, wherein the inner bag is adhered to an interior bottom surface of the outer box.
16. The food container of claim 10, wherein the first and second openings are large enough for cereal to flow freely out.
17. The food container of claim 16, wherein the opening is non-circular in shape.
18. A method of constructing a food container comprising:
- providing a roll of an inner bag material to a packaging machine, the roll of the inner bag material including a length;
- attaching a cap to the length of the inner bag material with the packaging machine;
- enclosing a bottom edge of the length of the inner bag material;
- filling the length of the inner bag material with food with the packaging machine;
- enclosing a top edge of the length of the inner bag material to form an enclosed inner bag, wherein the enclosed inner bag is sealed from the exterior environment; and
- locating the length of the inner bag material within an outer box.
19. The method of claim 18, further comprising perforating the outer box at a location of the cap such that removal of a perforated portion exposes the cap.
20. The method of claim 18, further comprising adhering the bottom edge of the length of the inner bag material to the food container.
21. The method of claim 18, further comprising attaching the cap to the length of the inner bag material proximate the bottom edge of the length of the inner bag material.
22. The method of claim 18, further comprising attaching the cap to the length of the inner bag material proximate the top edge of the length of the inner bag material.
23. The method of claim 18, further comprising cutting or melting the length of the inner bag material to create an opening to receive the cap.
24. The method of claim 23, further comprising heat pressing the edge of the opening of the length of the plastic film material to the cap to seal the opening to the cap.
Type: Application
Filed: Dec 31, 2014
Publication Date: Jul 2, 2015
Inventors: BRYANT LUIZZI (LOUDONVILLE, NY), CHRISTIAN LUIZZI (LOUDONVILLE, NY), PETER LUIZZI (LOUDONVILLE, NY)
Application Number: 14/587,992