-
2007-02-27
10/371,648
2003-02-24
US 7,182,377 B2
2007-02-27
-
-
Eileen D. Lillis | Paul T. Chin
2023-02-24
An improved spatula is presented that has a handle shaped to permit easy removal of the contents of condiment containers. The spatula handle possesses a double angled offset such that when held in the hand, the spatula head makes flush contact with the walls of a condiment container.
Get notified when new applications in this technology area are published.
A47J43/28 IPC
Implements for preparing or holding food, not provided for in other groups of this subclass Other culinary hand implements, e.g. spatulas, pincers, forks or like food holders, ladles, skimming ladles, cooking spoons; Spoon-holders attached to cooking pots
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to spatulas and scrapers used to spread condiments or obtain condiments from jars.
2. Description of Related Art
In the prior art, spatulas of this kind are comprised of a handle made from stiff or slightly flexible material and a spatula head made from a flexible material that returns to its original planar shape after it is used. The flexible spatula head often has a pointed, right-angled edge and a rounded edge at its farthest extension.
Previous spatula design have attempted to deal with the problem of using the spatula inside a jar, where the user inserts the flexible head as far down into the condiment jar as possible nd scrapes the sides and the bottom. Because previous designs have used a straight or straight-angled handle, the flat side edge of the spatula head has never come into direct, flat contact with the side of a standard condiment jar. There has always been the problem that the spatula head is canted so that only a portion of the flat edge is in contact with the jar side.
The present invention consists of a rigid or slightly flexible handle attached to a flexible spatula head. The handle is constructed with a double angle, such that when held, the flat sides of the spatula head are parallel to the portion of the handle grasped by the user. The angle or angles taken by the double-angled handle are a matter of design and projected function, and could be any angle less than 90 degrees.
This invention can be used to scrape out condiment jars or to spread condiments. The improved handle design will keep the user's hand above the spreading surface to avoid hand contact with the condiments being spread.
It is an object of this invention to provide an improved spatula with a handle possessing a double angle to permit easier use in condiment jars.
It is another object of this invention to provide a spatula with an improved head shape to better fit condiment jars.
It is a further object of this invention to provide an improved spatula with a double-angled handle that is available in a variety of handle angles to fit different jars and containers.
Further objects and features of the present invention are disclosed by the accompanying figures:
FIG. 1 shows the device in use in a condiment jar.
FIG. 2 shows the device in side view.
FIG. 3 shows the device in top view.
Referring to FIG. 1, the invention consists of handle101 and a spatula head102, the handle101 possessing an angle103a near the grasping end104 of the handle101 and an angle103b near the spatula head102. In the preferred embodiment, these two angles are the same trigonometric angle.
The handle101 is made of a rigid or slightly flexible material. Possible materials include wood, plastic, metal or ceramic. The spatula head102 is comprised of a flexible material that resumes its shape after being flexed, such as plastic or rubber.
In FIG. 1, it can be seen that the angles103a, 103b in the handle101 allow the flat spreading edge105 of the spatula to lie next to the side of the condiment container120. This permits easier scraping of the contents of the container120. The spatula head102 also possess a rounded end106 of the spreading edge that fits the curvature of condiment containers, making removal of contents at the bottom of such a container120 easier.
In FIG. 2, The general shape of the invention can be seen. The grasping end104 of the handle101 is in a line parallel and above the upper edge107 of the spatula head102. The head attachment portion110 of the handle101 is inserted into the receiving edge108 of the spatula head102 and in the preferred embodiment is held fixedly.
The downward offset portion of the handle109 is at an angle103a to the grasping end104 and is at an angle103b to the head attachment portion110 of the handle101. The handle101 can be held in the spatula head102 removably in other instantiations of this invention.
This invention has other applications, potentially, and one skilled in the art could discover these. The explication of the features of this invention does not limit the claims of this application; other applications developed by those skilled in the art will be included in this invention.
1. A spatula for spreading condiments, the spatula comprised of a handle and a spatula head, the handle comprised of a grip portion, a downward offset portion and a head attachment portion,
the downward offset portion connected to the grip portion at an angle, the head attachment portion connected to the other end of the downward offset portion at the same angle,
the grip portion and the head attachment portion positioned such that they are parallel to each other,
the grip portion, downward offset portion, and head attachment portion positioned such that they lie in a single geometric plane,
the spatula head a flat piece of flexible material bounded by a handle receiving edge, flanked on the sides with a flat upper edge on one side, a spreading edge on the other side with, and a curved end opposite the handle receiving edge,
the flat upper edge parallel to the grip portion and the head attachment portion of the handle, the head attachment portion of the handle connected to the handle receiving edge,
the spreading edge running along the side of the spatula head opposite the flat upper edge starting at the handle receiving edge and terminating in the curved end,
the curved end running along the side of the spatula head opposite the receiving edge, the curved end terminating at the end of the flat upper edge, the flat spatula head lying in the same geometric plane as the plane formed by the handle.
2. The spatula as in claim 1 where the curved end is a curve in the shape of a quarter circle.
3. The spatula as in claim 1 where the head attachment portion of the handle is attached fixedly to the handle receiving edge of the spatula head.
4. The spatula as in claim 1 where the head attachment portion of the handle is attached removably to the handle receiving edge of the spatula head.