Ehzin - Unfortunately there are no such product on the market and that’s why I have to make my own.
IRstuff – Read please.
When Mom bolted out of the kitchen in the early nineties and had to go get a job, her cooking was not replaced and since then obesity has taken over. As a professional French Chef with over 50 years experience I have been looking at finding a way to replace Mom’s pot roast. I always knew that the replacement had to be exact, meaning when Mom placed the pot roast on the table, we were all sited, forks in hand and ready-to-eat.
Ready-to-eat here is the key element in the success of what I am trying to accomplish.
It started with discovering the right size casserole dish with high heat retention capacity and the perfect size to serve two complete dinners, meat or fish, three veggies and a starch.
Utilizing that dish I mad a working prototype with blow-molded Urethane. It consists of two parts, a bottom to hold the dish and a top. Top and bottom are locked air tight with the handles system and is single hand held. Heat retention is satisfactory close to two hours.
The dish is pre-heated to 300-350 degrees the freshly prepared hot food is placed in it, quickly covered, locked and either delivered or pickup from a catering kitchen.
Yes, there is condensation on the cover when open, but I never had a client mentioning it. They are too happy they don’t have to cook…and the appearance is fine, also no complaint.
A testing was done previously with a different carrier with side opening vacuuming the air and replacing it with nitrogen. As a Chef, I had the surprise of my life. After two hours, the food was hot, there was no condensation and the green veggies were a beautiful green. There was no deterioration.
That container was later imploded….
I know, I was told years ago to go back to cooking… you cannot keep food hot in plastic…. But my prototype is working, the name is CaterBox®.
I am at the stage where I need to decide to stick with this design, invest in the injection molding tool for the handles, they are now machined, $15 ea. A complete carrier cost is close to $100 ea. Expensive yes, but it’s unbreakable; it could be used to make money for a long time.