← Back to context Comment by bobthepanda 2 years ago At least with Heinz recipes are specifically not covered by patents. 5 comments bobthepanda Reply willcipriano 2 years ago Milk "recipes" are: https://patents.google.com/patent/US2550584A/enSo are fruit leather "recipes": https://patents.google.com/patent/AU2021200204B2/enI'd imagine they had something like that. Probably have to do something special to not burn the ketchup while you heat it. nashashmi 2 years ago Calling almond milk a milk drink is a bad idea. It should be milk-like almond drink. bobthepanda 2 years ago Almond milk has a etymology in English dating all the way back to 1381. https://www.oed.com/dictionary/almond-milk_nAlternative milks were common in a time period before refrigeration and pasteurization. It just kept longer. bobthepanda 2 years ago This patents a machine for pasteurization. The fact of pasteurization, getting milk to the target temperature, is not copyrightable. You would just have to use a different machine but you could still pasteurize. 0cVlTeIATBs 2 years ago My favorite snack ever, since discontinued, are also covered by patent. Partially popped popcorn that used to be at Trader Joe's.https://patents.google.com/patent/US7579036B2/en
willcipriano 2 years ago Milk "recipes" are: https://patents.google.com/patent/US2550584A/enSo are fruit leather "recipes": https://patents.google.com/patent/AU2021200204B2/enI'd imagine they had something like that. Probably have to do something special to not burn the ketchup while you heat it. nashashmi 2 years ago Calling almond milk a milk drink is a bad idea. It should be milk-like almond drink. bobthepanda 2 years ago Almond milk has a etymology in English dating all the way back to 1381. https://www.oed.com/dictionary/almond-milk_nAlternative milks were common in a time period before refrigeration and pasteurization. It just kept longer. bobthepanda 2 years ago This patents a machine for pasteurization. The fact of pasteurization, getting milk to the target temperature, is not copyrightable. You would just have to use a different machine but you could still pasteurize. 0cVlTeIATBs 2 years ago My favorite snack ever, since discontinued, are also covered by patent. Partially popped popcorn that used to be at Trader Joe's.https://patents.google.com/patent/US7579036B2/en
nashashmi 2 years ago Calling almond milk a milk drink is a bad idea. It should be milk-like almond drink. bobthepanda 2 years ago Almond milk has a etymology in English dating all the way back to 1381. https://www.oed.com/dictionary/almond-milk_nAlternative milks were common in a time period before refrigeration and pasteurization. It just kept longer.
bobthepanda 2 years ago Almond milk has a etymology in English dating all the way back to 1381. https://www.oed.com/dictionary/almond-milk_nAlternative milks were common in a time period before refrigeration and pasteurization. It just kept longer.
bobthepanda 2 years ago This patents a machine for pasteurization. The fact of pasteurization, getting milk to the target temperature, is not copyrightable. You would just have to use a different machine but you could still pasteurize.
0cVlTeIATBs 2 years ago My favorite snack ever, since discontinued, are also covered by patent. Partially popped popcorn that used to be at Trader Joe's.https://patents.google.com/patent/US7579036B2/en
Milk "recipes" are: https://patents.google.com/patent/US2550584A/en
So are fruit leather "recipes": https://patents.google.com/patent/AU2021200204B2/en
I'd imagine they had something like that. Probably have to do something special to not burn the ketchup while you heat it.
Calling almond milk a milk drink is a bad idea. It should be milk-like almond drink.
Almond milk has a etymology in English dating all the way back to 1381. https://www.oed.com/dictionary/almond-milk_n
Alternative milks were common in a time period before refrigeration and pasteurization. It just kept longer.
This patents a machine for pasteurization. The fact of pasteurization, getting milk to the target temperature, is not copyrightable. You would just have to use a different machine but you could still pasteurize.
My favorite snack ever, since discontinued, are also covered by patent. Partially popped popcorn that used to be at Trader Joe's.
https://patents.google.com/patent/US7579036B2/en