For those needing capacity beyond 240 gallons per hour, the company produces a falling film chiller, which provides a self-contained reservoir that bakeries can continuously fill with chilled water and draw out to as many mixers as they want, Williams says. Paul Mueller is currently developing and hopes to release later this year a medium-sized falling-film chiller that could handle 70 to 240 gallons per hour.
Beor’s water scoring machines provide a number of benefits, according to Bozzola. These include: flexibility to do straight, inclined, cross, and custom scores; ability to score very small products without moving or damaging them; no need to change blades; and no risk for the employee being cut, or blades breaking off into the baked good. The line of five machines are adjustable in terms of water pressure, speed, scoring height, and nozzle inclination, all of which can be done remotely if the machine is connected to the internet, he notes.
“You can score very small pieces of bread,” Bozzola says. “You can adjust the pressure depending on hydration and other factors. Then you can adjust the speed of the arm—the faster you move, the less you score. The deeper the jet of the water, the more it goes into the bread. Then you can get into different scoring types.”
Schwenger notes that adjusting the angle of the cut can change the look of the finished product. “With artisan bread, you want a nice open bloom on the loaf,” he says. Because Beor is able to change the inclination or angle, as well as the depth of the cut, through the pressure and speed of the robot, the system can provide any kind of score, he notes.
The Rapidojet line also produced by Bakery Concepts has garnered “multiple patents” in how it uses high-pressure liquidation in the mixing process, Schwenger says. Customers looking to reduce mix time, eliminate coolant and increase yield have been especially focused on areas like yeast-raised dough mixing and gluten-free products, including corn masa items like tortilla chips.
The benefits of Rapidojet include a reduction of 90 percent in mixing energy needed, 25 percent greater hydration level for gluten-free products, continuous mixing of between 4,000 and 7,500 kilograms per hour with a single machine, the elimination of the need for any coolants such as ice, and significantly reduced costs for energy, labor, worker safety, and maintenance and sanitation, Schwenger says.