Contact presses (panini grills, sandwich presses, smashing-burger presses) cook with two heated plates pressing the food. They are the small-footprint hot-cookery tool for cafes, bars and quick-service. Hospitality Connect stocks contact presses from Roband, Apuro, Anvil, Birko and Cookrite — across single, double and twin-plate formats with smooth, ribbed and combo tops.
Types of contact presses
- Single contact press (smooth top): One press plate over a smooth bottom; suits flat sandwiches, smashing-burger and panini.
- Single contact press (ribbed top): Char-mark grill pattern on the top plate; gives the visual char-grill effect on panini and burgers.
- Twin contact press: Two side-by-side press plates; doubles the throughput for busy cafes.
- Combo (smooth + ribbed): One plate of each; flexibility for menu split.
- Heavy-duty smash burger presses: Cast-iron tops rated for high-volume burger service; thicker plates retain heat for back-to-back patties.
Sizing and venue match
Match plate area to your menu — a 250x250mm plate covers a single panini or two smashing burgers; 360x360mm covers two paninis or four burgers. Twin-plate machines double throughput for cafes pushing 60+ paninis a service. Power scales — single 1.8–2.2kW (10A); twin 3.0–3.6kW (15A). Plate weight matters: heavier cast-iron tops hold heat better for consecutive cooks but slow heat-up time. Lighter chrome-plated tops heat fast but lose temperature between presses.
Installation and operating notes
- Power: 10A 240V for single, 15A for twin or heavy-duty.
- Bench clearance: 50mm side and rear ventilation; heat sinks at the back of most units.
- Drip tray: Empty between flavours — cheese spillage burns on hot plates and creates smoke.
- Pre-heat time: Allow 8–12 minutes for full heat-up; programmable thermostats save energy on slow days.
- Plate cleaning: Hot plate-scraper while warm; chemicals only on cooled plates per manufacturer schedule.
Contact press scoping: smooth top for paninis with even browning; ribbed top for char-mark visual on burgers and panini; combo for menu flexibility. Plate weight matters — heavier cast-iron tops hold heat for back-to-back cooks but slow first-cook heat-up; lighter chrome-plated tops heat fast but lose temperature between presses. For burger smashing, specify cast-iron or heavy-duty plate; the smashing impact bends light plates over time. Confirm bench clearance before delivery — heat sinks at the back of most units; allow 50mm side and rear ventilation.
Pair with
Round out a hot-finish line with salamander open toaster, high speed ovens and grill, food heat lamps and electric cooking equipment.