Commercial cookware sits between your heat source and your menu — it determines how evenly food sears, whether sauces reduce predictably, and how long a pan lasts under daily service. Hospitality Connect's cookware range covers anodised aluminium frypans, stainless saucepans with bakelite handles, blue steel crepe and blinis pans, carbon steel woks and dedicated paella, balti and fish poaching pans from Chef Inox and Avanti, in sizes from 120mm starter blinis pans up to 460mm fish poachers.
Choosing the right cookware for your station
- Frypans 180–350mm: The 200mm and 250mm sizes carry the load on most a la carte stations; 300mm and 350mm are for batch sears, fish portions and breakfast service.
- Saucepans and stockpots: Stainless with sandwich bases for sauces and stocks where slow even heat matters more than fast response.
- Specialty pans: Blinis, paella and balti dishes are sized for plate-up presentation as well as cooking — order in service-set quantities, not just one of each.
- Woks 270–350mm: Bamboo helper handles for tossing, induction-compatible bases for sites running induction wok burners.
Material comparison
- Anodised aluminium: Fast heat-up, even distribution, lighter than stainless. The standard for high-volume frypan stations.
- Stainless steel 18/10: Most durable, dishwasher safe and best for sauces, stocks and reductions. Heavier on the wrist over a long shift.
- Carbon steel and blue steel: Builds a natural patina, retains heat well, and ideal for crepes, blinis and traditional French sauté.
- Non-stick coated aluminium: Egg, omelette and delicate fish stations only — keep away from metal utensils and high empty heat.
Specifying cookware for the type of venue
Cafés running breakfast service typically need 6–10 frypans in the 200–250mm range plus a couple of larger pans for share plates. Restaurants with longer menus need a wider mix — sauce pans, sauté pans, and at least one specialty pan per signature dish. Production kitchens supplying functions or events should size up — 300mm-plus pans and stockpots above 12 litres save labour on batch work.
Pair cookware with
Australian commercial hospitality covers a broad spectrum — quick-service chains, casual dining, fine dining restaurants, function and event centres, pubs and clubs, cafés, bakeries, hotels, aged-care kitchens, hospital food service, school canteens, government catering and the corporate function market. The right specification varies by venue type. We've supplied equipment to all of these, and that experience helps us flag when a piece of equipment is right-sized or when a different model would suit your throughput better.
Build out a complete kitchen kit by adding cooks knives, baking sheets and trays and bakeware and baking accessories — and don't forget cutting boards sized to suit your prep workflow.