Food carriers transport hot, cold and ambient food between production kitchens and service points — for catering operations, school and aged-care meal delivery, satellite kitchens, off-site events and disaster relief. Hospitality Connect supplies insulated and heated carriers from Cambro, Carlisle, Vogue and Apuro — front-loading and top-loading carriers in GN 1/1 and 60×40 bakery formats with passive insulation or active heating.
Types of food carrier
- Insulated front-loading pan carriers: Cambro Go Box and Carlisle Cateraide front-loaders accept GN 1/1 pans up to 200mm depth — the catering workhorse.
- Top-loading insulated carriers: Tall narrow units for hot soups, stews and beverage transport.
- Active heated carriers: 240V powered units that hold service temperature for full-day catering — cabin and trailer compatible with inverter setups.
- Bakery 60×40 carriers: Wide format for sheet pans, bakery trays and pastry transport.
- Beverage carriers and Cambro Camtainer: Insulated 5L–17L liquid carriers with spigot and pour-spout options for coffee, soup and stock transport.
Sizing and configuration
Sizing is by GN pan capacity: a Cambro Go Box GBPP180 holds 3 GN 1/1 pans at 100mm depth. Stack two for 6 pans of mains in a single carrier. For event catering serving 100-200 covers, plan 4-6 hot carriers and 2 cold carriers. Heated carriers add 240V power draw (50-150W) but maintain 65 degrees C+ for 6+ hours; passive carriers maintain plus or minus 5 degrees C from start temp for 4-6 hours. Match the carrier to the menu - soups need top-loaders; mains need front-loaders.
Use cases
- Off-site catering: Insulated GN carriers are the standard for weddings, corporate events and outdoor catering.
- Aged care and meal delivery: Heated trolleys with individual tray slots for ward and room delivery.
- Satellite kitchens: Central production kitchens batch-cook then transport to multiple service points; carriers maintain HACCP-compliant temperature.
- Schools and canteens: Bulk hot transport for lunch service from production kitchens to satellite serveries.
- Disaster and emergency response: Active heated carriers for first responders and field hospitals.
HACCP-defensible food transport requires temperature monitoring - most carriers accept a digital probe through the lid for door-to-door logging. Hot food must remain above 60 degrees C; cold below 5 degrees C; the danger zone (5-60 degrees C) is limited to 4 hours total cook-to-serve. For long-haul catering (over 90 minutes), specify a heated carrier or a Camwarmer GN insert that pre-heats and holds. Inspect door gaskets quarterly - compromised seals fail HACCP audits and accelerate temperature drift.
Pair with
Combine with food and plate wamers, anti-jam pans stainless steel gastornorm pan and gastronorm and bakery trolleys for full transport setups.