Types of hot cupboard
Hot cupboards are the back-of-house and front-of-house warming cabinets used to hold prepared food and clean crockery at safe service temperature. Hospitality Connect stocks FED, Bonvue, and Polar ranges across mobile bain-marie carts, plate-warming cabinets, sealed-door warming cupboards, and heated holding cabinets for service-ready dishes. Choose by what the cupboard holds — clean plate-warming differs from hot-food holding, and gentle holding (60°C) differs from active warming (75°C).
- Plate warmers: low-temperature (50–60°C) cabinets for warm plate service in restaurants and hotels.
- Hot food holding: 60–75°C controlled-temperature cabinets for prepared food awaiting service or buffet refresh.
- Mobile bain-marie carts: trolley-mounted heated cabinets with GN inserts for buffet and event service.
- Pass-through warming: two-door cabinets between kitchen and service zones for hot plate handover.
- Heated cabinet inserts: undercounter heated drawers integrated with bench fitouts for chef-station holding.
Sizing and capacity
Plate warmers are sized by plate count: 60-plate, 90-plate, 120-plate, and larger. Allow 1.5× covers per service in plate count to absorb wash-cycle gaps. Hot food holding is sized by GN pan capacity — 2 × GN 1/1 minimum for cafés, 4 × GN 1/1 or larger for restaurants running multiple held items. For mobile bain-marie carts, match wheel-base width to your service path; 800 mm carts navigate most service corridors, larger carts may snag on architectural features. Always confirm power requirements: most plate warmers run on 240 V, but high-capacity holding cabinets may need 15 A or 3-phase supply.
Operating considerations
- Temperature accuracy: digital thermostats hold within 2°C; older mechanical thermostats can drift 5–8°C between cycles.
- Humidity control: dry holding for fried items and pastries; moist holding for meats, vegetables, and steamed dishes.
- Insulation: look for sealed door gaskets and insulated walls — direct loss through poor insulation lifts the energy bill significantly.
- Gravity vs forced air: forced-air models heat faster but dry food faster; gravity holds gentler but takes longer to recover after door open.
- Service access: front-loading is standard; pass-through models suit dual-side service in larger kitchens.
Working with our team
Hospitality Connect's catalogue depth in this category reflects 21+ years of supplying Australian commercial venues — single-supplier convenience across appliances, smallware, and consumables means fewer purchase orders, consolidated freight, and consistent specification advice from a team that's seen most operational scenarios before.
Specification matters more than buyers expect — undersized or oversized purchases waste both capital and operating cost. Our trade team spec'd thousands of fitouts across cafés, restaurants, hotels, function venues, and contract kitchens, and we'll match recommendations to your venue brief rather than push the catalogue.
Pair with
Coordinate with commercial fridges, commercial food display, merchandising refrigeration, buffet and serving, and food preparation equipment for the full hot- and cold-line setup.