Benchtop induction cooktops bring fast, controllable, low-radiated-heat cooking to back-of-house stations and front-of-house live cookery. Hospitality Connect stocks 1.8kW through 5kW benchtop induction units from Anvil, Apuro, Birko, Roband and Cookmaster, in single-zone, double-zone and wok-format models.
Types of benchtop induction
- Single-zone bench induction (1.8–3.5kW): Plug-and-play 10A and 15A 240V; the standard for buffet live cookery and demo stations.
- Double-zone bench induction (3.5–5kW): Twin elements; suits sauces and garnish on a busy station — usually 15A or 20A 240V.
- Induction wok ranges: Bowl-shaped recess for round-bottom woks; high-power 3.5–5kW for stir-fry programs.
- Drop-in / built-in induction: For permanent install in front-of-house carts and demo bars; see induction cooktops.
- Plancha and griddle induction: Specialty surfaces matched to induction-rated polished steel pans.
Sizing and pan compatibility
Induction needs ferromagnetic pans — stainless with a clad induction base, cast iron or carbon steel. Aluminium and copper pans need an induction adapter. Power scaling is non-linear; a 1.8kW unit boils 1L of water in roughly 4 minutes vs 2 minutes for a 3.5kW. Match power to the dish — sauteing and reductions need 1.8–2.5kW; stockpots and stir-fry want 3.5kW+. Bench depth needs 350mm minimum; allow 50mm rear and side ventilation clearance to dissipate fan-cooled heat from the electronics.
Operating considerations
- Power circuit: 1.8kW runs on a 10A general-purpose outlet; 3.5kW typically needs 15A; 5kW often three-phase or 20A circuit. Confirm before delivery.
- Boost mode duration: Most boost cycles are duty-cycled (3–5 min on, then back to nominal). Plan service moves accordingly.
- Pan detection: Below the unit's detection threshold (often 100–120mm pan diameter), the cooktop won't power on. Match small saucepans to the model spec.
- Cleaning: Spilled sugar requires immediate wipe — sets like glass on a hot ceramic top.
- Ambient cooling: Fans pull air through the unit; extraction matters in busy kitchens to avoid heat trips.
Two common scoping issues with benchtop induction. First, voltage and circuit capacity — a 3.5kW unit on a shared 10A circuit will trip the breaker mid-service; budget a dedicated 15A outlet. Second, pan compatibility — staff bring a favourite aluminium pan, find it doesn't work, and the unit gets blamed. Train staff on induction-rated pans (stainless with magnetic base, cast iron, carbon steel) and stock pan adapters for non-magnetic legacy cookware. Ambient ventilation matters: induction units pull air through internal cooling fans, and a kitchen running 35°C+ may trip the unit on heat-overload protection.
Pair with
Pair with induction cooktops built-in models, electric cooking equipment and anti-jam pans stainless steel gastornorm pan.