Commercial tongs are the most-handled tool in any service kitchen — chosen for grip security, heat tolerance and quick washing. Hospitality Connect carries the working range from Chef Inox, Cambro, Wiltshire, Global and Piazza, in 180mm bar tongs through to 300mm catering tongs and Italian-made nickel-free service tongs for HACCP-sensitive venues.
Choosing the right tong for the station
- Stainless utility tongs (180–300mm): The standard line — 230mm Chef Inox in colour-coded handles for raw chicken, raw red meat and ready-to-eat is the most common station kit.
- Silicone-tipped tongs: Heat-tolerant to 230°C, safe for non-stick frypans and sealing surfaces. Wiltshire and Chef Inox both carry this format.
- Salad and vegetable tongs: Scalloped or fingered head, lighter spring tension for delicate leaves and herbs.
- Service and pastry tongs: Piazza, Italian-made; lighter form for pastry, charcuterie and front-of-house presentation.
- Buffet and ice tongs: Polished finish for view-side use; ice tongs run shorter handles and pointed tips.
Material and tip comparison
Stainless steel handles are dishwasher-rated and survive years of service. Silicone tips trade dishwasher tolerance for cookware safety — they soften gradually after 200+ heat cycles. Nickel-free Italian tongs avoid skin reactions for staff and run a polished finish for service. Chef Inox auto-lock 230mm and 250mm tongs are the highest-volume SKU; budget two per station as backups.
Use cases and care
- Colour-coded handles: Red for raw red meat, blue for raw seafood, green for salad, yellow for raw poultry, white for ready-to-eat. Set the rack accordingly.
- Auto-lock vs spring-load: Locking tongs save bench space; spring-only run faster but need a hook or tray when not in use.
- Inspection cycle: Check pivot point monthly; a snapped tong over a hot pan is a burn hazard.
- Pack with intent: Three to four sizes per kitchen — 180mm bar, 230mm working line, 300mm batch and 350mm catering.
Two operational habits separate venues that lose tongs to rust and breakage from venues that get five years out of a working set: tongs go through the dishwasher with the head down and the handle up so the auto-lock spring drains; and station tongs are inspected weekly for the hairline crack at the pivot that signals an imminent break. A pack-out for a 100-cover restaurant typically runs 6–8 working tongs per station, plus 2 spares per shift; cooking tongs separate from service tongs separate from raw protein tongs.
Pair with
Plate up with basting spoons, dinnerware and the chef's clothing range to round out a working line.