thebigcheese
New member
Anyone know of a source to get speed rails for my make line other than True?
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Call Northern Pizza Equipment(1800-426=0323 www.northernpizzaequipment.com). They work with someone that custom makes these for them. Just tell them the width you want and the depth of the grate that you want and they should be able to send you drawings. I had a local welder make mine after having Northern make my last one. Give me an email address and I’ll email you a few pictures of mine.I’m looking for the Grates that sit on top of the make surface that elevated your pie about 2" off the table and have catch pans at the bottom for free throw topping. not speed rails in a bar application.
When the goal is to get my pizzas in the oven 30 to 60 seconds from when they are ordered I don’t have time to try to put cheese on my pizzas with one hand while keeping the cheese off the make table with another. I cheese a pizza in a total of a couple seconds and what goes over the edge of the crust gets caught in a pan and gets recycled regularly. At the end of an 800 pie gameday there is very little wastage and customers still got their pizzas delivered in well less than 30 minutes. To my business, every second on the makeline matters, and the grates allow us to operate faster.Ok boys and girls, please explain to me how these would help? If I understand correctly, it seems that the purpose is to catch the toppings/cheese that get thrown around and don’t actually get on the pie? I would think that any employee working on the make table, that “threw” toppings so that the amount that did not hit the pie had any significance, should be either re-trained or replaced. At the end of a busy (for us) Friday night, approx 150 pies plus pastas etc, we might have two or three cups of wasted toppings/cheese.Seems these grate things would encourage wastage when we work so hard to control it? Kinda defeats the concept of weighing cheese etc doesn’t it?
Looking to the more experienced operators to fill me in… Thanks.
In addition to what Paul stated it is also much easier to slide a pizza pan when there is no cheese on the table to slow the pan. The cheese is much easier to reclaim if it has not been smashed on the table by a pizza pan.boatnut:![]()
When the goal is to get my pizzas in the oven 30 to 60 seconds from when they are ordered I don’t have time to try to put cheese on my pizzas with one hand while keeping the cheese off the make table with another. I cheese a pizza in a total of a couple seconds and what goes over the edge of the crust gets caught in a pan and gets recycled regularly. At the end of an 800 pie gameday there is very little wastage and customers still got their pizzas delivered in well less than 30 minutes. To my business, every second on the makeline matters, and the grates allow us to operate faster.Ok boys and girls, please explain to me how these would help? If I understand correctly, it seems that the purpose is to catch the toppings/cheese that get thrown around and don’t actually get on the pie? I would think that any employee working on the make table, that “threw” toppings so that the amount that did not hit the pie had any significance, should be either re-trained or replaced. At the end of a busy (for us) Friday night, approx 150 pies plus pastas etc, we might have two or three cups of wasted toppings/cheese.Seems these grate things would encourage wastage when we work so hard to control it? Kinda defeats the concept of weighing cheese etc doesn’t it?
Looking to the more experienced operators to fill me in… Thanks.
Kinda defeats the concept of weighing cheese etc doesn’t it?
Looking to the more experienced operators to fill me in… Thanks.