Food & Beverage Stewarding Manual
Food & Beverage Stewarding Manual
Food & Beverage Stewarding Manual
STEWARDING MANUAL
CHIEFS MANUAL & SOPS
Index
F&B Manual, Kitchen Section 5 (Stewarding)
Part 1, Guidelines for Chief
SOPs
Part I
Guidelines for Chief Steward
Racking
a.
For the single-rack or rack conveyor dish machine, there is a correct rack and
a wrong rack for every piece of tableware. The correct rack is one that
provides full and uniform exposure to the tableware to the washing and rinsing
sprays in the dish machine, and protects the tableware against breakage. For
example, stemware, goblets and other tall glassware require racks with tall
partitions around each item. Cups require special racks to protect handles.
Cutlery requires a completely different type of racks. Trays and large platters
need their own type of rack. This requires having an inventory of racks of
different types. The trend today is to have all-plastic racks. They are
lightweight, rust proof, resistant to chemical, quiet and most of all, offer the
best protection against breakage. The supplier of the dish machine detergents
should be knowledgeable about the wide variety of racks available and be able
to recommend the proper inventory.
b.
Certain racks are specially made for placement on angled over shelves, which
are great space savers and tie in well with the decoy system. (we do not have
them, but are planning for future development)
c.
Where the decoy system is not used, personnel should be trained to rack
dishes of similar size and type in a rack, to avoid blocking smaller
dishes by larger dishes. Dishes should always be racked at a slant facing into
the dish machine. Cutlery should always be racked in its own type of special
rack, packed loosely with the eating end up.
tableware is placed in racks which are placed on a conveyor. In others, known as the
flight type, the tableware is placed directly on the conveyor, which is constructed to
hold the tableware. (not applicable to us)
Lets follow a rack of dishes through a machine with the four stages: a pre-wash,
wash, pre-rinse and final rinse. In the pre-wash, sprays of hot water or hot detergent
solution, re-circulated by the pump, remove most of the easy soil from the dishes.
The washed off soil, mostly greasy in nature, floats to the top of the solution in the
tank and is removed through an overflow pipe.
When the rack reaches the wash stage, the process is repeated. In this stage, all of the
soil and stains should be completely removed. Then the dishes will be taken into the
pre-rinse stage, where sprays of hot water remove most if not all of the washing
solution.
In the final rinse stage any remaining wash solution is removed. The rinse water in
this stage is hot enough (180 - 190) to act as a sanitizer, killing bacteria. A rinse
additive is also injected into the final rinse water to provide a sheeting effect, for
quick drying and to prevent water spotting.
The spraying action in each stage is engineered to provide complete, uniform
coverage through the use of rotating wash arms and rinse arms containing the spray
nozzles.
b.