Commercial Convection Ovens for Professional Foodservice
Commercial convection ovens use forced-air circulation to distribute heat evenly, helping kitchens improve consistency across multiple trays. They’re widely used in Canadian restaurants, bakeries, cafés, hotels, commissaries, and institutional foodservice where speed and repeatable results matter. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
- Forced-air cooking for more even heat distribution
- Supports multi-pan baking, roasting, and rethermalizing
- Available in single units or double-stack configurations for higher output
What to Cook in a Convection Oven
Convection ovens are chosen for tray consistency and throughput—ideal for roasting proteins and vegetables, baking pastries, reheating prepared foods, and keeping production steady during peak service. They’re especially valuable when you need uniform results across racks.
- Baking: pastries, cookies, buns, breads, sheet-pan items
- Roasting: chicken, meats, vegetables, plated components
- Production: batch cooking for catering, commissary, and institutional kitchens
How to Choose the Right Commercial Convection Oven
Start with required output and available space, then match fuel type, control style, and configuration to your menu. Many commercial kitchens choose gas convection ovens for strong recovery and daily production performance. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
- Single vs double stack: double-stack increases throughput without expanding the footprint
- Controls: manual for simplicity, programmable/digital for repeatability and consistency
- Menu fit: prioritize even baking/roasting and rack capacity for your busiest hour
- Utilities: confirm gas type (NG/LP) or electrical requirements before ordering
- Workflow: plan door clearance, tray handling space, and daily cleaning access
Gas vs Electric Convection Ovens
Gas models are common in high-volume kitchens for strong heat recovery, while electric models can be a good fit where electrical capacity is available or where gas access is limited. The best choice depends on your utilities, production volume, and installation requirements.
Installation Checklist
- Measure doorways, hallways, and turns for delivery access
- Confirm ventilation requirements and clearances (local code)
- Verify power or gas type (NG/LP) and connection needs
- Plan safe workflow space for loading/unloading hot trays
- Use licensed professionals for installation and commissioning
Explore Related Commercial Cooking Equipment
- Commercial Restaurant Ranges
- Commercial Combi Ovens
- Commercial Hi-Speed Ovens
- Commercial Gas Pizza Ovens
- Commercial Electric Pizza Ovens
- Commercial Griddles
Frequently Asked Questions
Convection ovens circulate air to distribute heat more evenly, helping improve consistency across trays and often reducing cook times compared to standard ovens.
Choose a single oven for moderate volume or tight space. Choose a double-stack when you need more output without increasing the footprint.
Gas is common for strong recovery in high-volume kitchens. Electric may suit installations where gas is limited. Always confirm utilities and installation requirements before ordering.
Verify ventilation requirements, clearances, delivery access, and utility requirements (gas type or electrical). Commercial ovens should be installed by qualified professionals.
