Sponsored content provided by Federal Hospitality Equipment For more than 50 years, Federal Hospitality Equipment (FHE) has supported the kitchens that keep Australia’s hospitality industry moving. From independent cafés and bakeries through to hotels, pubs, clubs, catering businesses, supermarkets and large-scale foodservice operators, FHE has built its reputation around one
Sponsored content provided by Creative Ingredients Walk into a modern kitchen today and you’ll notice something subtle, but significant: desserts are moving back in-house. Not as a nostalgic return to tradition but as a strategic shift in how hospitality venues define themselves. For years, gelato and pastry were often outsourced
The hospitality industry has always been about people. Whether it’s the warm smile at the front desk, the personalised recommendations at a restaurant, or the barista who remembers your order, hospitality is built on human connection. Yet, artificial intelligence (AI) is emerging as a powerful force that is transforming this
Sponsored content provided by ARCA Australia’s restaurant and café sector has always been resilient. It has survived pandemics, supply shocks, labour shortages, and shifting consumer behaviour. But in 2026, operators are confronting something different: three structural pressures arriving at the same time-each capable of reshaping the economics of running a
Walk through any commercial kitchen and you’ll find wipes. On the bench, near the grill, beside the prep station. What most operators don’t realise is that nearly all of them are made with plastic, and every time they’re used near food, they leave something behind. It’s one of those industry-wide
For Allpress Espresso, 2025 marked a deliberate turning point. The brand pulled back from direct-to-consumer channels and shifted its focus to B2B, getting in front of the café owners, hotel groups, and foodservice decision-makers who were actively searching for a new coffee partner. Fine Food Australia was one platform that
Sustainability in hospitality is entering a new, more practical chapter. Rather than being driven by trends, it’s becoming a way for venues to operate more thoughtfully, efficiently and confidently. According to Natalie Bolt, co-founder of Table Food Consultants, sustainability today is less about doing everything at once and more about understanding your business better. “It’s about
In commercial kitchens where margins are tight and every operational decision counts, cooking oil management has quietly become one of the smartest investments an operator can make. It’s not glamorous, but it works. The cost is hiding in plain sight For most kitchens, oil is a significant and recurring cost.
Mental health in the restaurant industry has become one of the sector’s most pressing challenges. With 76% of hospitality workers reporting mental health struggles during their careers, operators who prioritise wellbeing aren’t just doing the right thing. They’re building more resilient, productive teams. The Numbers Tell a Confronting Story Recent
Hospitality is one of the most complex business models in Australia. In today’s economic climate, venues with strong systems consistently outperform those relying on instinct or firefighting. According to James O’Connell, Founder of The Hospitality Company, operators who embrace systemisation gain clarity, control and commercial stability in a way that passion alone can’t deliver. Hospitality