Jackie Ramsey February 17, 2026 0

A bad routing setup feels like a four-way stop with no signs. Tickets stack up, cooks start shouting, expo turns into a pile of plates, and the guest only sees the delay.

When I build a kitchen routing checklist, I treat it like traffic control. The goal isn’t to send every item everywhere. The goal is to send each item to the one place that owns it, with clear rules for who supports it and when it should fire.

Start with the kitchen reality, not the POS screen

Restaurant POS kitchen routing infographic with stations and routing arrows
An AI-created diagram showing how orders can route from POS to stations and expo.

Before I touch routing rules, I walk the line in my head (or on paper). I name the stations the way the team actually talks: Grill, Fry, Saute, Salad, Dessert, Bar, Expo. If the kitchen calls it “Hot Side” but the POS says “Line 2,” I fix that first. Clear names prevent mistakes during a rush.

Next, I decide what “primary” means in this building. A burger’s primary station is Grill, even though fries ride with it. Fries are a secondary station, but they shouldn’t steal ownership of the ticket. That ownership decision matters because splitting tickets too often creates noise, duplicate work, and expo confusion.

I also make expo a first-class stop in the flow. Expo is the pass, but it’s also quality control and pacing. If expo doesn’t see the right items at the right time, you’ll get “mystery plates” that sit, die in the window, or get remade.

Finally, I think in courses, not menu categories. Appetizers, entrees, desserts, and drinks often need different fire timing. Course-based routing keeps the kitchen calm because the ticket order matches how food should hit the table.

My kitchen routing checklist before I map a single item

I’ve learned that routing fails when people treat it as “send it to a printer.” I build rules that match production, timing, and human habits.

Here’s what I lock down first:

  • Define station ownership: Every menu item has one primary station. One. That station is accountable for the dish leaving the window.
  • Consolidate prints/screens: If two stations can share a screen without chaos, I combine them. Fewer destinations means fewer misses.
  • Use secondary stations for sides and mods: Fries, sauces, and add-ons should support the main ticket, not fragment it.
  • Set hold vs fire rules: “Hold fries until steak is dropped” is a rule, not a hope. Same for salads held until the table is sat.
  • Decide what expo must see: Expo should see complete, readable tickets, not a flood of partial chits.
  • Name devices like you mean it: “KDS 1” is useless. “Grill KDS” and “Fry Printer” save time when something breaks.
  • Plan for failure: A KDS outage needs a printer fallback (or the reverse) with a simple switch.

When I’m asked to provide Restaurant POS Support, I’m also doing Small Business IT. If your KDS depends on Cloud Infrastructure and Cloud Management (or you run multi-site), I check Secure Cloud Architecture, Cybersecurity Services, Endpoint Security, and Device Hardening on every POS and KDS device. Many operators tie this work to Office 365 Migration, Data Center Technology validation, and Infrastructure Optimization as part of a broader Digital Transformation. The right Business Technology Partner brings Technology Consulting, Tailored Technology Services, Innovative IT Solutions, Kitchen Technology Solutions, and IT Strategy for SMBs that keep Managed IT for Small Business and Business Continuity & Security in focus.

Routing table template and a 10-item sample mapping

Kitchen routing table template infographic
An AI-created routing table template you can copy into a spreadsheet.

I like a routing table because it forces decisions in plain language. It also stops the common mistake of building routing item-by-item inside the POS until the system becomes a patchwork.

Here’s a template you can paste into Sheets or Excel:

Menu ItemCoursePrimary StationSecondary Station(s)Printer/KDS ScreenHold/Fire RulesNotes

Sample mapping for a mixed casual menu (10 items)

Sample kitchen routing table with 10 items
An AI-created example mapping showing primary and secondary station choices.

Use this as a starting point, then adjust for your kitchen’s layout and staffing.

Menu ItemCoursePrimary StationSecondary Station(s)Printer/KDS ScreenHold/Fire RulesNotes
Classic Burger + FriesEntreeGrillFryGrill KDSFire fries with burgerToast bun timing
Chicken WingsAppetizerFryFry KDSHold sauce separateRanch on side
House SaladAppetizerSalad/Garde MangerSalad PrinterFire on orderDress light
Ribeye SteakEntreeGrillSauteGrill KDSHold veg until steak is downTemp notes matter
Fettuccine AlfredoEntreeSauteSaute KDSFire pasta, hold sauce if neededAllergy flag
Side FriesSideFryFry KDSFire with entreeSeason at drop
CheesecakeDessertDessertDessert PrinterHold until firedPlate berries
MargaritaDrinkBarBar KDSFire nowSalt rim mod
Draft BeerDrinkBarBar KDSFire nowGlass note
CokeDrinkBarBar KDSFire nowNo ice mod

Troubleshoot bottlenecks, then prove the fix in a peak simulation

Kitchen bottlenecks troubleshooting infographic
An AI-created visual showing common station overloads and routing fixes.

When service drags, I don’t start by adding more routes. I start by finding where tickets are piling up and why.

Grill overload (too many items land on one screen)

  • Move shared items to secondary stations (example: “add bacon” routes to Grill only as a modifier, not a second full ticket).
  • If you have a Saute station finishing steaks or chicken, let Grill own the item and Saute support it, not the other way around.
  • Watch for “everything prints to Grill” defaults in the POS.

Fry station queues (fries become the pacing problem)

  • Use hold-fire rules for sides so fries don’t die in the window.
  • If wings and fries share oil space, separate their routing screens so the cook can prioritize.
  • Consider a backup fry route only during peak shifts (don’t run it all day).

Expo congestion (tickets complete, but the pass is buried)

  • Make expo see the full order once, not five partial tickets.
  • Route “ready” signals by course, so expo isn’t juggling appetizers and entrees at the same moment.
  • Keep duplicate modifiers off the expo chit unless they affect plating.

Duplicate tickets (the quiet killer)

  • Check for both printer and KDS firing on the same station.
  • Confirm reprint settings and resend behavior at the terminal.
  • Standardize device names so admins don’t route to the wrong destination.

One-page kitchen routing checklist (print this)

Printable one-page kitchen routing checklist
An AI-created one-page checklist for routing setup and validation.
  1. List every menu item by course
  2. Assign one primary station per item
  3. Add secondary stations for sides and key modifiers
  4. Map each station to a printer or KDS screen
  5. Define hold vs fire rules per course
  6. Add notes for plating, temps, allergy flow
  7. Consolidate routes to reduce ticket splits
  8. Test at low volume, confirm every destination
  9. Simulate peak volume with timed fires
  10. Verify no duplicate prints or double KDS bumps
  11. Train staff on ownership and expo flow
  12. Review monthly, adjust with menu changes

A kitchen routing checklist isn’t “set it and forget it.” It’s a living map. When I keep ownership clear, avoid needless splits, and test under peak load, the kitchen stays calm and the guest feels the difference. If you want one fast win this week, run a 30-minute peak simulation and fix the first bottleneck you can measure, then lock it into your routing rules.


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