Every restaurant has a collection of unglamorous, time-saving tricks that never make it into cookbooks or food shows. Here are the ones I used every day and why theyโre even more useful in a home kitchen.
Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase through these links, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend products Iโve personally used or would trust in a professional kitchen.
Thereโs a version of restaurant cooking that gets all the attention, the flamboyant plating, the French terminology, the dramatic sautรฉ tosses. Then thereโs the version that actually keeps a kitchen running: the shortcuts.
Not lazy shortcuts. Not corner-cutting. Iโm talking about the practical, battle-tested hacks that every working kitchen depends on to push out hundreds of plates a night without falling apart. The kind of stuff that never ends up on a food blog because itโs not photogenic. Itโs not trendy. It just works.
After running a restaurant, I brought a lot of these habits home with me. And the thing is, most of them work even better in a home kitchen where youโre not cooking for a hundred people, youโre cooking for four.
Squeeze Bottles for Everything
In a restaurant, oils, sauces, and dressings donโt live in their original containers. They go into plastic squeeze bottles. Every station has a row of them: olive oil, vegetable oil, soy sauce, hot sauce, balsamic glaze, garlic butter. Whatever gets used regularly goes into a squeeze bottle.
This isnโt about looking professional. Itโs about speed and control. Pouring olive oil from a bottle is imprecise, you either pour too much or too little, and youโre fumbling with a cap in the middle of cooking. A squeeze bottle gives you a thin, controlled stream exactly where you want it. You can dress a plate, oil a pan, or drizzle a finishing sauce with one hand in half a second.
At home, this is a game-changer. Fill a squeeze bottle with your everyday olive oil and keep it next to the stove. Youโll use it for every meal, and youโll wonder how you ever cooked without it. I keep separate bottles for olive oil, avocado oil, soy sauce, and a homemade vinaigrette that I make.
Deli Containers Replace Every Storage Solution You Own
Open the storage drawer in any restaurant and youโll find one thing: stacks and stacks of clear deli containers. Quarts and pints, all the same brand, all interchangeable lids. Thatโs it. No mismatched Tupperware, no glass containers with missing lids, no ziplock bags.
Thereโs a reason every professional kitchen on the planet uses the same system: itโs cheap, it stacks perfectly, you can see whatโs inside without opening it, and when one gets stained or warped, you throw it away without a second thought.
I replaced every piece of food storage in my home kitchen with restaurant deli containers. Leftovers, prepped ingredients, marinating protein, storing stock, they handle everything. My fridge has never been more organized. And because theyโre all the same size, they stack without wasting a single inch of shelf space.
Sheet Pans Are Your Most Versatile Tool
In a restaurant, sheet pans are used for everything: roasting vegetables, baking proteins, catching drips, holding prepped ingredients, transporting food between stations, cooling baked goods. Theyโre the duct tape of the kitchen.
Most home cooks own one or two cookie sheets and use them exclusively for baking. Thatโs barely scratching the surface. Pair a proper half-sheet pan with a wire cooling rack that fits inside it, and youโve got an instant roasting setup that gives you airflow on all sides of the food. Bacon comes out crispier. Roasted vegetables donโt steam in their own moisture. Breaded items stay crunchy on the bottom instead of getting soggy.
I keep four sheet pans in rotation at home. Two are usually in use, one is being washed, and one is staging prepped ingredients. Theyโre cheap enough that you shouldnโt hesitate to buy extras.
Kitchen Shears Do Half the Jobs Youโre Using a Knife For
Hereโs something youโll never see in a cooking show but happens constantly in a real kitchen: cooks grabbing kitchen shears instead of a knife. Cutting herbs? Shears. Trimming fat off chicken thighs? Shears. Portioning pizza? Shears. Cutting parchment paper to fit a pan? Opening a package of bacon? Snipping green onions directly into a bowl? Shears, shears, shears.
A good pair of heavy-duty kitchen shears saves you from pulling out a cutting board for half the small tasks in cooking. Theyโre faster, theyโre more precise for certain cuts, and they create zero cleanup. You snip, youโre done.
The restaurant trick: keep them on a hook or magnetic strip right next to your stove, not buried in a drawer. If theyโre within armโs reach, youโll use them constantly. If theyโre in a drawer, youโll forget they exist.
The Bench Scraper Is the Most Underrated Tool in Any Kitchen
If youโve never used a bench scraper, youโre working harder than you need to. In a restaurant, every cook has one within reach. Itโs a flat, rectangular piece of stainless steel with a handle, and it does about fifteen different jobs.
Chopped a pile of onions? Scoop them off the board and into the pan in one motion. Need to clean flour off a countertop? One pass. Dividing dough into portions? Clean, even cuts. Transferring a pile of minced garlic from board to bowl? No more trying to scrape it off with the side of your knife and dropping half of it on the counter.
It costs less than a cup of coffee, and once you start using one, youโll carry it around the kitchen like itโs an extension of your hand.
Taste the Cooking Liquid, Not Just the Food
This one isnโt a tool shortcut, itโs a mental one that saves you from ever producing a bland dish again. In a restaurant, we donโt just taste the finished product. We taste the liquid. The braising liquid. The pasta water. The sauce as it reduces. The marinade before the protein goes in.
Why? Because liquid tells you everything. If your braising liquid tastes flat, the meat sitting in it for three hours is going to taste flat. If your pasta water isnโt salted enough, the pasta is going to taste like nothing no matter what sauce you toss it with. If the marinade doesnโt taste punchy and slightly too strong on its own, itโs not going to penetrate the protein enough to make a difference.
At home, grab a spoon and taste your liquids early and often. Adjust before itโs too late. This single habit catches problems that would otherwise ruin a meal, and it takes two seconds.
Blend First, Strain Later
When you need a smooth sauce, soup, or puree, the restaurant shortcut is simple: donโt worry about perfect prep. Roughly chop everything, cook it, then hit it with an immersion blender right in the pot. If it needs to be silky smooth, pass it through a fine mesh strainer after blending.
Home cooks spend too much time trying to dice everything perfectly for a soup thatโs going to be blended anyway. In a restaurant, the rough chop goes in, gets cooked, and gets blasted smooth in seconds. The immersion blender is the tool that makes this possible without transferring hot liquid to a countertop blender in batches which is messy, dangerous, and slow.
For anything that needs to be smooth, tomato soup, butternut squash puree, pan sauce, salad dressing in a tall container, the immersion blender is faster, easier, and creates less cleanup than any other method.
Stop Measuring, Start Weighing
Volume measurements, cups and tablespoons, are wildly inconsistent. How tightly you pack flour, how level your scoop is, even humidity can change the actual amount. Restaurants that do any baking or precise work use weight. Every time.
A digital kitchen scale costs less than dinner for two and makes you more accurate than any set of measuring cups ever will. Itโs also faster: put the bowl on the scale, zero it out, add ingredients one after another, zeroing between each. No measuring cups to wash. No second-guessing whether that was really a โpackedโ cup or a โlevelโ cup.
Once you start weighing, youโll notice your baking gets more consistent, your recipes become more repeatable, and your sink has fewer dishes in it.
The Common Thread
None of these shortcuts are sexy. Youโre not going to see a cooking show host rave about squeeze bottles and bench scrapers. But thatโs exactly the point. The real restaurant tricks arenโt the ones that look impressive, theyโre the ones that make everything run smoother, faster, and cleaner.
When I left the restaurant industry, I didnโt miss the long hours or the pressure. But I missed the efficiency. Everything had a system. Every tool had a purpose. Nothing was wasted, not time, not motion, not effort.
These shortcuts brought that feeling back into my home kitchen. Theyโll do the same for yours. Start with one or two, and once you feel the difference, youโll want the rest.
Ready to put these shortcuts to work? Browse our recipes and see how much smoother cooking feels with the right habits and tools in place.
Read Article โ What Restaurant Kitchens Get Right That Home Cooks Miss
Read Article โ Mise en Place: The Restaurant Habit That Will Change How You Cook


One response to “The Restaurant Shortcuts Nobody Talks About (That Work Even Better at Home)”
[…] Read โ The Restaurant Shortcuts Nobody Talks About (That Work Even Better at Home)] […]