EHO (Environmental Health Officer)
A local authority inspector who visits food businesses unannounced to assess hygiene, food safety, structural conditions, allergen management, and HACCP compliance. EHO inspections determine your FHRS rating (0–5). Thai restaurants with wok cooking — which generates significant grease and smoke — must pay particular attention to extraction and cleaning.
FHRS (Food Hygiene Rating Scheme)
A UK-wide rating system (England, Wales, NI) scoring food businesses from
0 (urgent improvement) to 5 (very good). Thai restaurant ratings are publicly visible on the FSA website, Google, and delivery platforms. A rating below 3 deters customers and can lead to reduced delivery visibility. Search any restaurant using the
Hygiene Rating Lookup tool.
HACCP (Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point)
A legal requirement for all UK food businesses — a documented system that identifies food safety hazards and sets critical control points (CCPs) to prevent them. For Thai kitchens, typical CCPs include: cooking temperature for chicken/prawn dishes (75°C core), cooling rates for coconut-based sauces, and storage temperature for fresh herbs and seafood.
Dry Stock
Ingredients stored at room temperature — not refrigerated or frozen. In a Thai restaurant dry stock includes: rice, noodles, spices, dried chillies, coconut milk (tinned), fish sauce, soy sauce, curry paste, sugar, flour, and packaging. Must be stored off the floor, in sealed containers, with clear date labels. Dry stock typically represents 30–40% of total food inventory value.
Extraction Canopy
A commercial ventilation hood installed above cooking equipment to remove smoke, steam, heat, and grease particles from the air. Thai wok cooking at high BTUs generates intense smoke — a properly designed extraction canopy (minimum 0.6 m/s capture velocity) is essential for EHO compliance, fire safety, and staff comfort. Canopies require quarterly professional cleaning.
Wok Burner BTU
BTU (British Thermal Unit) measures the heat output of a gas burner. Thai cooking requires high-BTU wok burners — typically 30,000–60,000 BTUs for a commercial jet burner (compared to 12,000–15,000 for a standard home burner). Wok burners need dedicated gas supply and extraction, and are a key factor in Thai kitchen fit-out costs.
Pass (kitchen pass)
The workstation where completed dishes are assembled, garnished, and checked before being served. In a Thai restaurant, the pass is where the head chef or senior chef controls presentation, portion size, and temperature before the dish goes to the customer. An efficient pass layout is critical during peak service — typically positioned between kitchen and FOH.
Front of House / Back of House
Front of House (FOH): All customer-facing staff — servers, hosts, bartenders, managers who interact with diners. Back of House (BOH): Kitchen staff — chefs, wok cooks, prep cooks, KP (kitchen porters), dishwashers. In a typical UK Thai restaurant, the split is roughly 40% FOH / 60% BOH of total staff.