Find the direction by scenario

First the scenario, then the packaging

If you do not have a clear direction yet, start from your store type, service model, and delivery flow.

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Start with the store scenario

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Practical judgment

Start from what matters most to you

Confirm the priority first, then decide the packaging direction.

Narrow it down by store type first, then review the scenario priority.

How to keep fried food crispy after delivery?

Steam release, moisture control, and sauce separation help protect texture in transit

To keep fried food in better condition after delivery, three points matter most: side steam release, bottom moisture control, and sauce separation.

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To keep fried food in better condition after delivery, three points matter most: side steam release, bottom moisture control, and sauce separation. First, ventilation holes should be placed on the side wall rather than on top of the lid, so condensation does not fall back onto the food. Second, a sheet of heavy-duty greaseproof paper under burgers, fried chicken, and similar items helps absorb moisture and protect the base texture. Third, rice and saucy dishes should be packed separately, using a two-compartment box or a separate sauce cup, so texture holds up better during transport.

Keep packaging operations organised during peak kitchen hours

Flat-packed storage, standard sizes, and stable stacking help keep service moving

During peak hours, packaging management often slows service more than cooking itself.

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During peak hours, service is often slowed more by packaging management than by cooking itself. First, choose boxes delivered flat and folded on site, such as standard burger or pizza boxes, because they save storage space and are faster to handle during a rush. Second, cover most menu items with a small number of standard sizes so staff spend less time choosing the right container. Third, run a stacking test before adopting any packaging, using three filled boxes to check for tilting, sliding, or loose lids during multi-order delivery.

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Soups, ramen, and hot meals

Heat resistance, steam release, and easy handling determine whether hot food arrives in good condition

In hot-food delivery, the lid, container structure, and carry setup need to work together to limit condensation and handling issues.

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In hot-food delivery, trapped steam quickly affects texture, structure, and ease of handling. First, the container needs enough heat resistance and rigidity to hold soups, ramen, and saucy meals without softening too fast. Second, the lid should release steam in a controlled way so condensation does not rapidly weaken noodles, toppings, or surface texture. Third, the carry setup also needs testing: rim comfort, lid security, and bag support should stay manageable for staff, riders, and customers.

Food contact material compliance is the baseline for packaging procurement

Confirm compliance first, then compare price, format, and lead time

When buying packaging, the first check should be food contact material compliance.

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When buying packaging, the first thing to confirm is food contact material compliance, before comparing price, format, or lead time. First, request a food contact test report or declaration of compliance to verify that the material suits the food category being served, especially in hot, oily, or prolonged-contact conditions. Second, avoid allowing outer bags or printed wraps with non-food-grade inks to touch uncovered food directly, reducing migration risk. Third, keep up with local regulatory updates so current packaging continues to meet the latest requirements.

Do not wait for bad reviews to improve packaging

Regular checks on real deliveries help surface fulfilment issues earlier

Packaging problems are better addressed before they reach the review stage.

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Packaging problems should not be handled only after negative reviews appear; one of the most effective approaches is to review real delivery orders regularly. First, select ten normal delivery orders each month and inspect them from the customer perspective after the usual delivery journey. Second, check whether lids stay secure, whether temperature and texture change too much, whether the packaging is crushed, and whether presentation drops noticeably after opening. Third, assign each issue to the packaging, kitchen, or delivery stage, record it, and improve it step by step.

Next step

Decide the next step

After you narrow the scope, you can continue into products or contact us to confirm the right setup.

Store typePackaging priorityReady stock / custom / samples

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