· Kitchen · 8 min read
The Kitchen Brigade System: From Escoffier's Hierarchy to the Modern Line
The brigade system developed by Auguste Escoffier still shapes how professional kitchens organize, communicate, and develop talent. Here's how the traditional structure works, how modern kitchens have adapted it, and how to choose the right model for your operation.
Every professional kitchen has an organizational structure, whether the team knows it or not. Someone calls the shots. Someone fires the proteins. Someone plates the desserts. The question is whether that structure is intentional — with clear roles, defined accountability, and a communication system that works under pressure — or whether it evolves haphazardly and breaks down during the Friday night rush.
The kitchen brigade system (Brigade de Cuisine), developed by Auguste Escoffier in the late 19th century from his military experience, remains the foundational model for professional kitchen organization. According to Lightspeed, it divides kitchen labor into specialized stations with clear chains of command. While few modern restaurants implement the full traditional brigade, its principles of specialization, hierarchy, and accountability continue to shape how kitchens operate.
The Traditional Brigade Structure
Leadership Tier
According to Lightspeed, the classical brigade is built on three leadership positions:
Executive Chef (Chef Executif) — Sits at the top of the hierarchy. Handles strategic decisions including menu creation, business operations, vendor relationships, and overall kitchen direction. In larger operations, this role is primarily managerial and administrative rather than hands-on cooking.
Chef de Cuisine — Manages day-to-day kitchen operations, overseeing staff performance, food quality, and service execution. In smaller restaurants, this role and the executive chef position are often combined into a single head chef role.
Sous Chef de Cuisine — The deputy chef. According to Lightspeed, the sous chef supervises line cooks during service, manages kitchen operations when the chef de cuisine is absent, and serves as the primary link between kitchen leadership and the cooking team. The sous chef typically has the most hands-on involvement across all stations.
Station Chefs (Chefs de Partie)
Each station chef specializes in a specific area. According to Lightspeed, the classical brigade includes:
| Station | Title | Responsibility |
|---|---|---|
| Sauces | Saucier | All sauces — traditionally the most skilled line position |
| Fish | Poissonnier | All fish and seafood preparations |
| Roasts | Rotisseur | Roasted and braised meats |
| Grill | Grillardin | All grilled items |
| Fry | Friturier | All fried preparations |
| Vegetables | Entremetier | Vegetables, soups, starches, egg dishes |
| Cold prep | Garde Manger | Salads, charcuterie, cold appetizers |
| Pastry | Patissier | Pastry, baked goods, desserts |
| Butchery | Boucher | Meat and poultry fabrication |
In a fully staffed classical brigade, each station has a Chef de Partie leading it and one or more Commis Chefs learning the craft under them.
Support Staff
Commis Chef — According to Lightspeed, this is the most junior cooking position. A commis works under a specific Chef de Partie, learning that station’s techniques and responsibilities. This is the traditional entry point for a culinary career.
Aboyeur (Expediter) — Coordinates the flow of orders between the dining room and kitchen. Calls out tickets, manages timing so all dishes for a table finish simultaneously, and ensures plates leave the kitchen correctly. This role is the critical communication bridge between front-of-house and back-of-house.
Plongeur — Dishwashing and kitchen cleaning. Often overlooked, but a kitchen without clean pots, pans, and plates stops functioning within an hour.
Modern Adaptations: The Compressed Brigade
Few modern restaurants can afford — or need — a full classical brigade. According to Lightspeed, contemporary restaurants have significantly streamlined the structure. A typical modern kitchen runs with an executive chef, a sous chef, two or three line cooks, and a dishwasher, with each cook responsible for multiple traditional station functions.
Why the Compression Happened
The shift toward flatter hierarchies reflects several forces:
- Smaller restaurant footprints — a 40-seat restaurant does not need nine station chefs
- Tighter labor budgets — labor costs of 25-35% of revenue leave little room for fully staffed brigades
- Multi-skilled cooks — modern cooks cross-train across stations, handling grill, saute, and fry in the same shift
- Technology — Kitchen Display Systems from providers like Toast now route orders directly from POS to cooking stations, reducing the traditional reliance on the Aboyeur role for ticket management
What a Modern Kitchen Looks Like
| Role | Traditional Equivalent | Responsibilities |
|---|---|---|
| Head Chef / Chef-Owner | Executive Chef + Chef de Cuisine | Menu, business operations, quality standards |
| Sous Chef | Sous Chef | Service execution, staff management, ordering |
| Line Cook (Hot Side) | Saucier + Rotisseur + Grillardin | All hot preparations — saute, grill, roast |
| Line Cook (Cold Side) | Garde Manger + Entremetier | Salads, cold apps, some sides |
| Prep Cook | Commis | Mise en place, batch prep, support |
| Dishwasher | Plongeur | Dish pit, cleaning support |
This compressed model preserves the brigade’s core principles — defined roles, clear accountability, and a chain of command — while fitting the economic and operational reality of most independent restaurants.
Communication: The Brigade’s Most Important Legacy
Even when the formal titles are gone, the brigade’s communication principles remain essential. According to Clover, effective communication between front-of-house and back-of-house is one of the most persistent operational challenges in restaurant management.
The Single Point of Contact
According to Clover, one of the most impactful organizational decisions is designating a single manager as the communication liaison between FOH and BOH during service. This prevents the chaos that erupts when multiple people relay conflicting information to the kitchen.
This practice directly descends from the traditional Aboyeur role. Whether you call the position an expediter, a shift lead, or a sous chef running the pass — someone needs to be the single funnel through which all communication flows during service.
Technology-Enabled Communication
According to Clover, Kitchen Display Systems have become the backbone of modern restaurant communication, replacing traditional paper ticket rails. When a server enters an order into the POS, it appears instantly on screens in the kitchen with real-time status updates.
Beyond KDS, modern kitchens deploy:
- Two-way radios for voice coordination between expeditors and wait staff
- Wireless paging systems that notify food runners when orders are ready
- Cloud-based inventory management giving FOH real-time visibility into availability
Communication Protocols That Work
According to Clover, six core tactics unify restaurant teams:
- Shared concept alignment — both FOH and BOH understand and embody the restaurant’s identity
- POS and KDS integration — automated, direct order routing with no manual re-entry
- Bidirectional menu knowledge — servers know ingredients and allergens; kitchen keeps FOH informed about specials and 86’d items
- Inventory transparency — real-time systems prevent selling items the kitchen has run out of
- Designated communication liaison during each service
- Performance tracking — using data to identify and fix recurring communication failures
Measuring Kitchen Productivity
Whether you run a formal brigade or a flat team, you need to measure performance. According to Foodie Coaches, without systematic measurement, operators rely on gut feelings rather than data.
Core Metrics
| Metric | How to Calculate | What It Reveals |
|---|---|---|
| Average order prep time | Total prep time / total orders | Overall kitchen speed |
| Covers per labor hour | Total covers / total labor hours | Labor efficiency |
| Plates per hour | Total plates / hours of service | Raw throughput |
| Ticket time variance | Standard deviation of ticket times | Consistency |
| Food cost percentage | Food cost / food revenue | Cost control |
According to Foodie Coaches, covers per labor hour is one of the fundamental productivity evaluations, revealing how effectively the kitchen converts labor investment into output.
Ticket time variance is particularly revealing. According to Foodie Coaches, it flags inconsistency — showing whether the kitchen delivers predictable performance or operates erratically during peak periods. A kitchen that averages 12-minute tickets but ranges from 8 to 25 minutes has a consistency problem that no amount of speed will fix.
Technology for Tracking
According to Foodie Coaches, Kitchen Display Systems provide real-time data on prep times, staff productivity, and order flow. Modern KDS platforms generate dashboards showing historical trends alongside live performance, enabling managers to intervene before small problems become service failures.
Choosing the Right Model for Your Restaurant
The decision between a formal brigade and a flat hierarchy should be driven by three factors:
Menu Complexity
A 15-item focused menu can be executed by three cross-trained line cooks. A 60-item fine dining menu with multiple courses and complex techniques benefits from station specialization. Match your structure to what your menu demands.
Staff Size and Budget
If you have three cooks and a dishwasher, a formal brigade is academic. Define clear roles, cross-train everyone, and focus on communication discipline. If you have eight or more kitchen staff, station assignments based on brigade principles improve efficiency and reduce confusion during service.
Service Volume
High-volume operations — 200+ covers per night — benefit from clearer station specialization because the volume demands focused execution. Lower-volume operations benefit from flexibility, with cooks moving between stations as demand shifts throughout service.
The Brigade’s Enduring Lessons
Regardless of your restaurant’s size or structure, four principles from Escoffier’s brigade remain essential:
Define roles clearly. Every person in the kitchen should know exactly what they are responsible for during each shift. Ambiguity creates confusion under pressure.
Establish accountability. When a dish goes out wrong, there should be no question about who was responsible for it. Accountability is not about blame — it is about ownership.
Create advancement pathways. The brigade was designed as a training system. Commis become Chefs de Partie, who become Sous Chefs, who become Executive Chefs. Organizations like the American Culinary Federation provide certification programs that formalize this progression. Even in a flat kitchen, cook progression from prep to line to lead provides motivation and retention.
→ Read more: Back-of-House Career Paths: Building a Kitchen Team That Grows With You
Maintain communication discipline. One voice calls the orders. One voice fires the courses. One voice runs the pass. During service, communication discipline is the difference between a smooth night and a disaster.
The Bottom Line
The full classical brigade is a relic in most modern kitchens. But its principles — specialization, hierarchy, accountability, and communication — are not. They are the operating system that makes kitchen work possible under pressure.
Whether you run a five-person kitchen in a neighborhood bistro or a 20-person team in a high-volume restaurant, the question is the same: does every person know their role, does communication flow through defined channels, and can you measure whether the system is working?
Build your kitchen organization intentionally. Define roles, establish communication protocols, measure performance, and create pathways for your team to grow. Escoffier figured this out 130 years ago. The details have changed. The principles have not.
→ Read more: The Kitchen Expeditor: How to Run the Pass and Keep Service Moving
→ Read more: Kitchen Communication Systems: From Expo Calls to Digital Solutions