Grease interceptors are the heavy infrastructure of commercial kitchen plumbing. These aren't small units under a sink β they're large-capacity tanks, often buried underground, built to handle continuous high-volume FOG output from full-scale commercial, institutional, and hospitality kitchens. When they're serviced properly, they do their job invisibly. When they're neglected, the consequences don't scale down to match the size of the problem.
Southern Grease Services provides grease interceptor pumping throughout Greenfield, OH for kitchens that depend on these systems every day. We bring the equipment, the trained personnel, and the documentation process that interceptor service requires β not a standard trap service stretched to fit a larger tank.
A kitchen turning out hundreds of covers daily is generating FOG volumes that push interceptor capacity faster than most operators expect. Service frequency needs to match actual output β not a default calendar. Southern Grease calibrates interceptor programs for high-volume kitchens in Greenfield based on measured fill rates.
Hotels running restaurants, banquet services, and room service simultaneously generate sustained, multi-source FOG output. Their interceptors are often large and centrally located. We coordinate service access and scheduling for hospitality properties without disrupting kitchen or event operations.
Universities, hospitals, corporate campuses, and correctional facilities operate kitchens under compliance requirements that exceed standard health department expectations. Southern Grease produces documentation that satisfies institutional compliance review β not just the minimum that passes a routine inspection.
Commissary kitchens feeding multiple storefronts need interceptor service that doesn't interrupt production. We coordinate service timing and documentation for multi-site operations under a unified program β one contact, one service standard, one documentation format across all locations in Greenfield, OH.
Before the first visit, we do our homework. Tank capacity, access configuration, service history, compliance reporting requirements specific to your location in Greenfield β we confirm all of this in advance. Our technicians arrive knowing what they're walking into, not discovering it at the site.
During the service, we communicate. If we find something unexpected β a structural issue, a baffle problem, flow restriction β we don't put it in the report and hope you read it later. We discuss it with your on-site contact before we leave.
After the service, the documentation is in your hands before the truck leaves the property. No chasing records. No waiting for a digital report that takes days to arrive. The record is ready when the service is done.
For multi-location clients, we provide consolidated documentation across all sites and proactively flag any findings that require follow-up before the next scheduled visit. We don't wait for you to ask.
Most kitchen operators know they're supposed to keep grease trap or interceptor service records. Fewer know what a useful record actually contains β or how to tell whether the records they have will hold up when an inspector reviews them in Greenfield, OH.
A complete interceptor service record should include, at minimum: the date of service, the name of the service provider and technician, the capacity and type of the interceptor, the volume of waste removed (in gallons), the condition of the baffles and inlet/outlet pipes, and confirmation that waste was transported to a licensed disposal facility.
What makes a record fail during an inspection? Missing fields β particularly waste volume and disposal confirmation. Dates that don't correspond to a reasonable service frequency. No technician name. Service summaries so vague that the inspector can't determine what was actually done.
Here's a practical step you can take right now: pull your last two service records and check them against the list above. If any field is blank or vague, that's the gap an inspector will notice.
Southern Grease produces service records that are complete by design β every field, every visit, formatted to meet the documentation standards used in health department reviews across Greenfield.
The 25% rule β service when combined FOG and solids reach 25% of tank depth β provides a baseline, but high-volume kitchens in Greenfield, OH often require pumping every 30 to 60 days. We measure fill rates at every visit and calibrate frequency accordingly.
We use vacuum trucks sized for commercial interceptor service. Tank capacity is confirmed when scheduling so the right equipment arrives at the first visit.
Yes. Both materials have specific inspection considerations β we address both as part of the standard post-pumping inspection.
We document the damage, discuss it with your on-site contact, and provide guidance on next steps. For issues requiring repair, we help connect you with qualified contractors.
Yes. We review whatever documentation exists, conduct an initial assessment, and establish a new service baseline. For clients with documentation gaps, we begin building a complete record from the first Southern Grease visit forward.
"Southern Grease coordinates around our event calendar so service never conflicts with a banquet. The documentation is thorough and our compliance team hasn't flagged a single issue."
β Harold G., General Manager, Hotel Food Service, Greenfield"They produced documentation that satisfies our institutional review process. Not many vendors do that without a lengthy back-and-forth."
β Josephine A., Food Service Director, Greenfield, OH"Southern Grease has adjusted our pumping schedule twice based on what they've measured β without me having to ask. Exactly what a production kitchen needs."
β Raymond L., Owner, Commissary Kitchen OperationGrease interceptor pumping in Greenfield requires experience, the right equipment, and documentation that holds up under scrutiny. Southern Grease Services brings all three to every visit.
Contact Southern Grease Services to schedule an interceptor assessment in Greenfield, OH. We'll review your system specs, establish a calibrated service program, and make sure the first visit sets the right foundation.