GEA has firmly moved into the bakery sector with the acquisition of Comas and Imaforni, the leading suppliers of demanding industrial processing equipment and solutions for the cakes, pies, cookies and biscuits, crackers and snacks industry. GEA customers can now rely on 100 years of combined experience in the bakery sector to have the best customized solutions for their needs.
Besides the bakery equipment on this page, discover GEA solutions for: Cakes, Cookies and biscuits, Layer cakes, Pies, Pastry, Pizza, Bread.
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GEA offers a comprehensive range of versatile machines for producing pie and quiche shells, or cheesecake bases.
GEA has developed a series of highly accurate side injection systems that will suit any processing line for products such as pastries, eclairs or bread buns.
Multi-piston vertical injectors from GEA promise high accuracy and precision for delivering fillings such as jams or creams into cakes, pastries and other baked products, including loose products on a conveyor, or products in indented trays.
Denesters for paper cups, aluminium foils and plastic containers
Bakery Experience Center
Butter, love and stainless steel: the perfect biscuit recipe.
Complete processing line for Crackers
Digital transformation at GEA means more than new tools – it’s about bold ideas, customer impact and a culture that values and drives innovation. Meet this year’s GEA Better World Awards Innovation & Digitalization winners who were celebrated for solutions which are shaping the future of our business.
While the initial interest in heat pumps was to save on operating costs, reducing emissions is now the main driver for the technology. Learn more about how GEA is spearheading efforts to increase energy efficiency and reduce CO2 emissions through hidden champion heat pump technology for industrial and district heating sectors.
What if your favorite chocolate didn’t require cocoa beans and your coffee was locally produced? As climate disruption, price hikes and ethical concerns hit two of our most beloved indulgences, scientists are reimagining how we produce them – using microbes, not monocultures. The goal: preserve the flavor and properties of coffee and chocolate while minimizing carbon emissions and improving food resilience.