portioning Have you already established a price?
You have 4 main protein choices
Beef
Chicken
Roast Pig
Shrimp
shrimp you could calculate on how many pieces per person. eg 3-5 depending on how the event prices out.
One pig for 300 people doesn't seem like enuf, but perhaps you can do one roast pig whole with loins of pork or pork roasts as back up.
Probably figure on 7-10 ounces total of beef, chicken and pork and then decide based on the demographics of the group which might be more popular and skew in that direction.
Also make sure you put the salads, breads, and sides first on the buffet line, so by the time they get to put the meat on their plate there isn't as much empty space. Not everything people take will always be eaten, especially with kids. And have someone controlling the shrimp (as well as being one of the last things on the buffet or have double sided mirrored lines converging in the middle with the shrimp being in the middle.
For example here in NYC, pork is probably the least popular.
Also another way to figure out is to see what a serving looks like
Eg if you are skewering the beef and chicken then figure out how much you will put on each skewer and how many skewers per guest. Maybe make the portion smaller and have more portions per guest....
Catering is a educationed guestamite. It gets easier over time, but keep notes, ask questions about the demographics of the guests - men vs. women, age, ethnic background, number of children and age range, type of eaters - sophisticated, meat and potatoes, simple, vegetarian, etc
Oh yeah, don't forget to offer some main course vegetarian options even if they haven't asked for them. With 300 guests there are bound to be vegetarians, vegans and people with various dietary restrictions for either health or religious reasons.
__________________ Chef Tigerwoman
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