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| Professional Catering Forum Professional caterers can share their experiences and ideas here. |
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#1
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| I cater a regular monthly business breakfast for about 25 guests and am running out of fun ideas that are still workable given the conditions. Since they have no oven, we usually bring a strata already baked and heat up the side dishes in toaster ovens that we bring with us. It's a working breakfast with a speaker, so fancy and complicated is not the goal (plus the budget is small). Here is what we have done in the past: Fresh Fruit Starter Baked Strata with bacon, mushroom and cheese Roasted Rosemary Potatoes Refried Beans with cojita cheese (this being México, they do expect this almost every time!) Basket of sweet breads Butter, salas, and pickled jalapenos Juice & Coffee So, I am looking for something I can bake off and serve upon arrival. I don't want to do a strata every time, but am limited by the cost and equipment constraints. Any ideas on other main dishes that would work? Thanks! |
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#2
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| Blintz Casserole....or something along that premise.....sweet cream cheese filled crepes with or without jam, topped with crema and sugar How about frittata, just sub potatoes for bread in the stratta or a corn tortilla casserole..... I make poached eggs, lardons, salad greens, roasted potato salad alot for brunch/breakfast I've heard of caramelized french toast casserole. Check out B&B cookbooks, several have recipes gearred to holding over a certain amount of time and there are interesting twists in some. |
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#3
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| Chilaquiles, por supuesto. Un desayuno sin chilaquiles no es un desayuno. Quiche con tocino -- "El continental touch." Tortilla Espana [siento, no tilda], que Shroomgirl se dice una "strata de papas." Eggs Benedict -- transporte el hollandaise en un thermos, y recalanta los huevos escalfados en agua caliente Chiles relleno con queso Chiles relleno desayuno -- con queso, huevos y tocino. (Buenos, actualmente) Quesadillas con un poco de chorizo Pudina de pan con maple syrup -- ye se llama, "Pudina 'French Toast Americano" Pudina de pina -- okay, pineapple upside down cake bread pudding. I can't write Spanish without pinche tildas dammit! Yema Migas Empanadas de sausiche, hongos, y manzanillas (en "puff pastry") Corned beef hash -- recalanta los huevos escalfados en agua caliente. Grits Casserole -- se llama "cazuela gabacho" -- con semola, huevos, queso, y sausiche o tocino. Cazuela de tortillas, huevos, queso, y mole verde o ranchero Burritos desayunos-- de chorizo con huevos y calabicitas, arroz y frijol; o de tocino con huevos y papas y frijol -- o cada con los frijoles sirven aparte. Cualquier. Platanos con crema y frijoles con tortillas estilas Salvadorena (poca gordita) Tamales de eltoe con crema -- que ricos! Por fin y por supuesto, "Corn tortilla casserole" con un gran sentido de humor y muchas sonrisas Buena suerte, BDL Last edited by boar_d_laze; 05-14-2008 at 08:55 AM. |
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#4
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| Quote:
nice touch answering in spanish could you be so kind as to post a translation for the rest of us non spanish speakers - sounds like you have a bevy of great ideas I was going to suggest a savoury bread pudding also american style breakfast with hash brown casserole scrambled eggs bagels and cream cheese danish croissants etc you could do a croissant bread pudding or croissants stuffed with ham and cheese (warm or room temp) could keep warm on top of a domestic type plug in griddle (we use them to make quesadillas at at station for an event) you could do breakfast burrittos - they are very popular throughout california and in the film industry scrambled eggs, potato, salsa possibly cheese, chorizo, mushrooms, spinach what ever - think omelet can predo them wrap in paper then tin foil and keep warm in chafers. can even make the night before and reheat in oven oh for scrambled eggs try adding cream cheese to keep moist and from getting rubbery when sitting in pan another thought that just popped into my mind is doing something like a cornish pasty but with an egg and some ham in the center. forgot what its called but it's an old school british breakfast item# as for european breakfast# sliced deli meats like ham and turkey sliced cheeses olives baguette yogurt fruit sliced cucumber and tomato
__________________ Chef Tigerwoman Stop Tofu Abuse...Eat Foie Gras... |
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BDL |
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#6
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| You mentioned they don't have an oven, but if they have electrical outlets, you could do things in crockpots and electric skillets, or portable electric burners. I stayed a week in a Residence Inn once and they had hot breakfasts every morning in the lobby and happy hour tapas using the above methods on a regular counter top. Just a thought. |
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#7
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| several spainish options cazuelas sound an awful lot like corn tortilla casserole to me.....a rose by any other name........ ![]() |
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#8
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| nice... great to be able to have ideas that are culturally appropriate... will be filing for future reference
__________________ Chef Tigerwoman Stop Tofu Abuse...Eat Foie Gras... |
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#9
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| I just catered a breakfast at a law firm for 50 and we had Asparagus and Gruyere Quiche (also good with Parmigiana) Plain Quiche Mini Ham biscuits with a Mustard Sauce Potato and Leek Casserole Fresh Fruit with a Honey Lime Dressing Banana Bread Lemon Poppy Seed Bread with a Lemon Glaze It went over very well...if I think of something I will let you know! |
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#10
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| Muchisimas gracias for all your great suggestions! I just came back from doing the breakfast. I did a baked strata with chorizo and cheese, scalloped potatoes and black beans, pan dulce and fruit platter. They wanted a buffet this time, which will make it easier in the future to place things in chafers to keep warm. They want me to continue doing the monthly breakfasts, and I am excited to try many of your ideas. Thanks! |
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#11
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| I have done several breakfast gigs (just starting out, so I don't have a ton of experience at this yet), but I have had great success with a breakfast sandwich that I do on a croissant. I have actually picked up some new clients with this because they loved it so much. Prepare a seasoned butter with curry powder, onion powder, dijon mustard and scallions. Spread the butter on the cut croissants and then put some sliced ham (experimented with several types of ham and regular old sliced deli ham works the best), scrambled egg and grated gouda cheese on it. Throw them in the oven at 350 until the cheese starts to melt. They hold pretty well in a chaffer for an hour or so. Good luck! |
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#12
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| Quote:
ONe question... How "curry" to you make the butter- just enough for flavor or so people realize it's curry they're eating? Explain how you do them for a breakfast that you have to transport. I'm curious as to whether they get soggy in their own steam. Are they wrapped separately? Sorry, that was more than one question. Thanks! |
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#13
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| Thanks, they are delicious. I generally make the butter just slightly curry flavored. For a pound of butter I'll put in about 1 to 1 1/2 tablespoons of curry powder, along with 1 tablespoon of onion powder, 1 1/2 tablespoons of dijon mustard and a 1/4 cup of sliced scallion. I'll then taste it and adjust as needed. You really want a balance of flavors in the butter, slight curry/onion flavor with the dijon adding some body and very slight heat to it. I really try not to go overboard with the curry or it will over power everything. As far as transporting them, I arrange them in a single layer in a hotel pan and bake uncovered until the cheese and butter melt. I then take them out, cover tightly with heavy plastic wrap and two layers of foil. They go into the cambro and will stay hot for an hour to two hours. They don't get very soggy unless they sit in a chaffer for a good long while. Just make sure you always have them in a single layer or they will mash down and get pretty nasty. Good luck with them, they are really great! |
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#14
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| That sounds fabulous! I think that they will really like this. I'll try it for the June meeting. Thanks! |
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#15
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| Sounds delicious! Have you got a catchy name for it? |
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