| Professional Catering Forum Professional caterers can share their experiences and ideas here. |  | | 
07-07-2009, 03:09 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Cook At Home | | Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 7
| | Ladies Luncheon, IDEAS please! I am hoping to cater a ladies luncheon in late Sept. The budget is between $10-12 per person, between 50-75 are expected. I will be expected to provide the meal and drinks (coffee, tea, juice) and dessert will be provided by someone else. Can you guys help a newbie pull this off? | 
07-07-2009, 03:30 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Oct 2007 Location: Eureka, CA
Posts: 817
| | Waldorf Pork Chops.
Add diced apples and walnuts to a traditional rice pilaf mix, put everything in a pan(s).
Meanwhile, brown off seasoned thin cut pork chops and place on top of uncooked rice mix.
Cover and bake for 40-45 minutes at 350°. Serve with a lightly dressed green salad.
You may also wish to thicken apple juice for a glaze to pour on just prior to serving.
Quick, easy and relatively inexpensive.
__________________ You should have been here when the shiitake hit the flan! | 
07-07-2009, 03:47 PM
|  | ChefTalk Supporter Culinary Experience: Owner/Operator | | Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Scotland
Posts: 1,166
| | You're going to need cakes. Small and fancy.
If Ladies who lunch in America are anything like our lot, They are hyper-critical, like everthing dainty and are very impressed with attention to detail.
In other words, make it look like you a) spend all week preparing it and b) go overboard on presentation.
If you're making sandwiches, use good quality bread and cut off the crusts.
Choux pastries go down a treat, both sweet and savoury
A soft fruit platter would be a good idea. There are always folk who are being good.
Crudites ( raw veg with dips)
Cold meat platter and a selection of salads
Some kind of savoury pastry
__________________ "If we're not supposed to eat animals, why are they made of meat?" Jo Brand | 
07-07-2009, 05:40 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Culinary Instructor | | Join Date: May 2006 Location: PALM BEACH FLORIDA
Posts: 2,239
| | Grilled Santa Clara chicken salad with watermelon arugula, and frizee Catalina dressing. Taro chips
Reason I go salad route is no vege or potato required and woman are diet and health aware at all times
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Last edited by ED BUCHANAN; 07-07-2009 at 05:45 PM.
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07-08-2009, 08:44 AM
|  | ChefTalk Moderator Culinary Experience: Professional Caterer | | Join Date: Aug 2000 Location: St. Louis Mo
Posts: 6,856
| | Buffet, Plated or Boxed?
Buffet, you need less staff......It's hard to get 50-75 plated lunches out solo.
I'm assuming at $10pp you are working solo.
Unless it's at your kitchen go cold Buffet.
$10-12......
past menus in a room next to my kitchen have been:
Tomato base vegetable soup
corn bread/rolls butter
green salad
deviled eggs (lagniappe)
Cookies/bars
Ice Tea
*covers the vegetarians, is filling, and economical.....labor was me, equipment is mine, I'd spend a morning putting it together/cleanup.
So, cold buffet, offsite, low budget......ladies, late Sept.
Large bowl of mixed grain salad......mix in dried fruit/minced veg, vinaigrette....border with chicken, that way the meat people have sustainence and the veg can scoop from the middle.
Or a maxed out pasta salad....we use two shapes of pasta, many sauted/fresh veg, usually calamata olives, meat around edge of bowl.
Green Salad with a creamy based dressing....we make a buttermilk herb that mimics the ever popular ranch.
Assorted rolls/breads/breadsticks.....whatever you specialize in......gougere are a nice touch.
If it's in your budget consider a cheese torte.....tigerwoman wrote about great combos that don't cost alot but have wow! factor.....essentially cream cheese with stronger cheese, in a nut crust....some with poached fruit on top.....bake off a couple of baguettes sliced into crostini.
Coffee/Tea/juice....why juice?.....watch the size of you glassware with juice or it'll eat your lunch. | 
07-08-2009, 10:07 AM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Owner/Operator | | Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Maine
Posts: 308
| | Ladies luncheon Are you saying you are only providing the meal and someone else is providing drinks and dessert? If so, you are in much better shape. I agree with the soup/salad ideas and you could do some type of vegetable pie or finger sandwiches like a traditional tea. | 
07-08-2009, 10:14 AM
|  | ChefTalk Moderator Culinary Experience: Professional Caterer | | Join Date: Aug 2000 Location: St. Louis Mo
Posts: 6,856
| | finger sandwiches on a buffet are labor intensive.....I'd punt and go for salad with bread......pesto rolls, cheesey puffs, herb biscuits.......
With finger sandwiches you'd be making a several hundred of them and they can be a PIA> | 
07-08-2009, 10:29 AM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Owner/Operator | | Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Maine
Posts: 308
| | ladies luncheon As always, I love your ideas shroom.
I have done the finger sandwiches for ladies luncheon - make 50 sandwiches, cut off crusts and cut sandwich into 4 or even 6 - with the soup and salad, it is plenty. | 
07-08-2009, 10:53 AM
|  | ChefTalk Moderator Culinary Experience: Professional Caterer | | Join Date: Aug 2000 Location: St. Louis Mo
Posts: 6,856
| | do you vary the fillings? Most of the fingersandwiches we make are fruffy.....
open faced circles with mayo/cucumber slices....edges rolled in minced parsley
dillweed garnish
Turkey with curry mayo/apricot chutney......
BLT on a puff
Rare Roast Beef with horseradish sauce/pickled red onions
Shrimp salad again either in pate choux or bread.
Upscale versions with various breads, shapes, fillings, garnish.....not a long shelf life, hours instead of days.....
3-4 out of a normal slice of bread......
buffet would mean 6-7 per person just so the last would not be crumbs.
If going that route, I'd consider putting a platter of sandwiches on each table with 4 pp.....more personal, there's typically constrained when there's a set amount amoungst a small group of ladies.
Puff pastry sheets are easy to work with, big bang for the buck. You could make savory butterflies or tarts or twists or ?
pesto, olives, herbs/nuts, dry cheeses, citrus all are good choices.
PGR, how would you cut a sandwich into 6 pieces? fingers, squares, triangles?
Reads like mom is making/serving the food and beverages, dessert is provided.
*are you providing the plate/fork etc for desserts? or slicing, serving, cleaning up after a cake? if so that's your energy/supplies that would need to be taken into consideration when pricing out. | 
07-08-2009, 11:27 AM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Line Cook | | Join Date: Apr 2008 Location: Auburn, CA
Posts: 372
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by shroomgirl
open faced circles with mayo/cucumber slices....edges rolled in minced parsley
dillweed garnish
Turkey with curry mayo/apricot chutney......
BLT on a puff
Rare Roast Beef with horseradish sauce/pickled red onions
Shrimp salad again either in pate choux or bread.
. | I will take 2 dozen of each please fax them immediately!
__________________ Do not meddle in the affairs of Dragons... for you are crunchy.... and taste good with ketchup | 
07-10-2009, 09:19 AM
|  | ChefTalk Moderator Culinary Experience: Professional Caterer | | Join Date: Aug 2000 Location: St. Louis Mo
Posts: 6,856
| | funny guy!
So Mom, what do you specialize in? Do you bake? | 
07-11-2009, 02:39 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Owner/Operator | | Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Maine
Posts: 308
| | ladies luncheon Shroom, I cut the 6 by doing finger shape | 
07-11-2009, 03:25 PM
| | ChefTalk Book Reviewer Culinary Experience: Food Writer | | Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: Central Kentucky---where the bluegrass meets the mountains
Posts: 2,413
| | Mom, we'd really like to hear back from you with more details, because they can have a real effect on your event.
F'rinstance, if this is a plated dinner, are you responsible for dishes and flatware? Renting that stuff can cut into a $12 plate real quick.
That aside, I reckon I'd consider only cold or room temp dishes. You can prep them ahead of time, then plate (or lay out the buffet) the morning of the event.
But do, please, tell us more. | 
07-12-2009, 06:26 AM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Cook At Home | | Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 7
| | Sorry, computer crashed so haven't checked responses in a few days...
I am a home-based caterer who (at least for now) works solo. I do as much food as I can home-made so I can attest to the ingredients and quality. I don't advertise because I don't necessarily want to do events that would require me to hire staff. I have done many small parties as well as individual items for large parties. I bake and sell my own rolls and desserts/cookies too. I love a challenge and that's what I see this luncheon as. I would not need to provide dihes but they asked if I would wash them afterwards. I can use the ovens at the site if I need to, plus refrigeration. Thank you all for your input! | 
07-12-2009, 08:17 AM
|  | ChefTalk Moderator Culinary Experience: Professional Caterer | | Join Date: Aug 2000 Location: St. Louis Mo
Posts: 6,856
| | If you are washing dishes, glasses, silverware that would be an additional charge. Most churches have a staff person or person "on call" who washes up after events for anywhere from $25-100....usually in between.
Who's setting up? ie tablecloths, silverware, glassware, plates, decorations?
Are you using their serving equipment or your own?
Past experience is, when you give a bargain they will come back at a later time and want the same deal....so if you provide "free" or non-line itemed cleanup they will expect it in the future. If they or you brought someone in to do it they'd be paid. What ever works for you. |  | |
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