T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1039.1 | appetizer suggestion | HUMOR::EPPES | Make 'em laugh | Tue Mar 08 1988 17:44 | 8 |
| A few years ago I attended a friend's wedding in August at the Andover
Inn in Andover, Mass. The item I remember best from the meal was a
cold strawberry soup served as an appetizer. It was delicious! And
also refreshing on a hot day. Unfortunately, I don't have a recipe,
but it shouldn't be too hard to find one somewhere....? July would
certainly be a perfect time to have something using strawberries.
-- Nina
|
1039.2 | A few hours in paradise ... | MUGSY::GLANTZ | Mike | Wed Mar 09 1988 04:18 | 64 |
| Can you give a bit more information? Like who would prepare the food?
Friends/family, or will it be at a restaurant, or would you consider a
professional caterer? The most important question is: how much do you
plan to spend, per person?
We recently helped some friends plan and organize their wedding meal.
After figuring out roughly what they wanted to spend, and the
importance of other factors, like convenience, timing, location, etc.,
we settled on a very nice local restaurant. We negotiated a special
menu with them, complete with wines, and it turned out just great. If
this is a possibility for you, it can work out really well.
An even better meal can be arranged if you're willing to spend for a
gourmet caterer. They can help you plan a perfect meal, taking into
account your budget, tastes, any special dietary requirements, etc.
One top-class caterer we know is Roberta Dowling of the Cambridge
School of Culinary Arts. She does affairs for folks who summer in
Hyannis Port and charges plenty. Some of her former students are more
modest, and pretty good, too. I can send you a couple of names if
you're interested.
But, from the sound of it, you might be considering to do it all with
family and friends. Is that the case? If so, the possibilities are
endless. You probably already know the most obvious guidelines: summer
can be hot, so dishes should be light on both quantity and grease.
Small hors d'oeuvres, especially vegetables. Probably a fish or
seafood first course. A cold vegetable soup is also a great first
course. Then either a fish/seafood or light poultry (e.g., chicken)
second course (or maybe veal). Cool desserts, like light cake or pie
with sherbet or ice cream, and fruit (raspberry or strawberry) sauces,
etc. One nice touch is a little cup of sherbet between the first and
second courses. This freshens people up if the first course was
strongly flavored (like with garlic or strong herbs).
Chilled white wines and plenty of cool water with all courses. For
example, champagne with hors d'oeuvres, young dry white with first
course (a dry Italian like orvieto, maybe). If this course is a cold
soup, you could even skip the wine or just continue the champagne into
this course. Medium bodied white with second course (maybe a
meursault), or a light fruity red, chilled (beaujolais?), and, if
people still want wine with dessert (probably not, though), something
a bit sweet, like sauternes, muscat, or asti (bubbles again!). And
coffee and tea afterward. A meal like this could take between 3 and 4
hours, start to finish. It's for people who like to eat.
If you're less obsessed with eating than I am, you could completely
eliminate the first course and the dessert wine. That will lighten it
up, take almost an hour less time, and keep people relatively sober
(something to think about in the heat). To help compensate for the
lost first course, you can build up the hors d'oeuvres a bit, or add a
light salad course (any combo of mixed-color lettuces, spinach,
watercress, endive or arugula with just oil and vinegar) before or
after the main course.
If you can eat outside, even if it has to be under a mosquito-netted
tent, or on a screened porch or veranda, it will be great fun. Start
the meal anytime between 1:00 and 6:00 so that you can have some
daylight. Have separate glasses for each wine, and for water. White
linen tablecloths. Fresh cut flowers everywhere. Candles for when the
sun goes down. In daylight, the whole table will glitter like gold and
diamonds and the colors of the food will be brilliant! Later, the
dessert wine and/or cognac (if you're really crazy!) will reflect the
golden candlelight. Photos will never capture it, but the picture will
stay in your memory forever.
|
1039.3 | more on reception | OGOMTS::MUMMOLO | | Wed Mar 09 1988 13:22 | 23 |
| re: 2
Mike,
The reception will be at the Shawmut Inn in Kennebunkport, ME.
They do the catering themselves. We're not terribly concerned with
the price per person for food, because for such a terrific place,
they include ice sculpture ( I think we'll choose the clam sculpture
because it can hold fresh seafood), and a wedding cake. At first
I was nervous about the overall quality, but I've seen pictures
of their work and tasted their good and they are excellent.
I think the beef dishes were about $35, and lobster @$42. Then
overall is an 18% service charge for waitresses, etc. Included
is salad, appetizer, entree, dessert. I would like to start off
with perhaps a cold soup, then is it a sherbert, the entree, salad,
and last dessert. They had very elegant desserts, but I think I
will stick with something light like a peach melba because the wedding
cake is a heavy fruitcake,so it should be a nice combination.
But is this to much of a "fruit" menu??
Tracy
|
1039.4 | Some Suggestions... | SOURCE::CDOMENICO | | Mon Mar 14 1988 10:10 | 20 |
| Tracy, I am getting married in June and faced the same problem as
you in deciding upon a wedding menu. I am tired of the typical
wedding fanfare of pasta and steamship round. We found a caterer
(sp?) who uses some of the recipies out of Martha Stewarts Wedding
book. We are starting off with a strawberry soup (reply 1 from
Nina made me breathe a little easier). The main dish will be a
selection of grilled sirloin with herbs and garlic or grilled turkey
with herbs and garlic. We are then adding many different salads
(i.e. wild rice with scallops and shrimp etc). Our wedding is
outdoors so we have to keep things light since June can also be
hot. My suggestion is to rent this book out of the library to get
some ideas. Though I know you are not crazy about fowl or seafood
I believe it is nice to have the option of beef of chicken/seafood.
There are many people who are now watching their diet/health and
are staying away from beef.
Your reception place sounds lovely. I love Kennebunkport. Getting
nervous yet?? I am
Carrie
|
1039.5 | Successful Wedding Menu | BOXTOP::JANCOURTZ | | Mon Apr 25 1988 12:59 | 74 |
| My sister-in-law got married last year and planning the menu was
the most contentious part of the wedding, so you have my condolences.
It was difficult to satisfy the RANGE of people who were coming--old
90-year-old German grandmas, 18-year-old rockers, French Canadians,
Southerners, and the world's worst collection of fussy, "no,
I-just-cant-abide garlic/tomatoes/fish/chocolate/red-wine/white-wine/
you-name-it" non-eaters.
The final menu was a compromise and everyone loved it. Here it
is:
Lots and lots of hors d'oeuvres (we had six kinds:)
Raw-ish seafood bar (clams, oysters, shrimp) this went FAST
French garlic sausages en croute
A very good liver pate on slices of fresh apple
Smoked salmon on thin-sliced pumpernickel
Stuffed endive, celery, and carrot barquettes
Cheese puffs made with roquefort and brie (two kinds)
HOT soup (Yeah, I know, cold soup is chic--but all the old folks
would've FREAKED at cold fruit soup. We had a nice chicken consomme
with beautiful little bits of julienne vegies in it. Very pretty
and no one complained.)
There were little plates of melon cubes wrapped in prosciutto on
the tables to keep everyone from scarfing all the bread and getting
too full to continue with dinner. It wasn't really necessary.
Caesar salad (no sorbet--too many grandparents and little kids would've
said loudly "What's dessert doing here so SOON?" and been embarrassed.)
Grilled veal chops with herbs and garlic
(The main course was a major battle. Bride hated fish, groom's
family wanted lamb, grandma kept yelling "everyone loves chicken!",
and I as chief menu consultant refused to okay prime rib in the
heat of summer.) Everyone at the veal and loved it. It was served
with grilled summer vegies on the side--peppers, zucchini, onion
wedges, and a potato or two. Servers came around with a reduced
sauce for those who can't eat their meat without gravy.
We didn't offer a choice of entrees, since the bride's family thought
that asking people to choose in advance was vulgar and asking them
to choose at serving time was impractical.
Dessert consisted of beautifully arranged fruit and cheese platters
for each table, and the wedding cake itself. It was a hazelnut
meringue torte with buttercream frosting and utterly delicious.
BUT--that buttercream frosting was about 20 minutes away from melting
by the time we ate dessert.
We did offer a choice of wines: pink champagne (very chic now that
one can GET good pink champagne) and soft drinks with the hors
d'ouevres, a nice California Chardonnay (I think it was Liberty)
and Beaujolais Villages with the veal, and a glass of sauternes
at dessert (this was EXPENSIVE, but all the French and Germans in
the crowd loved it).
Instead of huge flower arrangements at every table, we had flowers
in POTS--no worries about wilting and folks could take them home
without spilling water all over the car interiors. The cake was
decorated in fresh flowers, too.
There, that's it. Do what YOU want; it's YOUR wedding and if you
want kielbasa with caviar, you can have it.
For other ideas, go to the library and check GOURMET magazine, June
and May issues, from the past four or five years. Or just dump
all your constraints in the caterer's lap and tell him, "I'm just
too busy with all the other arrangements to handle this. Do the
right thing."
Have a lovely wedding!
|
1039.6 | Beef is perfect for Summer | SHAPES::MALITORISK | KERRY | Wed Jul 05 1989 08:35 | 13 |
| You say you like beef? Due to the possible hot July weather beef
is an excellent choice because it can be served without the need
for heavy sauces. I went to a wedding in Williamsburg Virginia
in August (talk about hot). The main course was a small fillet
mignon stuffed with oysters. It had been grilled to medium rare
and was just delicious. I am not a big fan of beef but I was
impressed. The oysters added a wonderful flavor and a real touch
of summer. It was served with a simple wild rice and a gorgeous
cesaer salad. No mushy vegatables no sauces to spill on your tie.
The wine was actually a wonderful Tavel Rose. Not too heavy to
put off the 'white wine only' fans, not sweet to put off everyone,
yet a good full body to stand up to the meat. Enjoy the day.
|
1039.7 | Need more menu ideas!! | RUSTIE::NALE | | Tue Feb 20 1990 16:10 | 17 |
|
I'm hoping to reactivate this string...
I'm getting married in May or June of '91. It will be an outdoor
wedding in Gloucester, MA -- right by the ocean. I'm currently
thinking of doing the food myself (well, actually my family and
my fiance's family would be doing most of it ;^). I have a couple of
ideas about main courses, but would like some ideas on how to
fill out the menu.
For main courses, I was thinking of smoked turkey, and smoked
ham. My fiance's parents make them, and they're *delicious*.
What would go well with these dishes? Any ideas on wine? Do you
think that these two dishes would be plenty for main courses?
Thanks for all you help!
|
1039.8 | Try Weddings, by Martha Stewart | ISLNDS::COLELLA | Does Uranus have an aurora? | Wed Feb 21 1990 08:35 | 6 |
| For some great ideas for (fancy) wedding menus, check out Martha
Stewart's book on weddings. It should be at your library. She's
got everything from appetizers to the wedding cake in there.
Cara
|
1039.10 | Buffet | RUSTIE::NALE | | Wed Feb 21 1990 10:26 | 15 |
|
I'm thinking of a buffet. Although the wedding itself would
probably qualify as "formal", I'd like the reception to be
fairly relaxed with people helping themselves to what they'd
like. This will be an early afternoon wedding.
It would be good if the dishes can be prepared ahead of time
(either a few days, or earlier then frozen).
Re: Martha Stewart's Wedding book. I saw it in the bookstore and
it looked like it had great ideas for everything from flowers to
table settings to menus. My birthday's coming up & Mom said
she'd get it for me.
Sue
|
1039.11 | A few ideas | REORG::AITEL | Never eat a barracuda over 3 lbs. | Wed Feb 21 1990 11:40 | 13 |
| How about a potato or pasta salad? You can make either one as
simple and down to earth or as fancy as you want. I really like
them with smoked meats - the tastes seem to go well. Both can
be prepared a little ahead of time, if kept refrigerated. Or you
can go with a heartier "German" hot potato salad. Another good
thing about these two types of salads is that most people like them.
It's not like those fancy aspics that always seem to be left over....
Since it's going to be in the spring, how about using some fresh
spring veggies like peas, sugar snap peas, or asparagus? Sugar
snap peas make delicious raw appetizers, along with a dip.
--Louise
|
1039.12 | no do-overs on weddings... | CSOA1::WIEGMANN | | Wed Feb 21 1990 12:40 | 23 |
| A few more things to think about -
The time of day - will people be expecting a full/substantial meal, or
will a selection of appetizers be more appropriate? Will you have
facilities to keep the food hot or cold, or will you need to plan for
foods that are served room temperature?
Seating - will you be providing a place for everyone to sit while they
eat, or will people be walking around mingling (which makes it
difficult to manage a plate, a beverage, a purse...) People who are
dressed up may not eat for fear of wearing it, and then all your hard
work will have been wasted!
Place - by the ocean sounds beautiful, but will it be windy, will you
be subject to surf spray? How much stuff will you (or your friends!)
have to lug to the site; serving utensils, condiments, trashbags,
etc., etc.
Whatever you do, start making lists!
Good luck!
TW
|
1039.13 | THIS June !! | DECEAT::DRISKELL | Call the foundation savers - NOW | Wed Mar 21 1990 09:38 | 21 |
|
re: .0
I am in the same boat (almost). The wedding is at the end of this June
- 1990. I am not thrilled with the choices from the caterers as they
are all rather heavy sit_down_and_be_full menues. I am going to give
them a `preferred' menue and see if they will go for it. I would like
a buffet (sitdown) or family style serving - with turkey and ham, potatoe
salad and asparagus, a garden salad, fresh veggies and deviled eggs for
appetizers. And what else???????? What goes here???? Help !!!!!
If anyone has suggestions on this - let me know. I am not very good at
this, and trying to come up with a menu for this has been frustrating.
I am trying to keep it simple so that the caterers will be agreeable.
And I really would like it to be good food that everyone likes, that
isn't going to weigh them down and keep them at the bar. Oh yea, it's
an afternoon reception and will be indoor/outdoor.
Thanks in advance....
Jodi
|
1039.14 | Two suggestions | REORG::AITEL | Never eat a barracuda over 3 lbs. | Wed Mar 21 1990 10:17 | 13 |
| There should be a lot of nice strawberries and california fruits
by June - how about fruit salad as either an appetizer or an adjunct
to the cake for dessert? That way dieters can have a sliver of
cake and a dish of fruit salad, and remain "honest". It's also
easier to keep than eggs for an appetizer - deviled eggs tend to
spoil quickly - besides, who needs all the cholesterol!
June is when sugar snap peas are in season, too. They make delicious
appetizers, and are nice steamed and marinated (like the asparagus
that I think you mentioned) or stir-fried for a side-dish. They're
also a little exotic - not your every-day vegetable for most people.
--Louise
|
1039.15 | | DECEAT::DRISKELL | Call the foundation savers - NOW | Wed Mar 21 1990 13:52 | 10 |
| Yes, I am DEFINATELY serving strawberries - it will be the height of
the season here (central mass). Rather than the traditional wedding
cake, I am having a cheesecake and will serve that topped with
strawberries for desert (plus bowls of fresh whole berries).
I hadn't thought about the spoil factor on eggs - good point.
I am not sure I know what sugar snap peas are... could you describe
them? How about cold dishes?
Thanks
|
1039.16 | Poached salmon | SSGBPM::COMISKEY | | Wed Mar 21 1990 13:59 | 9 |
| My sister had whole poached salmon (cold) at the light buffet at her
reception. THe pink salmon was quite lovely. It was served with
several different sauces/mayonnaises.
The only problem was that when my 5-year-old nephew went through
the buffet line he yelled, "Gross! That fish still has eyes on it!"
Kate
|
1039.17 | Snap pea digression | REORG::AITEL | Never eat a barracuda over 3 lbs. | Thu Mar 22 1990 10:35 | 42 |
| Sugar snap peas are pretty new, so I'm not surprised you haven't
heard of them. They've been hailed as a new vegetable, the
vegetable of the decade, etc., in the garden catalogs and
magazines. I'd almost have to show you a picture in one of
my garden catalogs to really describe them, but here goes a try!
Take a regular garden pea-pod, filled out with nice young peas.
Make the pod entirely edible, just like the flat snow-pea pods.
Increase the flavor and sugar content to match the best fresh
petit-pois - those delicious french baby peas. Make the pod
stringless and just a little narrower than a regular garden pea-pod.
The whole pod is about 2-3 inches long, depending on variety, and
just about round in cross-section.
To serve sugar-snaps:
- eat them whole right off the vine (my favorite method)
- remove the tips and tails and serve in a bowl with a dip,
using a light dip ie not a heavy fatty one
- snap them in two and add to salads
- stir-fry lightly either whole or snapped in two
- steam briefly, cool, and marinade in a vinaigrette similar
to one for making marinaded asparagus
and so on. They're really delicious, and also are easy to grow.
I take a nylon string trellis, about 15 feet long and 5 feet tall,
and stake it up along the back of a 3 foot wide bed. I dig an 8
inch wide trench, about 4 inches deep, along the trellis. In that
trench, I plant my taller snap-pea seeds, covering them 1 inch deep
and spacing them 1 inch apart - really thickly seeded! I plant the
bushier early snap-pea seeds, again 1 inch deep and thickly seeded,
in the remaining 2 feet of the row, in front of the taller peas.
The early ones are good, 2 inch pods, and ripen 2-3 weeks before the
later ones. The later ones are even better, and have 3 inch long
pods. I use Pea Innoculant, which can be purchased in the garden
catalogs and is good for helping peas fix nitrogen. The only other
fertilizers I add are organic phosphorous and potassium - greensand
and I forget what the other is called.
So, more than you ever wanted to know about snap-peas!
--Louise
|
1039.18 | Suggestions for Wedding Cake (plus) Reception? | PSYCHE::HACHE | Just call me BelteshazzarRE | Thu Jan 24 1991 12:10 | 51 |
|
Hi Noters!
I need your help. I got a phone call from a friend of mine who
is catering a wedding on Saturday that I was supposed to be a guest
at.
For some reason that I don't fully understand, things have not gone
well and are still kind of up in the air. Not all that UNUSUAL in
the wedding business, I can assure you, but... I have been enlisted
to help with the food for Saturday. (I should mention that I owe
both this friend, and the couple getting married at least a million
favors each for helping me with MY wedding business, so whatever they
need, I will TRY to do!)
Here are the details:
Cake and Punch reception for 250
3 Kinds of coffee, hot water for tea and something else that escapes me
right now (maybe decaff)
'Pastry' trays:
. tarts
.rasberry
. quickbread/creamcheese 'sandwiches'
. zucchini
. pumpkin
. lemon/poppyseed
. sour cream coffee cake
Butter Mints
Mixed Nuts
The tarts will be made in 4 inch circles and cut into 6 wedges
The creamcheese sandwiches will be cut into 1 inch fingers
The coffeecake will be cut in squares
I think we need another option.. the parameters are it has to
not be square, wedge or rectangular shaped, must be relatively
small, inexpensive and easy.
My first inclination is mini-bagels, but I'd like to know what
comes to YOUR minds.
Also, when I make tarts I do a lattice top. With such small
pieces, I'm sure that the pastry won't hold up to being cut
(I'll end up with a crumb topping!). What could I top the
tarts with to be attractive in small pieces?
adTHANKSvance for all your help and suggestions!
dm
|
1039.19 | | HORSEY::MACKONIS | Put it in Writitng.... | Thu Jan 24 1991 12:38 | 10 |
| How about a cookie -- they are round!
Other alternative, fresh strawberries dipped in chocolate. You only dip the
bottom half, and I have seen them with the leaves on which make good little
handles.
Other alternative would be a fruit salad, or perhaps a sponge or angel food
cake with a fruit or a chocolate sauce topping.
|
1039.20 | | CSCOAC::ANDERSON_M | Dwell in possibility | Thu Jan 24 1991 12:52 | 2 |
|
How about small, mixed-fruit kebobs?
|
1039.21 | Fruit Would be Wonderful... but | PSYCHE::HACHE | Just call me BelteshazzarRE | Thu Jan 24 1991 12:55 | 10 |
| I would love to do something with fruit, unfortunately
especially at this time of year, fruit is way out of
line with the budget. We'd need to do at least 150
pieces of whatever we decide on. Cookies are a good
option. Any thoughts on a not too sweet cookie?
Don't repost a recipe here, a pointer would be fine.
Thanks for your speedy suggestions!
dm
|
1039.22 | POinter to cookie recipe | JUMP4::JOY | Get a life! | Thu Jan 24 1991 13:25 | 7 |
| Danielle,
The Cranberry Chocolate Chippers in note 363.41 have gotten rave
reviews every time I've made them, and you get to have some fruit as
well as chocolate. The cranberries cut the sweetness of the cookie too.
Debbie
|
1039.23 | Meltaways cookies | DELNI::SCORMIER | | Thu Jan 24 1991 13:25 | 8 |
| SOmewhere in here there is a recipe for Meltaways. They are not too
sweet, but literally melt in your mouth. I believe they are listed
under one of the Christmas Cookie notes. I used a pastry bag with
tinted icing for a baby shower one year to dress them up (just a little
squiggle, nothing fancy) and they were a big hit. Extremely easy to
prepare.
Sarah
|
1039.24 | Versatile almond paste cookies | RUSTIE::NALE | Accept No Limitations | Fri Jan 25 1991 10:58 | 10 |
|
I have a recipe at home for cookies made with almond paste. I
usually make them for the holidays. The cookies are VERY rich:
lots of butter. They're very versatile: my sister makes mini
chocolate cheesecakes using the dough as the "crust", I often
top them with various jams, you can dip them in chocolate, or
drizzle with chocolate.
If anyone's interested, I can post the recipe.
Sue
|
1039.25 | Fruit Skewers This Time of Year | CSG001::WEINSTEIN | Barbara Weinstein | Fri Jan 25 1991 16:35 | 8 |
| You can make reasonable fruit skewers (which has now become a staple recipe for
me) using pineapple chunks and grapes, both of which you can get easily and
can be tasty this time of year. For a little more money, splurge on a
basket of blueberries -- one on each skewer goes a long way. With more
time and shopping around, which I suspect you have little time for now and
you probably won't even read this note 'til the wedding is over, you can
find ripe melons.
|
1039.26 | meringues are easy to shape fancy | TYGON::WILDE | illegal possession of a GNU | Fri Jan 25 1991 18:35 | 3 |
| meringues are a traditional "fancy cookie" and ideal for weddings and showers.
any cookbook has a recipe. You can make lemon, orange, and/or chocolate
meringue cookies for a nice mixture of colors.
|
1039.27 | | PINION::HACHE | Just call me BelteshazzarRE | Tue Jan 29 1991 09:52 | 12 |
|
Hi,
Thanks for all your help and input. We ended up doing two
things, mini fruit kabobs and some small pastel cookies
(which I didn't make or taste, so I don't remember what they
were).
All of your suggestions will be tucked into my wedding file
for the next time I need ideas!
dm
|