Have you heard the phrase, “Don’t yuck my yum?” It would be good for you to learn. |
| Were you specifically asked to bring cookies or do you just know there will be a cookie table? Usually it’s a small group of family members who do the baking. I’m sure you could ask them if a bakery cookie is ok. Some families have really strong feelings about that while others welcome all. |
| No wedding guest should be contributing food to a wedding. What in the bridezilla is going on in Pittsburgh? |
+1 though I once attended a bridal shower where guests were asked to bring a family cookie recipe on a card as a gift for the bride. They had a cookie table of their family recipies. It was nice. |
NP OP is seeking a "guest contribution". It's appropriate to offer an honest review. |
Maybe they are poor? |
No. Couples from families without much money will usually have tons of delicious homemade food and desserts because family members who can’t afford gifts will offer the gift of time and cook/bake from scratch. The family would never let random guests contribute food. |
No way, the best cookie tables are put together by working class families; the tradition started with working class and poor Italian and Eastern European immigrants in cities like Pittsburgh and Youngstown. The families put a lot of work into this, and take a lot of pride in this and see this as their responsibility to make the cookies . They would never solicit cookies from random guests. |
It's Pittsburgh tradition among a certain Pittsburgh demographic, and no one is required to participate. People do it because they want to. Not bridezilla-y when done properly-- I'm sorry OP is worrying. That is NOT in the spirit of the cookie table! |