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All duplicates, I think: Halved baby potatoes with creme fraiche or sour cream topped with black caviar; stuffed mushrooms;
bagel chips with cream cheese, lox and capers, and/or whitefish salad. Hummus with pita chips and veggies that can be dipped; stuffed mushrooms; asparagus wrapped in prosciutto. For sweets: flourless chocolate cake; mini cheesecakes; strawberries or a fruit platter; assorted rugelach. I realized only as I wrote this that except for the prosciutto, all of these could easily be kosher — and many of the most chi chi events that I went to back then as a grad student would have tried to have spreads that were kosher enough. In contrast, during the same time period, when I came home to DC, the spreads would have been more likely to include individual baby back ribs; miniature crab cakes; shrimp cocktail; and maybe chicken wings with different sauces; with fancy brownies for sweets. |
We were not at all fancy. We bought our chopped liver in a plastic container. |
| And for dessert: lemon tarts. if you ready the book, you would know why! |
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Knorr spinach dip served in a bread bowl (knorr soup has the recipe on the package if they still make it)
Quiche/mini quiche potato skins ( stuffed with cheese/bacon/chives) |
Oh, that’s a great idea! |
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hot crab dip
oysters rockefeller clams casino shrimp cocktail |
I stood next to somebody the other day who bought it at the Parkway Deli. Yum. |
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OP here. Thanks for all of the inspiration—great ideas (as always)!
I went with the curried chicken salad on endives—it was a big hit! I also brought - batch version of the Southside cocktail. Another friend brought millionaire bars. But now I may need to make lemon tarts, as well as a baked brie dish! And perhaps put the little caviar potatoes on my shortlist for NYE… |
| Coke-a-vin! |
| Try recreating some items from Dorsia's menu |