And many people do: poke, sushi, shrimp cocktail, crab dip, etc. |
Ignore them. Get feedback from you guests. Offer suggestions to them a get feedback. Food is personal. Get preferences and your menu will be enjoyable. Anchovies remind me of South Italy. I would approve. Just make sure they a decent quality. If you are serving DCUM, serve Chick-Fil-A. Make sure it’s reheated several times. Serve with a side of wallpaper paste. |
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Try this:
TJs feta/onion cups, but before you bake them top with a little tiny bit of fig jam: https://www.traderjoes.com/home/products/pdp/pastry-bites-feta-cheese-caramelized-onions-001026 Little skewers with a marinated mozzarella ball and a cherry tomato or two (get the three color ones and each will be a little different), drizzle with olive oil (literally the Drizzle Graza brand, available at Whole Foods and some other stores) and some thick balsamic or balsamic glaze, and crushed red pepper Anchoves are fine but look up a creative way to serve them that appeals to people Your meatballs sound fine Consider getting Soupergirl gazpacho - you can serve shooters of this. Do something fun like this https://thecrumbykitchen.com/gazpacho-recipe/ (I would put the toast balanced on the top or on the side.) Order mini Georgetown cupcakes or have some beautiful chocolates. Probably an additional fruit/veggie/cheese plate. |
Lots of people can’t eat dairy. It doesn’t make cheese a “terrible food choice” by default as pp insinuated. It’s only bad if you are serving contrary to your guests preferences. I don’t get the impression that ops guests are picky eaters. |
| I love crabmeat dip and Fritos but I don't think they're complimentary flavors. |
| This menu is schizophrenic. Fritos and bone broth don't belong on the same menu. |
This is actually too much work. Do crab dip in a bowl and grapes, cheese and nuts on a board. Add sliced baguette or crackers (for both the dip and the cheese). I'd probably skip the toast points and shooters (even tho I like them both it's just getting a little hodgepodge). Keep lamb balls and cookies. yummy What's your book?! |
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What is the book?
Is the menu on topic? |
Foodies want high quality food, not weird combinations that are "creative." Get high quality cheeses, two types of nuts, organic strawberries, whatever other fruit is in season where you live, some veggies and good quality dip, and two types of crackers. Then get some good quality chocolates (nothing made in the US). You can do ONE low brow food item, like pigs in a blanket. |
There’s nothing low brow about pigs in a blanket. I’d eat that over your weird cheeses and sardines any day of the week! |
| You’re punking us, right? |
Bingo.
It's mini hot dogs and dough from a tube. Please.
Goat cheese is "weird". Wait until PP discovers how those hot dogs are made. |
| I try to match the snacks to the book (ex. English tea for a book set in London) but nothing too elaborate. Little sandwiches, a veggie tray & dip, cheese and crackers, something sweet, a variety of drinks. In my case, book club isn’t at a meal time so no one expects more than snacks. |
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OP, I would enjoy your spread. But I do agree it's a lot of foodie items. If your book club is like that (others also serve foodie items) then go for it. But if others are opening a box of ritz to go with sliced cheddar blocks from the grocery store, then I'd dial it back.
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+1 |