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A potluck you take what you brought
A hosted meal where people have brought contributions…Always ask the host if they want it and as the host always politely refuse. Only exception is opened alcohol (leave it) or a host gift (wine, birthday cake etc) That’s how it works in my friend circle. Who wants to be left with a table of other people food to clean up and put away only to waste it later. |
No, that’s not rude. People brought the food to the host’s party. It now belongs to the host. S/he can distribute it, keep it, do whatever s/he wants with it. Guests have relinquished control. The only thing they can claim are the dish3s they brought the food in. |
I think it’s nice if the hosts stuck with lots of left overs offer food to families with lots of teens or kids to spread it around. Especially if you know there’s no way they will eat all of it. It’s not about “control” but sharing the bounty. |
No, guests don’t get to change the rules of engagement in a host’s house. And you don’t seem to understand that people often bring dishes against the host’s express request that they bring nothing. They’re actually trying to be polite, having been taught never to arrive at an event empty-handed, but their behavior does not change a hosted brunch into a potluck. And as the host I’d do whatever I wanted with the unasked for dishes—keep if yummy, graciously send back if not so tasty. |
It is nice, but it’s not rude to make another choice. |
| OP here. This happens at all my hosted brunches or dinners with this group. It’s not a potluck. And this is like 4 groups of friends all taking their items back. Half eaten guacamole, even scooping out of the serving dish. Half bag of chips. Sometimes they ask if you’re not going to eat this I’ll take it back. But I feel like it’s rude for me to say yes please leave it. So I say they can have it back but just the fact that they take it back or ask I feel is rude and don’t know if there is anything I can politely say about it. Oh well. Thank you for making me feel normal lol! |
| It's rude to assume they can take it, but sometimes I will tell people to when I host. No one ever takes back unopened bottles of wine - that is animal behavior. |
Can look greedy for a family of 2 or 3 to keep far more of the food than they can possibly eat. A dish to share isn’t a hostess gift. |
So let them take back the dish you never wanted in the first place. “Please, take it with you” can be perceived as nobody really even liked it anyway. Why do you even want it? |
| Absolutely not! That would be so tacky. It wouldn't even occur to me and I'd be shocked if anyone did it in front of me. |
Sounds like there is confusion in your group. You seem to think you’re hosting a brunch and they are all used to contributing something potluck style. |
Agree |
| We do not have a lot of fridge or storage space so I’m happy to have people take back what they brought. But if you are going to eat the leftovers, then just say so when the night is ending - “I’m excited for these leftovers tomorrow.” And hopefully your friends take the hint. |
So? If you don’t want the host to keep it, make less or don’t bring it. OP said it wasn’t a potluck, you did this unbidden and for no reason. Now it’s hers to do with as she wants. |
Why do YOU want it back? You have to have brought it assuming it might all be eaten. You should never bring more food than you can bear to part with. |