Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have household staff- so no.
Otherwise it is too hard to be formal, both in dress and dining, when you are the one doing all the cooking, plating, serving, cleaning and cleaning up- oh and being hostess and socializing and being pleasant while looking like you aren’t busy doing a bunch of work
…nope. Don’t you know how to make things ahead? Many main dishes like coq au vin can be made ahead; so can basically any appetizer or dessert
Let me guess, you think you have to make every little thing from scratch? Even Ina Garten says you should focus on making one or two things, and fill in with good-quality store bought instead of working yourself into a froth.
As in cocktail hour can be a pitcher of homemade sangria (made the day before) and some good-quality cheese and Marcona almonds. Soup can be made ahead, and so can salad (lightly dress before serving, no big deal). Pre-marinated salmon can cook during first course, served along with asparagus and roasted potatoes, no big deal. Then a beautiful dessert from the best bakery in town.
Like, this isn’t rocket science.
Oh awesome! So I can spend the two days prior stuck in kitchen cooking! It doesn’t make it less work to “do ahead” you are simply doing the work at a different time. And yes, I do make everything from scratch. I don’t consider it a formal dinner party if I’m serving cheese and crackers and Costco frozen apps and store bought dessert.
I think there's an in between of making everything from scratch and frozen Costco appetizers. I can make my own focaccia but sometimes I do buy a fresh one from a local bakery and serve it with a homemade chutney. I don't think most people would consider that some cheap lazy hack. But I think by putting these impossible standards on yourself and others you're missing out FWIW.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have household staff- so no.
Otherwise it is too hard to be formal, both in dress and dining, when you are the one doing all the cooking, plating, serving, cleaning and cleaning up- oh and being hostess and socializing and being pleasant while looking like you aren’t busy doing a bunch of work
…nope. Don’t you know how to make things ahead? Many main dishes like coq au vin can be made ahead; so can basically any appetizer or dessert
Let me guess, you think you have to make every little thing from scratch? Even Ina Garten says you should focus on making one or two things, and fill in with good-quality store bought instead of working yourself into a froth.
As in cocktail hour can be a pitcher of homemade sangria (made the day before) and some good-quality cheese and Marcona almonds. Soup can be made ahead, and so can salad (lightly dress before serving, no big deal). Pre-marinated salmon can cook during first course, served along with asparagus and roasted potatoes, no big deal. Then a beautiful dessert from the best bakery in town.
Like, this isn’t rocket science.
Oh awesome! So I can spend the two days prior stuck in kitchen cooking! It doesn’t make it less work to “do ahead” you are simply doing the work at a different time. And yes, I do make everything from scratch. I don’t consider it a formal dinner party if I’m serving cheese and crackers and Costco frozen apps and store bought dessert.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have household staff- so no.
Otherwise it is too hard to be formal, both in dress and dining, when you are the one doing all the cooking, plating, serving, cleaning and cleaning up- oh and being hostess and socializing and being pleasant while looking like you aren’t busy doing a bunch of work
…nope. Don’t you know how to make things ahead? Many main dishes like coq au vin can be made ahead; so can basically any appetizer or dessert
Let me guess, you think you have to make every little thing from scratch? Even Ina Garten says you should focus on making one or two things, and fill in with good-quality store bought instead of working yourself into a froth.
As in cocktail hour can be a pitcher of homemade sangria (made the day before) and some good-quality cheese and Marcona almonds. Soup can be made ahead, and so can salad (lightly dress before serving, no big deal). Pre-marinated salmon can cook during first course, served along with asparagus and roasted potatoes, no big deal. Then a beautiful dessert from the best bakery in town.
Like, this isn’t rocket science.
Oh awesome! So I can spend the two days prior stuck in kitchen cooking! It doesn’t make it less work to “do ahead” you are simply doing the work at a different time. And yes, I do make everything from scratch. I don’t consider it a formal dinner party if I’m serving cheese and crackers and Costco frozen apps and store bought dessert.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have household staff- so no.
Otherwise it is too hard to be formal, both in dress and dining, when you are the one doing all the cooking, plating, serving, cleaning and cleaning up- oh and being hostess and socializing and being pleasant while looking like you aren’t busy doing a bunch of work
…nope. Don’t you know how to make things ahead? Many main dishes like coq au vin can be made ahead; so can basically any appetizer or dessert
Let me guess, you think you have to make every little thing from scratch? Even Ina Garten says you should focus on making one or two things, and fill in with good-quality store bought instead of working yourself into a froth.
As in cocktail hour can be a pitcher of homemade sangria (made the day before) and some good-quality cheese and Marcona almonds. Soup can be made ahead, and so can salad (lightly dress before serving, no big deal). Pre-marinated salmon can cook during first course, served along with asparagus and roasted potatoes, no big deal. Then a beautiful dessert from the best bakery in town.
Like, this isn’t rocket science.
The topic is “formal” dinner party. Which I don’t have. I do host plenty of casual dinner parties with all homemade stuff I make that day or some light prep the day before- but it is casual and enjoyed by all.
Oh awesome! So I can spend the two days prior stuck in kitchen cooking! It doesn’t make it less work to “do ahead” you are simply doing the work at a different time. And yes, I do make everything from scratch. I don’t consider it a formal dinner party if I’m serving cheese and crackers and Costco frozen apps and store bought dessert.
You sound like the hapless type who uses a recipe for every little thing, stresses out and never improvises. If making sangria a day ahead is some Hurculean task, hosting will always be hard for you, and yes your guests sense your fear and strain.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have household staff- so no.
Otherwise it is too hard to be formal, both in dress and dining, when you are the one doing all the cooking, plating, serving, cleaning and cleaning up- oh and being hostess and socializing and being pleasant while looking like you aren’t busy doing a bunch of work
…nope. Don’t you know how to make things ahead? Many main dishes like coq au vin can be made ahead; so can basically any appetizer or dessert
Let me guess, you think you have to make every little thing from scratch? Even Ina Garten says you should focus on making one or two things, and fill in with good-quality store bought instead of working yourself into a froth.
As in cocktail hour can be a pitcher of homemade sangria (made the day before) and some good-quality cheese and Marcona almonds. Soup can be made ahead, and so can salad (lightly dress before serving, no big deal). Pre-marinated salmon can cook during first course, served along with asparagus and roasted potatoes, no big deal. Then a beautiful dessert from the best bakery in town.
Like, this isn’t rocket science.
Oh awesome! So I can spend the two days prior stuck in kitchen cooking! It doesn’t make it less work to “do ahead” you are simply doing the work at a different time. And yes, I do make everything from scratch. I don’t consider it a formal dinner party if I’m serving cheese and crackers and Costco frozen apps and store bought dessert.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have household staff- so no.
Otherwise it is too hard to be formal, both in dress and dining, when you are the one doing all the cooking, plating, serving, cleaning and cleaning up- oh and being hostess and socializing and being pleasant while looking like you aren’t busy doing a bunch of work
…nope. Don’t you know how to make things ahead? Many main dishes like coq au vin can be made ahead; so can basically any appetizer or dessert
Let me guess, you think you have to make every little thing from scratch? Even Ina Garten says you should focus on making one or two things, and fill in with good-quality store bought instead of working yourself into a froth.
As in cocktail hour can be a pitcher of homemade sangria (made the day before) and some good-quality cheese and Marcona almonds. Soup can be made ahead, and so can salad (lightly dress before serving, no big deal). Pre-marinated salmon can cook during first course, served along with asparagus and roasted potatoes, no big deal. Then a beautiful dessert from the best bakery in town.
Like, this isn’t rocket science.
Anonymous wrote:We don’t do formal, but we do nibbles, sometimes a starter, a main and dessert, everything always homemade. I don’t enjoy formality, and we don’t have of wang start in our house. The kids make dessert, which makes it manageable. If we do a starter it id something made in advance. For the main we try to do something that doesn’t require a lot of work at the end. Stews, curries, carnitas etc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have household staff- so no.
Otherwise it is too hard to be formal, both in dress and dining, when you are the one doing all the cooking, plating, serving, cleaning and cleaning up- oh and being hostess and socializing and being pleasant while looking like you aren’t busy doing a bunch of work
You can do it! It’s all about menu planning. And caftans. And dim lighting.
Also there is a great company called Party Hands where you can hire one or a few lovely people to help.
Yeah, PP! What the posters are saying is that if you're rich and have a fully-stocked kitchen, no limits to spending on quality drinks, premade luxury desserts or main courses, and hire staff, it's really easy, and how stupid do you have to be to not want to do this?!!
You're not allowed to be poor, socially-anxious or executive functioning-challenged. It's so easy!!!
Babe, this thread is literally about *formal dinner parties.* Did you drunkenly stumble in from the Tortinos and Boxed Wine in My Studio Apartment thread?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have household staff- so no.
Otherwise it is too hard to be formal, both in dress and dining, when you are the one doing all the cooking, plating, serving, cleaning and cleaning up- oh and being hostess and socializing and being pleasant while looking like you aren’t busy doing a bunch of work
You can do it! It’s all about menu planning. And caftans. And dim lighting.
Also there is a great company called Party Hands where you can hire one or a few lovely people to help.
Yeah, PP! What the posters are saying is that if you're rich and have a fully-stocked kitchen, no limits to spending on quality drinks, premade luxury desserts or main courses, and hire staff, it's really easy, and how stupid do you have to be to not want to do this?!!
You're not allowed to be poor, socially-anxious or executive functioning-challenged. It's so easy!!!