My fiancé and I are planning an intimate wedding with our closest family and friends. It's small (60 guests) because we feel that it's an incredibly personal event that we only want our closest loved ones to attend. We're also on a small budget (we are NOT willing to go into debt for our special day and don't want to go over budget) and are playing around with reception ideas. We know that our family and friends love us regardless but I still want to feel that I'm doing "enough" for them, especially since most are coming from out of town (a few hours drive for most but still). I'm rejecting the wedding industry in so many ways but I'm unsure of this, even though the menu excites my fiancé and I. Our family and friends come from different backgrounds and countries and parts of the country so there is no "norm" to follow. However, we live in North Carolina.
My question is: How would you feel attending a wedding in a woodland setting that has a SLIGHT enchanted forest theme that served an afternoon tea/heavy hors d'oeuvres/dessert style menu? Obviously I'm not sure what to call this yet! Haha. Here's what I'm thinking:
Dessert tableWedding cake/Cookies/Cupcakes/Pies/Doughnuts
Tea and coffee bar
Tea, coffee, hot chocolate, toppings (sprinkles, whipped cream, etc)/Scones/Coffee cake/Muffins/Croissants/Macaroons/Mini sandwiches
Hors d'oeuvres
Various meats and cheeses/Crackers/Mini Subs/Pinwheel Wraps/Chips and dips/Vegetable platter/Fruit platter
Drinks
Tea/Lemonade/Water/Hard Cider and Beer/Red sangria/White sangria
Another question: What SHOULD I indicate this style of reception as on an invitation? We would absolutely WORD IT CORRECTLY so that guests know that there will be no formal sit down dinner. We will start the reception sometime between 2:30-3:45pm and end between 7pm-8pm. Our timeline isn't complete.
If you have any additional menu suggestions or advice that would definitely help too! Keep in mind that a lot of these items will be bought in bulk from Costco or Sam's but some things (like the cupcakes and doughnuts) will be bought from our favorite local specialty shops.
PS: Please be KIND with your opinions. I've seen some NASTY forums which I why I've NEVER posted but I need suggestions. Thanks!!
Your menu sounds lovely for an afternoon, non-meal time reception. However, once you begin to get into the dinner time hours, as a guest I might think that the earlier food was a prelude to a dinner. It might translate better if your evening ended earlier.asp1993 said:My fiancé and I are planning an intimate wedding with our closest family and friends. It's small (60 guests) because we feel that it's an incredibly personal event that we only want our closest loved ones to attend. We're also on a small budget (we are NOT willing to go into debt for our special day and don't want to go over budget) and are playing around with reception ideas. We know that our family and friends love us regardless but I still want to feel that I'm doing "enough" for them, especially since most are coming from out of town (a few hours drive for most but still). I'm rejecting the wedding industry in so many ways but I'm unsure of this, even though the menu excites my fiancé and I. Our family and friends come from different backgrounds and countries and parts of the country so there is no "norm" to follow. However, we live in North Carolina.
My question is: How would you feel attending a wedding in a woodland setting that has a SLIGHT enchanted forest theme that served an afternoon tea/heavy hors d'oeuvres/dessert style menu? Obviously I'm not sure what to call this yet! Haha. Here's what I'm thinking:
Dessert tableWedding cake/Cookies/Cupcakes/Pies/Doughnuts
Tea and coffee bar
Tea, coffee, hot chocolate, toppings (sprinkles, whipped cream, etc)/Scones/Coffee cake/Muffins/Croissants/Macaroons/Mini sandwiches
Hors d'oeuvres
Various meats and cheeses/Crackers/Mini Subs/Pinwheel Wraps/Chips and dips/Vegetable platter/Fruit platter
Drinks
Tea/Lemonade/Water/Hard Cider and Beer/Red sangria/White sangria
Another question: What SHOULD I indicate this style of reception as on an invitation? We would absolutely WORD IT CORRECTLY so that guests know that there will be no formal sit down dinner. We will start the reception sometime between 2:30-3:45pm and end between 7pm-8pm. Our timeline isn't complete.
If you have any additional menu suggestions or advice that would definitely help too! Keep in mind that a lot of these items will be bought in bulk from Costco or Sam's but some things (like the cupcakes and doughnuts) will be bought from our favorite local specialty shops.
PS: Please be KIND with your opinions. I've seen some NASTY forums which I why I've NEVER posted but I need suggestions. Thanks!!
Re: Afternoon tea/hors d'oeuvres/dessert reception
If you start you ceremony at 2pm, assuming it is over in 30 mins your reception would start at 2:30. On your invitation you would say that a reception is to follow. Are you having dancing, toasts, cake cutting and such? You don't have to, but keep in mind timing might get a little tight in a 2 and 1/2 hour time frame. If you aren't having dancing and toasts, then your time frame should work fine. This was the type of wedding I had years ago. Our ceremony was at 3pm. Receptions was hot and cold hors d'oeurves, cake, and drinks. It was over by 5:30. We had cake cutting and bouquet toss but no dancing or toasts.
You could list it on your invitations as a cake and punch reception or light snacks to follow, etc. I know technical etiquette says you don't list the level of hosting, but it's generally acceptable to give the guests a heads up.
Our ceremony started at 2 w/ a reception that started at 4 (Catholic and no gap) and we had a full meal and reception ended at 10.
If I received an invitation to an event that listed reception start time and not end time, I'd assume I'm getting a full meal. If the reception ends anytime after 6, I'd assume full meal.
I made some edits to your menu above to make it more simple. If you have a ton of options, you'll be more likely to run out of one thing, run out of table space/be refilling things constantly, and to just be managing way too much stuff. Also, it was SUPER pastry heavy and lacking in "real food" so I would suggest adding two or three of the following options (or options like them - actual heavy apps):
- meatballs
- shrimp cocktail
- deviled eggs
- mini crab cakes
- caprese skewers
- chicken wings or satay skewers
- prosciutto and puff pastry wrapped asparagus
You do not need to indicate anything on the invitation except that people are invited to your wedding and reception. People know that if an event starts at 2 and ends at 5, there's no meal. And even if they don't understand that, ending the event at 5 (or 6) gives them plenty of time to go get dinner. You just need to make sure you end it then so you don't get into bad hosting territory.
PS: I'm keeping the cider, it's a fall wedding and my fav. ;-)
My experience with our wedding (27 years ago!) and with catering other teas is that people tend to want sweet food in the afternoon, but if it goes past 5, they will want heavier, savory things. So think about the timing when you are considering what to serve. For example, I did the food for a reception honoring a retiring elementary school principal. The event ended at 5. Nearly all the cookies, pastries, cake and sweet punch were consumed, but we had a lot of leftover mini sandwiches and cocktail meatballs. At another afternoon reception that ended at 6, it was the reverse. That one hour made a difference.
You could inform your guests that it's not a meal by saying something like "Afternoon tea reception immediately following" on the invites. And if you set up a site here, you can give more info to clarify.