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Kids party catering - help!

27 replies

ReadingInTheRain583 · 01/11/2024 12:10

Just sat down to book a Tesco delivery for party food for DCs birthday party next weekend and realised I'm clueless. Please help!

Do I do a standard buffet type affair?individual boxes? Up to 20 kids coming (still waiting on a few RSVPs)

What do I serve beyond sandwiches (ham/cheese?!), crisps and sausage rolls? Venue doesn't have a cooker. My kid is autistic and has literally eaten the same food every day for the last 4 years so a bit out of my depth here!

Do I feed parents or do they get left overs? Party finishes at 1.30 so not like anyone would starve to death before they got home. Was thinking of supplying tea/coffee/tub of celebrations for any parents who stuck around.

AM I just over thinking this?!

OP posts:
Forgottenmyphone · 01/11/2024 12:17

How old are the children and do you have any dietary requirements to cater for? If it’s young children and/or there are very specific dietary requirements, then individual boxes are a good way to go. It ensures each child gets a relatively balanced meal and a fair share, no child grabs and gorges 20 chocolate biscuits, and nobody eats anything they’re allergic to. It also means you can spot any children who haven’t eaten much. It makes working how much of everything to purchase so much easier, minimises waste and is probably more cost effective.

MiddleAgedDread · 01/11/2024 12:19

How old are they? Definitely not a stand up buffet with kdis!! Party boxes can be good if you've got anyone with food allergies or dietary requirements and is easier for portion control.
Basic sandwiches - don't do too many as they'll all make a beeline for more snacky foods and a lot of young kids aren't big on bread.
Cocktail sausages
A token jesture towards something healthy e.g. cucumber sticks, cherry tomatoes and some grapes (depends how old they are)
Breadsticks and hummus if you're really middle class and want to look virtuous.
Jelly
Cupcakes and biscuits if you're doing birthday cake to take home.

MiddleAgedDread · 01/11/2024 12:21

oh I'm guessing maybe 5 or 6 age group if your child has eaten the same thing for 4 years?
in that case i'd do a party box with half a sandwich (maybe a quarter cheese and a quarter of ham), a bag of crisps, a couple of mini sausages or sausage rolls, a pack of something veg or fruit based, a bag of those mini biscuits e.g. chocolate animal biscuits

Forgottenmyphone · 01/11/2024 12:22

Last year, for the parents, I did bacon rolls, cream cheese bagels, a lemon drizzle and had some tubes of Pringles and punnets of grapes too. Tea and coffee would also be much appreciated!

OatFlatWhiteForMePlease · 01/11/2024 12:24

Individual boxes are also easy to transport and no need for paper plates, platters etc.

Sandwich (cheese, ham) but check if any vegan kids.
veg sticks (I used little self seal bags from Amazon).
Barney bear or something similar.
Crisps.
Water or carton of juice/fruit shoot.

Kids party catering - help!
JustSaltPlease · 01/11/2024 12:25

We did a buffet for our 4 year old last year, we had so much waste! We did sandwiches, pasties, pizza, cocktail sausages, crisps etc.

I went to a party the other week where the parents ordered 2 large bags of chips from chippy and plated them up with some turkey dinosaurs they had made. Genius.

We did toy with doing the individual boxes but what a load of faff, you would have to pack them last minute to ensure sandwiches etc stay fresh

JustSaltPlease · 01/11/2024 12:26

The place where we held party had a kitchen area, so I got loads of tea and coffee and biscuits and told the parents to help themselves. I also did 2 platters of sandwiches for them, kept separately from the kiddys stinky hands

Scentedjasmin · 01/11/2024 12:27

If going to a venue, sandwich boxes are a no hassle way and negate the need to provide plates too, so saves on party table wear. However, an alternative can be paper plates (unless the venue supply plastic recyclable ones), and to make a tray of sandwiches, a pack of mini sausages/sausage rolls, some chopped carrots, biscuits, crisps and take a bottle of cordial. The venue will have serving bowls, cups, jugs if a community centre kind of place.

Scentedjasmin · 01/11/2024 12:29

I would also Only do a quarter of a sandwich per child. I usually do half a sandwich but then end up with soooo much waste. They will only eat half of the savoury food available.

Comedycook · 01/11/2024 12:29

Is it a drop off party or have you said parents can stay? If the latter you need to provide at least nibble for them...crisps and dips are fine.

For the kids, I'd do sandwiches, sausage rolls..very small squares or slices of cold pizza...this was very popular at the last kids party I was at. Big bowl of crisps. Tray of crudités... cucumber, carrots etc. bowl of cut up grapes and strawberries. Something sweet like mini rolls, chocolate fingers etc.. I'd do it all like a buffet.

InfoSecInTheCity · 01/11/2024 12:32

I always went with keeping it simple.

The kids could not care less about the food. For you getting them to sit down in the middle of the party gives you an opportunity to calm them all down a little bit and controls the timeline of the party. For them they want to be sat down for the shortest time possible, cram enough food in to boost their energy and then get back to playing.

We had quite a mix of ethnicities and diets so I always just stuck to a vegetarian menu, it meant I wasn't having to police their plates and choices.

Veg - cherry tomatoes cut in half and cucumber rounds. Pretty much universally accepted and easy to do.

Fruit - melon slices/chunks and berries of some kind, most kids like them and easy to prepare.

Biscuits - chocolate fingers, party rings etc

Crisps - big box of supermarket brand mixed flavours. Let them grab a bag from piles along the table.

Sandwiches - jam or cheese. White bread, butter/marg, filling and cut into triangles

Mini- cakes - mini rolls, mr Kipling style own brand things

You're not trying to provide them a high quality balanced diet. You're proving fun fuel.

Paper cups with their names written on and a couple of big jugs of squash.

In addition to the food, you will need:

  • big roll of kitchen paper, at least one child will knock over their drink
  • knife for cake cutting as well as candles and a lighter
  • roll of bin bags for clean up and for transporting weird shaped and/or big presents from room to car.
  • duck tape - use it to fasten down paper tablecloths, cover any random trip hazards you find unexpectedly or attach decorations to things
  • ziplock bags - any leftovers you want to keep
  • paper plates
  • napkins for wrapping sliced cake for party bags or for holding sliced cake if you serve it there and then
  • disposable cutlery if you're serving anything that needs spoons or forks
ReadingInTheRain583 · 01/11/2024 12:59

Thanks everyone! Forgot to say kids will be between 3-6yrs. So far just one vegetarian

Food waste was a consideration and I thought boxes would be a good idea to combat that (assuming they eat it!).

I have added things like individually wrapped packs of mini jammie dodgers, party rings, Cadbury fingers to my basket so far, as at least they can be taken as left overs without having been defiled by grotty kid fingers.

I did chuckle at the middle class houmous comment - that's literally what my child has eaten for lunch daily for the last 4 years 😆

It's a village hall type venue, we're rural so unfortunately my original idea of a McDs happy meal each is out. I did try and get a venue where we could whack a load of chips and nuggets in the oven but our options are limited around here.

I haven't specified drop off vs stay, at least 50% of the kids are family and their parents will be staying so plenty of eyes/pairs of hands and definitely some adults around if everyone else drops and runs although given the location (rural) I expect most will stay. It's not somewhere you could drop and mooch around town for an hour or two in peace. Spare sandwiches/crisps, tea, coffee, soft drinks for the adults added to the list.

@InfoSecInTheCity it sounds like you're speaking from experience with the "extras"!!

OP posts:
coxesorangepippin · 01/11/2024 12:59

Keep it basic

They're too excited to eat (and that's just the parents)

Ohshitiveturnedintomymother · 01/11/2024 13:07

Here it’s always just put along the table and kids dog in. Couple of plates of mixed sandwiches, cheese/ham/jam, veg sticks, crisps, party rings, and maybe some sweets in bowls. I don’t do adult food per se but everyone just eats the kids sandwiches too.
I lay places along the table in advance so I know how many seats etc needed with just a plate and napkin. I take my own plates then take home again, no need for paper throw away ones. I hate bow much waste kids parties create so avoid all the unnecessary packaging like boxes, plastic bags etc. really wasteful and so much single use plastic!

my top tip is make sure you turn the bouncy castle off at the wall when you want them to eat so they have to sit down!

ReadingInTheRain583 · 01/11/2024 13:08

OK, tesco basket...

Stuff for sandwiches - ham, cheese, white bread, flora spread (dairy free and we use it at home anyway!)

Crisps - giant wotsits, skips, pom bears

Cheese & tom pizzas

Sausage rolls (vegetarian - never spotted by a meat eater yet!)

Grapes & watermelon

Sweet treats - party rings, jammie dodgers, cadbury fingers (individually wrapped)

Frube yoghurts

Tea/coffee/soft drinks for parents + milk

Squash for kids - orange and summer fruits

Will that do?

OP posts:
ReadingInTheRain583 · 01/11/2024 13:13

Ohshitiveturnedintomymother · 01/11/2024 13:07

Here it’s always just put along the table and kids dog in. Couple of plates of mixed sandwiches, cheese/ham/jam, veg sticks, crisps, party rings, and maybe some sweets in bowls. I don’t do adult food per se but everyone just eats the kids sandwiches too.
I lay places along the table in advance so I know how many seats etc needed with just a plate and napkin. I take my own plates then take home again, no need for paper throw away ones. I hate bow much waste kids parties create so avoid all the unnecessary packaging like boxes, plastic bags etc. really wasteful and so much single use plastic!

my top tip is make sure you turn the bouncy castle off at the wall when you want them to eat so they have to sit down!

No bouncy castle thankfully! But the hired entertainers have "table" entertainment for them whist they eat. Due to the rural nature of where we are (small village school) their class teacher from last year will be there with their own child so reckon everyone will be on their best behaviour!

I am using paper plates but they are recyclable rather than the hideous shiny things, as they aren't eating off of my Denby 😆will have all that set up and ready to go.

Have sweets for the party bags (bought those today, thank you post halloween reductions!) and plastic free goodies in them).

OP posts:
AnellaA · 01/11/2024 13:15

At parties in village halls the kids are always ravenous in my experience, especially at lunchtime! I’ve seen a good party spread devoured in almost total silence several times.

Jam sandwiches are weirdly the most popular party food ever.

I also do grated cheese, ham, and sometimes tuna mayo. Twice as many strawberry jam!

Do lots of paper plates of sandwiches - you can bring out more if they go fast, keep the rest as leftovers or for adults.

Crisps - lots of small bowls.

Grapes, tangerine segments, strawberries, blueberries or even chunks of gala melon if budget allows. Cucumber and tomatoes.

Samosas and home made mini sausage rolls, margarita pizza slices (cold)

Biscuits, Fairy cakes - bring these out separately NOT with the savoury food.

Mix of bread - white and slightly brown, crusts off if they are even vaguely hard.

I’ve never done boxes as whilst the kids seem excited by them a lot of food is wasted.

Adults don’t expect to be fed and invite them to have leftovers BUT if you have invited family I would probably provide drinks and snacks - hand round a few trays of cupcakes or millionaire shortcake for the adults. Always appreciated.

The venue will have big jugs. you need at least two paper cups per child and orange squash and black currant squash. Many will drink water though.

Paper tablecloths to make it look nice and save lots of wiping of tables at the end.

Tea bags and instant coffee and milk for adults. Not alcohol (unless family expect it).

A pack of wet wipes for sticky hands.

A few bin bags and some food waste bags for clearing up.

Matches and candles for the cake

Sprogonthetyne · 01/11/2024 13:18

I do a box per child, sandwich, pack of crisps, bag of party rings, tube yogurt & fruit windy thing. They also get a slice of birthday cake (or easier, put lots of cupcakes on a cake stand with candles, then just hand out without having to cut).

Christmasdreaming · 01/11/2024 13:19

Jam sandwiches are very popular at parties, I made each kids a little lunch box and majority of the kids asked for jam (often with no butter!)

Willyoubereadybyteatime · 01/11/2024 13:19

Veteran party organiser here!

This is just what I do! It’s everyone elses’s choice whether they wish to follow suit or not!

Ask parents for allergy details and mobile phone numbers if dropping off.

Food boxes much easier

Depends on age of child but we put in ours variation on:

  • 1 bag mini Hoola Hoops
  • a mini baby bel
  • a yoghurt in a tube and/or a fruit pouch
  • one milk roll sandwich with Philadelphia cheese of ham or both
  • one wrapped biscuit
  • a tiny box of yoghurt covered raisins
  • mini paper cup or bowel filled with chopped up melon and strawberries (summer) or a combination of pineapple and mango (winter)
  • a bamboo spork
  • a party napkin

Wrap the rolls in a sandwich bag and put in fridge with the yoghurts and fruit cups

Get to kitchen early and assemble and lay out food boxes and supplies

Blue tack a list of contents of one box to kitchen counter then any competent helper/parent can fill boxes for you

Add sandwiches fruit and yoghurt at last minute from fridge and hand out to dc who I suggest you sit on a couple of plastic tablecloths or easily washable throws to contain any mess.

Do not put drinks in food box as they are too heavy : I buy bags of ice in bulk from supermarket and fill two brightly coloured plastic gardening tubs with ice. Then add fruit juice boxes in one, and bottles of water in the other. Children form a queue and help themselves.

You can offer a third ice filled tub of drinks to parents filled with water bottles, tins of flavoured Perrier or San Pelligrino

Or if I have time, I make up big jugs of ice tea (Delia Smith recipe) in summer to serve to parents in plastic cups

Or in winter I make a hot non-alcoholic fruit punch

Serve with bowls of crisps or two baked, cut up pizzas, cut in to small squares with scissors.

Do NOT whatever you do get in to a position where you are making and serving cups of tea and coffee to parents. It’s a complete faff and you won’t have time.

(I never serve alcohol to parents who are usually driving other children around to extra curricular classes )

Make sure you have one parent help on door of venue at all times to stop dc escaping.

And one parent helper to ferry dc back and forth to toilet and keep an eye on any that get lost on way.

You need another parent/helper/teen for help with music and games

And a spare parent helper to monitor one or two “difficult” dc if you have a lot of children.

I find it easier to prepare games in advance like pass the parcel and stick to a rough schedule (also pinned on wall) but some prepare free flowing approach!

But either way good to have some bubble blowing/colouring in activities for stressful dropping off and collecting periods of time when you are meeting and greeting parents and siblings to keep waiting dc entertained.

Buy some bulk packs of mixed sweets for prizes and for party bags if you are having the latter.

I buy bulk boxes of colourful socks, bamboo toothbrushes and rolls of stickers for party bags nowadays with a couple of boxes of sweets like mini smarties and haribo. Stick to a budget bc it all adds up. Tiny party bags are fine. But make sure you have some extras made up for siblings or children who were ill and couldn’t come.

Personally I never bother with balloons. They are a faff to blow up and tie up etc. Paper garlands make easier decorations.

A cardboard Photo Booth or corner with a dressing up box goes down well if you have someone to supervise.

Also take to venue:

  • rubbish bags
  • sellotqpe on a dispenser
  • Plasters and antiseptic spray
  • dettol and bucket (in case a child is sick)
  • j cloths, washing up sponges, washing up liq, loo rolls, kitchen paper
  • blue tack
  • music speaker compatible with phone
  • prepared games like pin the tail on the donkey or pass the parcel
  • optional but useful - name badges for children

Good luck!

Comedycook · 01/11/2024 13:21

ReadingInTheRain583 · 01/11/2024 13:08

OK, tesco basket...

Stuff for sandwiches - ham, cheese, white bread, flora spread (dairy free and we use it at home anyway!)

Crisps - giant wotsits, skips, pom bears

Cheese & tom pizzas

Sausage rolls (vegetarian - never spotted by a meat eater yet!)

Grapes & watermelon

Sweet treats - party rings, jammie dodgers, cadbury fingers (individually wrapped)

Frube yoghurts

Tea/coffee/soft drinks for parents + milk

Squash for kids - orange and summer fruits

Will that do?

Sounds perfect to me...I'd also do jam sandwiches though

Willyoubereadybyteatime · 01/11/2024 13:29

Personally I’d avoid serving grapes - choking hazard

But totally agree about individual cup cakes being far easier to serve than one big birthday cake. You can lay some out with candles in, to form the shape of the number six (or however old your child is) for everyone to sing happy birthday etc

NorthernGirlie · 01/11/2024 13:31

Not read the full thread but - do you have a slow cooker? I buy a load of hotdogs and buns. Slow cooker goes on at the start of the party. Means all I have to do is cut buns and squeeze on sauce

ReadingInTheRain583 · 01/11/2024 13:34

Jam sandwiches added to the list... with butter or without? I don't think I've ever made or eaten a jam sandwich!

Cake - DC wants a very specific one (there's only one cake in the world he eats 🙄) so that van go in party bags to go home unless he changes his mind sharpish!

Grapes were going to be served cut up and in individual little paper pots (so they can just take one)

@NorthernGirlie that's a genius idea! Unfortunately my own kid won't eat hotdogs

OP posts:
PullTheBricksDown · 01/11/2024 13:37

My standard for this would be ham, cheese and jam sandwiches. Not altogether.. Yes, butter on the jam ones.