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Big Girls, Small Kitchen

Big Girls, Small Kitchen

Posted: December 23, 2010 05:47 AM


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Picture us at age twelve or thirteen.

Growing up in New York City, every weekend played host to at least one bar or bat mitzvah. And where would you have found the young quarter-life cooks at these weekly events? Not on the dance floor, getting down. Not by the photographer, grabbing attention from the bar mitzvah boy. No, we were hovering by the door to the kitchen, waiting to accost the poor cater waiter each time he emerged with a new tray of crab cakes, or chicken skewers, or bite-sized pizza.

Jump to today. We still find that finger food trumps main courses at most parties we go to. But it also translates extremely well to the parties we host at home. Portions are small and price tags are correspondingly affordable. Prep work can usually be done completely ahead of time. Since no one's stuck eating a three-course meal, mingling can occur. If someone doesn't like something you serve, they don't have to push it around their plate, pretending to eat it.

Above and beyond all the practical reasons for hosting finger food parties--and we could go on and on--the fact is, they're fun. They work well in small urban spaces, and they're good for young people with busy lives, whether they're the hosts or the guests.

During holiday season especially, when party invitations are in abundance, we like to get by on the minimum--though a classy minimum it is! By reducing our holiday party menus from ambitious dinner courses to small bites and little sweets, we get to focus our time and space on the most perfect dishes in our repertoire.

Read on for some of our tips for hosting a successful holiday finger food or cocktail party.

--Cara and Phoebe of Big Girls, Small Kitchen

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Tips & Tricks


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Think Ahead. Especially if you're hosting, you don't want to do any cooking or prepping once the party starts. A lot of food is good room temperature, so focus on that. Plus, take into consideration whether food will get soggy. Tea sandwiches, crackers and cheese, and wonton crisps are all durable finger food. If you must have one dish that requires last-minute attention, you can keep it on the menu. Just don't have two.

Recipe: Shrimp & Mango Wonton Crisps


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Neatness Counts. Avoid all dishes that have sticky sauces, and minimize the number of dishes that have sauces at all. Don't overstuff sandwiches--the filling will fall out--and don't use caramel for any reason. Skewers and toothpicks can help you contain any items that might cause a mess. And bread is your friend--it acts as a neat vessel and a sponge.

Recipe: Lime-Marinated Chicken Skewers with Carrot-Miso Dipping Sauce


* * *


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Simplify the Booze (or Delegate It). If you're supplying the booze, set some kind of limit for yourself. Maybe you'll just serve beer and wine. Perhaps you'll develop a signature cocktail and serve that all evening. Perhaps you'll have two choices of hard alcohol and a few mixers and that's it. Unless you're a total boozehound, don't try to set out a full bar--it's expensive and impractical. Best yet, ask certain friends or all guests to bring the wine of their choice. You'll have a vast assortment without having spent any money, mental energy, or time.

Recipe: Jonestown Punch


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Plate Prettily. Most of the time, plan to do all your plating before your guests arrive. You'll want nice-looking platters--if you're investing in your first set, make them white--and make sure they hold at least 15-20 bites. Much smaller and you'll have to replenish all the time. It's possible to find pretty disposable platters as well--we like Verreterra in particular. Limit each plate to one item, unless you've made two kinds of one thing--like crostini with various toppings--in which case you can arrange the different kinds in patterns.

Recipe: Black Bean Cakes


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Size Matters. If you want your guests to leave full, you'll have to figure that each guest will eat five to seven things. That will give you an accounting of how much food to make. If your party is going to occur earlier in the evening, you can figure that guests will be eating dinner elsewhere and serve only three to four bites per person.

Recipe: Sprinkle Cake Bites


* * *


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Dip. Bite. Crostini. When in doubt, revert to this formula. For every three hors d'oeuvres you're serving, make one of them a dip, one of them a bite, and one of them a crostini. That will give you good variety and amount as well as reduce your stress and indecision.

Recipe: White Bean, Carmelized Onion, and Rosemary Puree


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Taste the Rainbow. Of course you want your food to look pretty individually, but you also want the whole menu to span a variety of colors and appearances. Too much bread will mean a rather white menu. Garnishing with green herbs goes a long way.

Recipe: Butternut Squash Latkes with Greek Yogurt and Cilantro


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Serve Dessert. If your party extends long enough, or it's meant to celebrate a birthday or other important event, it's fun to add dessert to your finger food menu. Choose bite-size delicacies: cookies, mini brownies, or tiny scones. Plate them in overflowing piles on small plates and set them around the room.

Recipe: Peanut Butter & Jelly Thumbprint Cookies

 
 
 

Follow Big Girls, Small Kitchen on Twitter: www.twitter.com/BGSK

Picture us at age twelve or thirteen. Growing up in New York City, every weekend played host to at least one bar or bat mitzvah. And where would you have found the young quarter-life cooks at thes...
Picture us at age twelve or thirteen. Growing up in New York City, every weekend played host to at least one bar or bat mitzvah. And where would you have found the young quarter-life cooks at thes...
 
 
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06:53 PM on 12/25/2010
Great party tips! Love the cake bites and crostini.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lozange
Aiming around wondrously
10:40 PM on 12/24/2010
I've been using a caterer in recent years but always had this hors d'oeuvre to fall back on: water chestnuts that you put into pitted dates then roll in half a slice of bacon, held together by toothpicks that you put in the over at 350 until you get this great smell and the bacon is well cooked.
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naschkatze
A free man creates himself.
10:28 PM on 12/24/2010
I never serve dips because there are double dippers out there.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ianmcc
Those who you let anger you conquer you
11:28 PM on 12/26/2010
Haven't you ever seen a 'dip-dish'? The dip bowl top is screwed on and there are 4 small holes in the top that four extra-long & thin dip spoons can go in to get out dip. It'a a very hygenic alternative.
03:29 PM on 12/24/2010
Is it just me, or does anyone else here find it more than a little tasteless to name a punch, to be served at a holiday party, after Jonestown, the site of a mass murder/suicide?
05:01 PM on 12/24/2010
Yeah, just a bit...but to be fair they are probably too young to know about it.
traceymarie
Independent to Dem in 2007
06:46 PM on 12/24/2010
It is a bar/restaurant in Chicago.
02:19 PM on 12/24/2010
Don't use disposable servers if you can help it.
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electricladyland
Don't censor me bro.
01:01 PM on 12/24/2010
In a clutch there's always toaster pizza.
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GraniteSkyline
I wish you happiness!
01:38 AM on 12/25/2010
That's always my problem--recipes devised of cr@p in my cupboard that I can throw together after someone to whom I said, "drop by any time, " actually does.

Usually these people get my standard emergency recipe--grated cheddar cheese mixed with just enough mayo to hold it together and finely chopped onion and then spooned onto cocktail bread, sliced baguette, cracker or de-crusted toast and melted in the oven

Its amazing how tasty the simple combination of cheddar, mayo, and onion is!
10:41 AM on 12/24/2010
These are great recipes. The black bean cakes are something completely new. I think I'll try that this year since I'm hosting a lot of people.
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chaapai
just an earthbound misfit, I
12:57 AM on 12/24/2010
One of the weird appetizers my mom used to do and now I do as well was take a log of cream cheese, pour over cocktail sauce and then top with those little tins of mini shrimp. For some reason that was always a favorite of mine when I was a kid.

Now, I whip the cheese with fresh herbs shape it into a nicer presentation. I make my own cocktail sauce and I grill or sauté fresh shrimp to top it with.

it's not widely gourmet. its not all that extravagant. But for some reason I still love it. I have a bunch of copper jello molds that I use to shape it. then serve with crackers.
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Kellybelle22
Happy medical wife, mom
10:44 AM on 12/24/2010
One of my mom's "quickie" appetizers was to put a brick of softened cream cheese on a small pretty plate. Then she poured Pickapeppa sauce on it. Then she surrounded it on a bigger plate with a circular array of Ritz crackers and a spread knife. Sounds awful, but it tasted good and everyone ate it up.
12:44 PM on 12/24/2010
The Southwest version is a brick of softened cream cheese topped with jalapeno jelly or a carmelized onion spread, served with good crackers. YUM.
These other versions sound terrific too. I will have to try them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chaapai
just an earthbound misfit, I
10:08 PM on 12/24/2010
Sounds really good. I have been curious about jalapeno jelly and brie. Cut the brie in half, spread the jelly on half, cover with the other half, wrap in puff pastry and bake.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ianmcc
Those who you let anger you conquer you
11:48 PM on 12/23/2010
Great little recipe I know for a finger food is to take some unprocessed solid parmesan cheese, use a grater to make 3-inch rounds on wax paper on a cookie sheet, bake at around 325 degrees just a few minutes until it begins to melt. Then use a spatchula and shape each cheese disk into a mini muffin tin until it cools. You will then have a cheese 'cup' that you can put a mini salad into with some baby arugula, diced tomatoes, spicy edible nasturtiums & a mild vinagrette. You can then serve a salad as a hors d'oeuvre!
12:12 AM on 12/24/2010
That really does sound good! Actually, I've been reading so much about s'mores that I'm thinking
that might have something going on there. Except I like cinnamon graham crackers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kellybelle22
Happy medical wife, mom
10:47 AM on 12/24/2010
This is a great way to get a salad in as an hors d'oeuvre, and the green and red colors and that lacy golden parmesan tuile must look beautiful together. Thanks for sharing this idea. I plan to use it at my holiday cocktail party next year!
05:13 PM on 12/23/2010
Saltine cracker. A little cream cheese. Put a green olive on top.
cardiaccare
original flower child
07:28 PM on 12/23/2010
Don't go overboard!
12:11 AM on 12/24/2010
I don't have a boat. I barely have a car.
04:33 PM on 12/23/2010
Those latkes look really good.
08:15 AM on 12/23/2010
Very clever. Great ideas and lovely photos.