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Mrs. Veggie, Raglan, New Zealand/Scranton, PA Age and Occupation: 27, Director of Small Non-Profit Fiance's Age and Occupation: 42, PhD Student & Farmer Engagement Date: June 13, 2009 Wedding Date: August 2010 Venue: Indian Head Camp, Honesdale Pennsylvania About Me: I am a tree-huggin' farmer turned enthusiastic wedding-planner. I live in a house truck and wear flip-flops more often than shoes. In my old life I was a high school Spanish teacher in love with a crazy guy who lived off-the grid on a farm in New Hampshire. But, we decided to mix things up a bit, quit our jobs and move to New Zealand. My southern hemisphere lifestyle involves growing veggies, teaching, running our small non-profit, and surfing. I love laughing, singing, playing, and the inspirational Mr. Veggie (of course!). For our wedding, I am committed to throwing a killer party that celebrates our values without breaking the bank. Look forward to an eco-thrifty summer-campy weekend-long extravaganza.
About Mrs. Veggie

Part Two of Designing Our Menu

April 28th, 2010 @ 3:08 pm by Mrs. Veggie

Sorry for the non-creative title. I’ve been invaded by some kind of flu bug and it has debilitated my brain a bit.

A few days ago I started talking about our desire to build a local/organic menu. Here are the meals that will round out our weekend.

Cocktail Hour Saturday:

Part Two of Designing Our Menu :  wedding food scranton 1 1

Sources: Veggies and Dip, Cheese, Fresh Mozzarella and Tomato, Pita and Hummus, Fresh Fruit, Bruschetta

Of all the meals, the cocktail hour menu was the one that departed furthest from Indian Head’s initial suggestions. We moved from a microwaved/fried meaty hot menu towards a fresh cool light menu. Given the taco lunch and potential heat of August we thought this was a good call. We want people up and dancing, not down and digesting. It also helped bring down the cost of the menu and make it more local.

Sat Dinner

Part Two of Designing Our Menu :  wedding food scranton 2 2

Sources: Baked Ziti with Spinach, Carved Meat, Yuengling, Roasted Summer Veg, Rice and Beans, Dinner Rolls, Mixed Greens, Roasted Winter Veg Not pictured: Green Beans Almondine (darn you flu-brain).

For Saturday’s dinner we wanted to provide one main meat dish and lots of vegetarian sides to choose from. We’re not sure whether to do beef or pork yet (have a preference? please let us know!), but in either case the meat will be free-range-grass-fed-organic and come to us from a local butcher. We haven’t made all of the alcohol decisions for the weekend, but definitely know that we will have Yuengling available with dinner (PA pride!).

Sunday Buffet:

Part Two of Designing Our Menu :  wedding food scranton 3 3

Sources: Scrambled Eggs, Beautiful Vermont Maple Syrup, Pancakes with berries, Home fries

We’ll finish off the weekend with Sunday brunch. By then, hopefully, everyone will be exhausted and stuffed.

Looking at our menu, and how full it is, its hard to imagine that we had to leave some things out. But just like how we had to make tough choices when coming up with our financial budget, we also had to make tough choices in our food-miles budget. Some of the big ticket items on our food mile list were: exotic fruits like bananas, mangos, and kiwi fruit; imported gourmet cheeses; coffee; tea; hot chocolate; asparagus; imported wine; rice; chickpeas for hummus; dried beans; and spices.

When possible, we switched these items for their local/ in-season counterparts. Melons and berries got swapped in for bananas and mangos, asparagus got traded in for green beans, gourmet cheeses were nixed for local varieties (like Cabot yummm…). We will try to stash a few bottles of NZ wine in our luggage, but other wines will come from Europe (which actually have a smaller eco-footprint than Californian wines for us East-Coasters).

There are some things that are important to us and will need to come from far away, no matter what. For these items, like coffee, hot chocolate, rice, beans, and spices, we will be sure to choose fair trade producers from as local as possible.

At some point I will do a calculation on the total food miles for our weekend wedding and convert that into carbon emissions produced, but since we don’t know the exact suppliers for most things, its a bit early for all that yet. Plus, honestly, I don’t think my flu brain would allow for it at the moment. But as far as I can tell about 90% of the food served will come from within the northeastern U.S. (Woo hoo!!).

Given the price of organic food (due to too many fair and unfair reasons to list here), it might seem like an organic local menu isn’t feasible on a shoestring budget. But, we are paying the same price per head with our new menu, as we would have with Indian Head’s original proposed menu. There are a few ways we made this possible:

  1. Our menu is in-season. Almost all of our fresh fruit and veggies will come from local farms and markets. We have planned on cooking things that are generally in surplus in August in our region, which means lower prices.
  2. Flexibility. Our cook is flexible. If a certain fresh item isn’t available in abundance in August, he is willing to switch to another local item, rather than importing the original item. This keeps costs low.
  3. Hot breakfasts and hot hors d’oeuvres were substituted with cold items.
  4. We planned our meals with creative ways to use leftovers in mind. Chili and salad bar from Friday will become taco bar on Saturday.
  5. We are forming a close relationship with our caterer and are offering to support him in researching local providers for specific items.

OK, I’ve talked far too much about this for the moment (can you tell we love our jobs!). I would love to hear any suggestions for our menu, especially about the beef or pork toss-up.

Tags: food, scranton |
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28 Responses to “Part Two of Designing Our Menu”

1 2 

1.
Ms. Library
Member
Ms. Library (message)  1,250 posts, Bumble bee

The fruit and bruschetta look amazing! Yum!

 
2.
Mrs. Pug
Bee
Mrs. Pug (message)  3,753 posts, Honey bee

that is awesome that you found a venue so willing to work with you. and the food looks like it’s going to be delish. you’ve got quite a feast lined up for everyone!

 
3.
Member Icon
Member
denverbirdlet (message)  750 posts, Busy bee

we decided to go with pork rather than beef for our plated dinner because people can be particular about how their beef is cooked (especially as steak) and in a large reception, they won’t be able to specify medium rare or medium etc … so we went with roasted pork tenderloin because there is no ambiguity on the cooking.

 
4.
gcwest
Member
gcwest (message)  599 posts, Busy bee

I think all of this looks so good! I would love to be a guest at your wedding!

 
5.
Guest Icon
Guest
LurkMcGurk

I reccomend beef over pork. Beef suits a wider variety of tastes. It’s a wider crowd pleaser IMO.

 
6.
Guest Icon
Guest
LurkMcGurk

I reccomend beef over pork. Beef suits a wider variety of tastes. It’s a better crowd pleaser IMO.

 
7.
Guest Icon
Guest
Dani_PA

If you’re looking for a PA beer in addition to Yuengling - check out Troeg’s, from Harrisburg.

 
8.
Bee Icon
Bee
Mrs. Spaniel (message)  6,792 posts, Bee Keeper

I always pick beef over pork, for the same reasons as @LurkMcGurk–more people seem to prefer beef to pork. It’s probably not helpful since I’m not a guest at your wedding, but I actually don’t eat pork. ;) So I vote for beef!

 
9.
Jessie516
Hostess
Jessie516 (message)  5,480 posts, Bee Keeper

Wow, I think it’s awesome that you found a menu that sounds (and looks) delicious and is local and organic!

 
10.
Rgeddy
Member
Rgeddy (message)  2,186 posts, Buzzing bee

We’re going with pork rather than beef - so far everyone has loved it and chosen it equally as much as our salmon choice!

I’m so glad you’re putting the local movement out there - not to mention organic.

 
11.
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Member
Coffeecake (message)  345 posts, Helper bee

I would go with pork — it seems more fitting for a summer wedding, and is a little more unexpected.

 
12.
you dont make friends w salad
Member
you dont make friends w salad (message)  41 posts, Newbee

I would lean towards beef, because grass-fed beef is lovely.

 
13.
Erisque
Member
Erisque (message)  246 posts, Helper bee

That is a very yummy sounding menu!

We went with beef for our menu, since more people seem to prefer that and we had a large number of Jewish guests.

 
14.
Guest Icon
Guest
KatieZ

I’m SO EXCITED that you’re doing local, organic foods for your wedding! I think it’s so important to weave personal beliefs and values into one’s wedding -and food is a great way to do that! Living in California, I’m guessing it’s somewhat easier for us to do than for you guys on the East coast so I applaud you for going for it!

I remember going to my cousin’s wedding in New Zealand (boy was THAT a flight..) and it was GORGEOUS there. I joke that if I ever get fed up with my life in Cali I’m going to pack my bags, roam New Zealand and befriend some lambs! (:

 
15.
ktbrady
Member
ktbrady (message)  1,054 posts, Bumble bee

You have done a lot of work on this, I can tell! Way to go! I love that you are keeping your wedding so true to the values you both hold in your hearts. It’s very inspirational!

 
16.
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Member
heathermarie18 (message)  71 posts, Worker bee

Yuengling!!! My fiance is from Pennsylvania so that makes me super excited :) Your menu sounds wonderful!

 
17.
jordynrose
Member
jordynrose (message)  6,351 posts, Bee Keeper

I recommend beef over pork as well. I love pork, but a lot of people don’t really eat it.

 
18.
tea
Member
tea (message)  7,288 posts, Bee Keeper

your menu sounds delicious! i would go with beef to be safe. there are some people who’ll eat beef but not pork.

 
19.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Octopus (message)  1,446 posts, Bumble bee

Wow, sounds deeeeelish! We’re having Yuengling at our PA wedding too! Also, as far as the meat goes, I wonder if you have a lot of Jewish guests? If you do, and they keep kosher, then they’ll be left out of the meat deliciousness.

 
20.
rabbit
Member
rabbit (message)  1,542 posts, Bumble bee

First- for your pork-beef debate, I suggest going with kosher beef. If you have any Jewish friends, they could eat that, whereas they couldn’t eat pork. Plus, back when I ate meat, I liked beef. :)

Second- yay for local, organic! I was very afraid that our dream for a local, organic, earth-friendly menu would be too expensive, but we eventually found a caterer who is not only affordable, but under bid ALL the non-organic, non-local caterers in our area! OMG! So yay for us who win with awesome caterers!

 
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Mrs. Veggie
Mrs. Veggie

Mrs. Veggie, Raglan, New Zealand/Scranton, PA Age and Occupation: 27, Director of Small Non-Profit Fiance's Age and Occupation: 42, PhD Student & Farmer Engagement Date: June 13, 2009 Wedding Date: August 2010 Venue: Indian Head Camp, Honesdale Pennsylvania About Me: I am a tree-huggin' farmer turned enthusiastic wedding-planner. I live in a house truck and wear flip-flops more often than shoes. In my old life I was a high school Spanish teacher in love with a crazy guy who lived off-the grid on a farm in New Hampshire. But, we decided to mix things up a bit, quit our jobs and move to New Zealand. My southern hemisphere lifestyle involves growing veggies, teaching, running our small non-profit, and surfing. I love laughing, singing, playing, and the inspirational Mr. Veggie (of course!). For our wedding, I am committed to throwing a killer party that celebrates our values without breaking the bank. Look forward to an eco-thrifty summer-campy weekend-long extravaganza.

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