Anatomy of a Dinner Party: a day in the life of a hospitalityaholic
 

An Impromptu Dinner Party

Written by Patti on August 22nd, 2009

Happy hour sometimes morphs into dinner time. This is a rare occurrence in our home because we are usually scheduled to the gills. But it happened last night and it is always a pleasant treat.

Spent a little time with Val this afternoon teaching the basics of pasta making. I had mentioned this to our pals Denise and Rick earlier in the day and in the midst of waiting for the pasta to rest, Denise called and I invited them over. As Val and I were finishing with our class, Denise and Rick arrived with a bottle of Pinot Noir and happy hour began in earnest.

After a few bottles of wine between the four of us, Eric finally gets off work and joins the party in the kitchen, where I am preparing a drinky snack – peanut butter & bacon sandwiches (with the crusts cut off, of course). And as yummy as this was, we needed something of substance. Eric came to the rescue, whipping up a yummy, yet simple dinner of grilled rib eyes (look at those grill marks!) and some of the leftover pappardelle from Wednesday night’s soiree. I pull out my favorite heavy white TAG plates and 4 cool wooden placemats, set with our hammered flatware and burnished gold napkins. The makeshift dessert is four spoonfuls of lemon curd each topped with a plump raspberry, eaten standing in the middle of the kitchen. Everyone walks home a bit later, warm headed, with a tummy full of deliciousness and memories of a fun, last minute, dinner party.

Later that night, as the rain is pounding our roof, Eric and I sit outside on the porch to enjoy Mother Nature’s spectacle and muse about our evening.

Every night is an opportunity to create a special dining experience for you and your loved ones. Even if it is dinner for one, take out your most special pieces and drink out of your best glasses. You are your own best friend. Pamper yourself.

xoxo, Patti

 

The Clean Up Controversy

Written by Patti on August 21st, 2009

Most people dislike the cleanup after a soiree. For me, its a magical time for Eric and I to relive funny and interesting moments from the evening. Giggly, a little tipsy and elbow deep in sudsy water makes for a romantic after party for two.

I’m not telling you that you have to be responsible for clean up after a huge gala of 100+ guests. There are services that handle that. But for a small dinner party (6 to 24 folks), this time can be your time to decompress while getting your kitchen and dining room back to its sparkling clean state.

Start with your toughest dish/platter/roasting pan. If you served a dish like lasagna in a ceramic/glass dish, I know that baked on cheese and sauce can be a bear to get off. TIP TIME: Put a dryer sheet in with the soapy water in your pan and it will be spotless in no time. You can take the wet dryer sheet and just wipe up the remaining gooey-ness.

Load the dishwasher with your pots and pans first and then stack the dishes in the sink. This way you can leave it until tomorrow if you are just too sleepy to deal with it right now. Place them in soapy water and you will be much happier in the morning. Line all of your wine glasses up and pop a little drop of dish liquid in each one so you won’t have any red wine stains on your nice stemware. Filling them with a bit of hot water will make you feel happy the day after, too. It’s all about making it easy on yourself. Not that giving a dinner party is easy – it’s entertainment and have you ever seen all that goes into a Broadway production? Great entertaining is not easy, if you really set out for the summit every time. And you should. Welcoming people into your home and feeding them is one of the most personal things you can do for those you love (or want to impress), so why do it half way?

xoxo, Patti

 

Maiden Post – Make it look effortless

Written by Patti on August 20th, 2009

Welcome to my blog – Anatomy of A Dinner Party. I will be documenting each party I give here, the good, the bad and the ugly.

Last night was a dinner for 12. I had promised everything would be made from scratch.

The menu:

Stuffed Mushrooms
Pappardelle Bolognese
Garlic Bread
Salad with walnuts and goat cheese
Mini lemon tarts topped with a raspberry

I take my party giving seriously, so from the moment I invite our guests, I am planning. First, the list making. Of course, one needs a shopping list for ingredients, but I can’t stop there. There are lists for serving vessels, as well as a to-do list for each step of the party.

As soon as I hit “send” on the invites, the panic sets in. Nevermind the fact that I have been doing this for well over 20 years and have owned a catering company. I get terrible performance anxiety until the party starts.

The party was set for Wednesday night, so Monday started my prep. Off to Ikea for wine glasses that match and those fab $.49 dish towels that I am so fond of using for napkins when serving pasta. They cover laps beautifully and if they get stained, who cares? I also pick up a cute candle lantern and more votive holders (you can never have enough). Next stop, Trader Joe’s for their wonderful cheap Two Buck Chuck (decanted, all wine tastes special). Yes, I will take a case, thank you. On to Kroger where I buy all the meat for the bolognese and all the produce, as well as the sparkling water (sparkling water bottles on the table just add to the abundance already set out for your guests). By this time, it’s 5 p.m., so I am headed home.

It’s Tuesday, and I did none of the food prep I had hoped to do on Monday. This will be a big day. After getting my darling Eric ready for his day, I attack the kitchen (what I like to think of as “my office”) in earnest. Prepping the Italian sausage, beef, onions, garlic, grated carrots, mushrooms, fresh herbs from Crystal’s garden (thanks Crystal!) for the sauce takes well over an hour, but it is now simmering on the stove and the house smells amazing. For my bread dough, I use the 5 minute artisanal bread.
If you love fresh baked bread, this book will change your life, as well as your waistline. But that’s a story for another day.

Bread dough made and rising. On to the fresh pasta. I am accustomed to making a small batch of pasta for lasagna, but have never attempted to make a batch that will feed 12 guests, that also needs to be hand cut. I thought using my Kitchen Aid would do the trick, not that I have ever heard of anyone using this method with great results. The first batch worked well, with a silky ball of pasta now wrapped in Saran Wrap, resting on the counter. The second batch feels like old Play Doh, not a good sign, but I wrap it and hope for the best. At this point I have been cooking for 6 hours and I’m getting a little cranky. I unwrap my pasta and set to cutting it into portions that will fit through my hand cranked pasta maker ( I only used the Kitchen Aid to mix the pasta). For some inane reason, I decide to use the difficult dough first (really? what was I thinking?) and it is not being kind. The dough is ripping and falling apart. I move on to the dough I made first and while it rolled out much easier, I am over it. I roll out and cut until I cannot look at one more piece of pappardelle before chucking a majority of it out and calling Via Elisa, the place in Atlanta for fabulously fresh pasta. Although it is after hours, someone miraculously answers the phone and takes my order for 4 pounds of pappardelle. Whew, the day is over and my sweet husband takes me to La Fonda for dinner.

Wednesday – party day! I still have to make the stuffed mushrooms, rise and bake the bread and make the mini lemon tarts. The table needs to be dressed and I have got to make it all look effortless before my guests arrive. I remove the stems from the caps of the mushrooms, marinate the caps in olive oil and make the stuffing which consists of the chopped stems, a beaten egg, bread crumbs and mozzarella. I then move the mixture to a Ziploc container, which as soon as I turn around suddenly, falls on the floor. My heart stops, and I find myself swearing like a sailor. Funny enough, the container falls right side up, keeping some of its contents intact. I clean up what falls on the floor (no five second rule for slate kitchen floors in homes with two furry dogs) and save the rest. I will stuff and bake these right before the guests arrive. Even with my spacious fridge, I am running out of room. The lemon tarts await assembly. I use my trusty lemon bar recipe, but form the tarts individually in cupcake tins. This one dish comes off without a hitch and I even have some leftover curd for my lemon curd loving husband.

Three hours and counting until my guests walk through the door. Bread is shaped and set out to rise for 40 minutes before baking and the mushrooms are stuffed (the leftover stuffing is just enough for the amount of caps I have!) Time to breeze through the house with a dust rag, bathroom cleaner and vacuum (this is not the time for deep cleaning, candles hide a multitude of sins). Jump in the shower and get dressed. The bread and the mushrooms get baked, and the sauces and pasta water are set into their pots to heat. The salad is assembled. The candles are lit. I have time for a glass of chardonnay before my friends get here. I receive a phone call from Nedra, a new friend who is the Shopping & Fashion Reporter for the Atlanta Journal Constitution, saying she is delayed by a parade at the Georgia Dome. Better to be stopped by a parade than traffic – this way you have something to entertain you while you wait.

Our canine children get relegated to the bedroom so as not to maul the guests upon arrival (it’s a friendly maul, but a maul just the same). Guests start arriving, the mushrooms are plated and devoured, Eric is manning the cooking pasta and sauce and everyone seems to be having a good time. Our guest list for this party includes some really fantastic folks. Crystal, one of our dearest friends, arrives first and jumps in to help. Next, Diane, our friend who is an editor for CNN, gets here. Then Jeff, our favorite next door neighbor. Then Jeff’s brother Tim and his wife Becky. Tim and Becky are working with the youth of our ‘hood and doing great things. Val, who is a delight and lives behind us, gets there around the same time as Chioke and Taruan, who live next door to Crystal and Teague and are too fabulous for words. Next to arrive is Miss Patricia Tinsley, a true southern belle. Nedra finally wrangles herself out of the parade route to join us as we polish off the mushrooms and sit down to dinner.

This is when I finally relax. This is the payoff. Filling our home with people we love and hearing their laughter over great food (if I do say so myself) is what I am all about.

My next posts will include pictures! I would love to hear about your entertaining quests, so leave me a comment!

xoxo, Patti