FAQs
Frequently Asked Questions About Catering
Planning an event comes with a lot of decisions. Whether you’re hosting a wedding, corporate meeting, TAMU department event, Parents Weekend brunch, or a private celebration, we want to make the catering part simple, clear, and stress-free.
Below you’ll find answers to the questions people ask Google, Chat/AI, and ask us directly every day.
- People Should Be Asking
- How Catering Works
- Pricing, Costs & Budget
- Service Style
- Menu & Dietary
- Venue & Location
- Wedding Catering
- Corporate & University Catering
- Parents Weekend & Graduation
- Day-Of-Event
- Policy
Yes — these are extremely popular for:
- Corporate meetings
- Parents Weekend
- Graduation
- Showers
- Early receptions
Yes — from simple family gatherings to full outdoor celebrations.
All the time — weddings, banquets, galas, expos, and corporate events.
Yes — amount varies by event type and menu selection.
All details are included in your proposal.
It depends on the service level — your proposal will spell it out clearly.
For full-service events, yes.
Delivery-only events do not include cleanup unless requested.
Arrival depends on setup needs. Generally:
- Corporate: 15–30 minutes early
- Weddings: 1–2 hours early
- Campus events: Based on access restrictions
At least 4–8 weeks — it books fast.
Yes — brunches, lunches, and family-style meals are especially popular
Yes — including multiple meal breaks, snack spreads, and full-day service.
Yes — many campus meetings start early, and we deliver accordingly.
Most companies spend $12–$20+ per person, depending on menu and service style.
Absolutely — buffets, brunches, plated dinners, or hors d’oeuvres.
Yes — where outside catering is allowed.
Yes — depending on the event size and menu.
Most wedding catering falls between $20–$35+ per person, depending on the menu and service style.
Yes. Vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free, dairy-free, and allergy-friendly options are all available.
Just let us know — we’ll help you build a menu everyone can enjoy.
Yes — themed menus are often the most fun to design. If you have a vision, we can build around it.
Yes. Vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free, dairy-free, and allergy-friendly options are all available.
Just let us know — we’ll help you build a menu everyone can enjoy.
Absolutely. Many weddings do hors d’oeuvres + buffet. Many corporate events do a buffet & dessert stations. Blends work great.
It depends on the experience you want.
Here’s a simple way to think about it:
Choose a buffet if you want:
- speed
- flexibility
- large crowd flow
- variety
Choose plated if you want:
- elegance
- structure
- a formal atmosphere
- portion control
Choose stations if you want:
- interaction
- a visually impressive setup
- multiple styles of food
- a more social flow
If you’re unsure, tell us your event style — we’ll guide you.
There shouldn’t be.
If a caterer is transparent, they will spell everything out. Ask about:
- staffing
- delivery
- venue fees
- equipment
- gratuity
- special setup requirements
Our proposals clearly list everything so nothing surprises you.
A good caterer can help you trim costs without sacrificing quality. Common ways to save include:
Ways to save on catering:
- Choose buffet over plated
- Pick fewer entrée varieties
- Avoid labor-heavy or specialty dishes
- Stick with seasonal ingredients
- Opt for delivery-only when appropriate
- Keep your menu simple and crowd-friendly
Budget-friendly doesn’t mean low quality — it just means smart choices.
Catering isn’t just food — it’s labor, equipment, transportation, timing, and logistics.
A price difference often reflects:
- menu type
- ingredient cost
- staffing needs
- timeline
- equipment
- service style
- dietary requests
- venue logistics
Cheaper sometimes means “less included.” Ask to make sure.
Catering varies — not just by menu, but by service style, staffing, and event type. Most events fall into ranges:
Typical catering price ranges:
- Buffets: $14–$20+ per person
- Plated meals: $22–$35+ per person
- Hors d’oeuvres: $12–$18+ per person
- Stations: $18–$30+ per person
- Breakfast/Brunch: $10–$18+ per person
These numbers help with planning, but your actual quote will depend on your choices.
For full-service events: yes.
For delivery-only events: typically no.
We’ll spell this out clearly in your proposal.
This is where experience matters.
We size portions based on your event type, guest count, service style, and timeline. Buffets require more variety; plated meals require precision.
A good caterer will walk you through exactly how much you need — you shouldn’t be guessing.
No — a venue helps, but it’s not required.
Many clients get quotes before locking down a location. We can refine details once your venue is confirmed.
Think of catering as a guided process — you share the vision, and the caterer builds the structure. Here’s what the journey looks like:
The catering process usually goes like this:
- You share your event details.
- We send a custom proposal based on your event type, menu style, and venue.
- You finalize the menu and service plan.
- We coordinate logistics with your venue (or home/office/campus location).
- We arrive early, set up, handle service, and manage the food flow.
- We handle cleanup for full-service events.
The goal is simple: make you feel supported the entire way.
It depends on the event and the season. The busier the season, the sooner you should book. In Bryan–College Station, TAMU’s academic calendar affects demand.
A general rule of thumb:
Recommended booking timelines:
- Weddings: 6–12 months
- Parents Weekend: 4–8 weeks
- Graduation: 4–8 weeks
- Corporate events: 2–6 weeks
- University events: 2–4 weeks
- Social gatherings: 2–6 weeks
If you’re unsure, earlier is always better.
A strong proposal should explain the event clearly without you having to guess. It should include:
- Menus + portion details
- Per-person pricing
- Staffing plan
- Equipment included
- Setup + service timeline
- Dietary accommodations
- Payment schedule
- Venue or TAMU-building considerations
If something seems vague, ask — it should never feel mysterious.
Comparing quotes can be confusing because not all caterers include the same things. One quote might look cheaper but secretly require extra fees for staff, equipment, delivery, or cleanup.
To compare accurately, put both quotes side-by-side and ask:
When comparing quotes, make sure both include:
- Staffing
- Setup + cleanup
- Serving equipment
- Delivery fees
- Venue-specific fees
- Gratuity
- Realistic portion sizes
- Any dietary or menu upgrades
A higher price that includes everything can actually cost less than a “cheap” quote that adds fees later.
Reliability shows up before the event — not during it. Look for fast communication, clear proposals, straightforward pricing, a history of serving your type of event, and consistent reviews.
Reliable caterers:
- respond quickly
- send clear proposals
- explain logistics in plain language
- ask smart questions
- guide you instead of upselling you
- show experience with your style of event (wedding, corporate, TAMU, etc.)
If the planning phase feels disorganized, the event will be too.
A good caterer should feel like a partner, not just a vendor. Ask about availability, menu flexibility, staffing, pricing structure, logistics, dietary needs, and what’s actually included in your quote.
Here’s a simple checklist you can use:
Before booking a caterer, ask:
- What exactly is included in your price?
- What costs extra?
- Do you provide staff, setup, and cleanup?
- What size events do you handle regularly?
- How flexible are the menus?
- Can you work with my venue’s restrictions?
- What is your cancellation policy?
- How early do you arrive on event day?
- Do you handle dietary restrictions?
- How do payments and deposits work?
If a caterer answers these confidently and transparently, you’re in good hands.
Still have questions? We’re happy to help.
Tell us about your event and we’ll build a custom proposal tailored to your needs.

