Keeping Food Hot & Delicious

Keeping Food Hot & Delicious - White and Pink Flower Petals

I'm having a large amount of guests over tomorrow and I wanted to know how can keep large portions of food hot and ready to serve without it getting cold or damp, while also keeping my deserts cool and refreshing. I'm serving Pasta, Sandwiches, Chicken, Fries & Cold Deserts.

I'm looking for a tech savvy and cheap way to keep my food hot and cold accordingly and any advice would be helpful.



Best Answer

Standard answer is hotel pans and chaffing dishes with alcohol burners for the hot items.

Double hotel pans with ice between them for the cold items.

Coolers work well for storing items before serve. Things that are fried though would do much better in an oven set to the lowest temp, coolers will trap moisture and they will lose their crispness.

chafing dish Chafing dish

Hotel Pan Hotel pans




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How do you keep food warm for hours?

Slow Cooker or Chafing Dishes For hot vegetables, sauces, stews, and soups, a slow cooker or chafing dish may be used on the low setting to keep the food warm. Similar to an oven, if you plan to store foods for longer than an hour, you may notice a change in texture or taste.

How do you keep food hot to serve?

Chafing dishes, preheated warming trays, multicookers, slow cookers or toaster ovens may also be used to keep food warm.

How do you keep food warm without getting soggy?

MORE QUICK TIPS & TRICKS TO KEEP WARM FOOD WARM Just be sure to toss in a warm pack. Double wrap your food in plastic, then foil to keep everything from getting too soggy. Steel Bento Boxes \u2013 If you need to keep foods separate, you'll love this option. You can use the same trick that you did with the thermos.

How can you keep hot foods hot during a party?

Here are some of the ways on how to keep food warm for a party.
  • Use Towels and Aluminum Foil.
  • Store Food in Insulated Containers.
  • Use an Electric Blanket or a Heating Pad.
  • Use Hot Bricks or Hot Water Bottles.
  • Try Using a Cooler.
  • Place Food in the Oven at a Low Temperature.
  • Use Chafing Dishes or Warming Tray.




  • How to Keep Food Hot for a Picnic | Tesco Food




    More answers regarding keeping Food Hot & Delicious

    Answer 2

    Depending how many people you have over, and assuming the party is at your house, a lot of that is just fine at lukewarm rather than piping hot; you could stuff the pasta and chicken into an oven set to "Warm" or "200F" or whatever the lowest heat is, which keeps it dry and warm, and keep the desserts in the fridge, covered to prevent moisture. If you're just having a medium-sized dinner party, this is the simplest suggestion.

    Answer 3

    Draksia gave the best answer if you're going to be doing this a lot. If you're not, a few things that the average person is more likely to have, or can get relatively cheaply:

    To keep things cool:

    1. Find two vessels that nest inside of each other, with decent sides, fill the larger one with ice, then place the smaller one on top, with the food inside it. Examples include cake pans (not springform), 9x12 and 10x15 glass dishes, casserole dishes, etc.

    2. If you don't already have suitable vessels, pick up a pack of disposable aluminum deep steam table trays. (I like the half size ones ... full size are a pain)

    To keep things warm:

    1. Crock pots set on warm : work well for liquid or really wet items; should work for pasta.

    2. A tray set on top of a heating pad : make sure to check the heating pad for damage before use (which you should always do before using a heating pad)

    3. Keep things on your grill, set to a low flame (if propane), or start 1/2 a chimney early, and let it die down before your guests arrive.

    4. Make your own chafing dish : You'll need a sheet pan, 5 bricks, a wire rack, and a bunch of tea candles. Place the bricks in the corner of the sheet pan, plus one in the middle. Set the tea candles in between. (you only need 4 for a 1/2 sheet pan), then place the wire rack on top. (one from a grill or your oven will be more durable than a cooling rack). Light the candles, then place oven-save dishes above them. You might need to replace the tea candles after an hour or so.

    5. Make your own steam table : find containers such as mentioned for keeping things cool (although beware of glass or ceramics). Place something as a heat-proof spacer in the larger pan (I have some metal pinch cups that are about 4cm high, but you can crush up some aluminium foil into tight balls). Pour in boiling water about 1/2 the way up the spacers, then set the other vessel on top. (Don't top off, as a spill would make things really not fun)

    6. Impromptu heat lamps : hallogen worklights get really hot, but I don't know if they'd be focused enough to help you with your fries. (or safe for people to be near; I've used 'em to bend PVC conduit when I didn't have a torch)

    ... but to make things easier, I'd consider not putting out all of the food at once. Hold half or two-thirds of it in reserve, in the fridge, oven or on the stove, and top-off things as they're depleted. How much to hold depends on how long the event is going to be, and if you're expecting the crowd to show up all at once, or trickle in over time.

    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: Victoria Bowers, Chevanon Photography, Madison Inouye, Engin Akyurt