Each year our family puts on a Christmas appreciation dinner for friends and people that we work with. My two kids handle the appetizers, I do the entrees, and my wife does the decorations and desserts. Last year I got some good advice from several people on this forum and the dinner was a great success. I am banking on your help to get me through another year! The party is December 13.
Typically we serve buffet style and have 80 to 100 people attend. My hope is to serve food that is a bit different than the normal dinner party menu. Usually I do a beef, pork, and chicken dish. After trying MikeMcQ's twice smoked salmon, I will be adding that to the menu.
Here is where I'm at so far:
Beef: My plan is to wet age whole beef roast for 30 days. I'll pick it up this week. Looking at this week's ads, my best options seem to be a Whole Beef Top Sirloin ($2.99 lb.) or Whole NY Strip Loins ($2.75 lb.). After aging it, I'd like to thinly slice it and make individual serving sized roll-ups. This will eliminate the need to carve it during dinner, making serving that much easier. I hope to do some experimenting with fillings in the next day or two.
Pork: Hands down it is going to be DavidN's stuffed pork tenderloin. I made this a couple of weeks ago for my mom's birthday and really liked it. Looking at probably doing about 8 rolls. My guess is that by the eighth one I will finally figure out how to get a decent roll!!
Chicken: I have a good assortment of thighs, drumsticks, and breasts in the freezer; bone-in and boneless. Not really sure what to do with them. I'm thinking I could make some sort of casserole type of dish.
Salmon:When the sandwiches are done it should work to slice the buns into 4-6 pieces depending on the size of the buns. Planning on smoking on 8-10 lbs of salmon.
Haven't thought much about potatoes and a vegetable yet. I have been enjoying a lot of riced cauliflower this year, so I may include that somehow.
Each year I try to to find things that will hold well and can be done ahead of time, so when it gets to crunch time all I need to do is pull things from the oven and serve. The salmon, chicken, and pork I will do on the pellet grill. Since I will probably sear the beef first, I don't know how much of an advantage it will be to cook it on the grill.
Questions: Best type of beef to buy? Any chicken, veggie or potato suggestions? Any other tips, advice, or insight?
Thanks in advance for your help.