Grateful Palate Catering & Events
Wedding Caterer
+1 954-566-3044
Standalone profileThe Menuevents on the kitchen's roster
Standing Servicepractice overview
Event caterer in Fort Lauderdale: corporate events and office catering. Grateful Palate Catering & Events takes , plus wedding receptions and cuisine-specific menus bookings as well.
Local providers vary widely in how they document their work, and that variance shows up months later when something needs follow-up.
Before calling Grateful Palate Catering & Events in Fort Lauderdale, FL, scan the breakdown below: what is documented, what is unclear, and the questions that separate working catering service providers from generic competitors.
Use-case alignment: Corporate lunches, meetings, and office events; Wedding receptions and private celebrations; Cuisine-specific event menus.
Starting frame for the call — not a guarantee of pricing, availability, or technician skill.
Service cues on file: corporate events, wedding catering, cuisine-specific catering, staffed events, menu planning.
That spans 5 categories.
Confirm whether the same staff handle all of them or whether different specialists rotate in.
Local Fort Lauderdale market conditions shape what a provider actually does day-to-day.
A provider that explains those tradeoffs is worth more than one that quotes the cheapest job.
Ask whether the provider leaves a written report after each visit listing what was done, what was found, and what to watch next.
Without that, the next provider has to re-diagnose from scratch.
Mise en Placebooking facts
- Phone+1 954-566-3044
- Sitethegratefulpalate.com
- Kitchen base3003 NE 32nd Ave, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33308, United States
- SpecialtyWedding Caterer
- Service areaFort Lauderdale · Jacksonville · Miami · Orlando
- Profile tierStandalone
- Data score100 / 100
Regional Practicepermits & service customs in this region
In the South — TX, FL, GA, SC, NC, VA, TN, AL, MS, LA, AR, OK, WV, KY — state-level licensing is light but county-level health permits are heavy. Outdoor and tent events are common but require a Temporary Food Service permit in most counties. New Orleans has unique catering rules around alcohol permits and French Quarter delivery restrictions. Ask whether the kitchen is a dedicated BBQ caterer or a generalist that simply adds BBQ to the menu — the equipment and hauling logistics differ.
Consider Before You Callfive questions to bring to the booking
- What's the minimum headcount for a corporate booking, and is there a separate weekday vs. weekend rate?
- How far in advance do weddings book up, and is a tasting offered before the contract is signed?
- What's the server-to-guest ratio you staff at, and is bar service an additional package?
- What is included in the per-head price — appetizers, dessert, non-alcoholic drinks, gratuity, taxes?
- Do you carry a current health-department permit and a certificate of insurance the venue can request?
Table Questionsfrequent asks at the booking
- How is catering priced — per head or per dish?
- Most catering is priced per-person ("per-head") for a fixed package: appetizers and main and dessert and non-alcoholic drinks. Service staff, rentals, and the bar are usually separate line items. À-la-carte and weight-based ("market price") pricing is common at high-end and cuisine-specific kitchens. Confirm whether tax, service charge, and gratuity are inside the per-head number before signing.
- How far ahead should the kitchen be booked?
- Wedding caterers typically book six to twelve months ahead for prime spring–summer dates. Corporate events book two to four weeks ahead, sometimes shorter. Drop-off catering for office events can be twenty-four to seventy-two hours. Last-minute bookings limit the menu, since the kitchen has to source from what is already in their order rotation.
- Drop-off versus full-service — what is the practical difference?
- Drop-off means the kitchen delivers food (hot or cold) and leaves — no servers, no bar, no on-site staff. Full-service brings servers, bartenders, an event captain, and sometimes rentals (linens, glassware, china). Full-service typically costs thirty to sixty percent more than drop-off for the same food.
- How is the menu tasting handled?
- Most full-service caterers offer a tasting before the contract is signed (sometimes free, sometimes a credit-on-booking fee). The tasting is a curated four to six dish version of the proposed menu. Bring the decision-makers and write notes on each dish; the tasting is to lock in the menu, not redesign it from scratch.
- What is the difference between a wedding caterer and a regular caterer?
- A wedding caterer specializes in reception dining at scale — typically fifty to three hundred guests with a fixed timeline (cocktail hour, plated dinner, dessert station). Wedding caterers often have venue partnerships, contracts written for wedding contingencies, and staff trained for the wedding-day flow. A regular ("event") caterer covers a broader range of events but may not be staffed for the long, multi-stage flow a wedding needs.
- Tipping and service charges — how do they work?
- Service charge (typically eighteen to twenty-two percent) is added by the caterer to cover front-of-house labor; it is not a tip — it goes to the company. If the contract says "service charge" not "gratuity," a separate tip for the captain, servers, and bartenders is appropriate. Standard tipping for catering staff is ten to twenty percent of the food bill, distributed among the team.