If you know us, it shouldn’t be a secret to you—we adore weddings! The atmosphere, the music, the overwhelming sense of romance… it’s all wonderful. But no party is complete without proper food and drinks. After all, you won’t keep your guests happy with teary-eyed speeches and wedding games alone, no matter how great they might be.
Redditor u/MsPumpernickel recently sparked a captivating thread on the r/weddingshaming subreddit. Members of this online community spilled the tea about the very worst wedding food that they’ve been served. If you think that crackers and cheese will leave you feeling hungry, wait till you read about the rest.
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We went to my nephew's wedding at a ski resort in Wisconsin near the bride's home. The dinner was a buffet and it looked like the buffet in Vegas Vacation with various meats in mystery sauces served to ourselves with spoons that were too short and kept slipping into the food. The bride told me that the food served was nothing like what they had tasted when booking the place. Fortunately the FOB was a cheese broker. (Yes, Wisconsin has cheese brokers) and he had set up a huge cheese buffet for appetizers. He had ordered half a pound of cheese per person so no one went hungry! There was a big variety of cheeses covering two long banquet tables surmounted by a carved double heart shaped cheddar with the bride and grooms names on it. We all had a great time and it was possibly the most Wisconsin wedding ever. The wedding cake was cheesecake.
The worst was the time we were being called up, table by table, for guests to get their dinner from a buffet. By the time my table was called, there was no food. So the worst wedding food I ever had was when I got no food at all.
Bad planning. There are basic formulas for No. of guests and food servings.
A plate of lettuce. It was the vegan option at my sister's wedding. Legitimately just a plate of shredded lettuce with side cups of olive oil and balsamic vinegar as dressing :')
That happened recently to my husband at a work conference. The "vegetarian option" for dinner was just a larger portion of the green salad. He now brings his own food to these meetings just in case.
Yes, weddings are meant to celebrate the eternal bond between two souls, but you can’t ignore the needs of your family and friends either. You have to come up with some sort of balanced approach where the tastes and dietary preferences of the happy couple meet the wants of the dozens (if not hundreds) of guests lining up to witness the union.
Picking out the wedding food is akin to a fun puzzle. You have to know what your guests like and find a way to fit that into the overall theme of the wedding. Pizza, burgers, and fries would probably make nearly everyone happy, but this might not match the refined atmosphere you’re going for. On the flip side, if you make every nibble and meal overly aristocratic, you might leave most people confused, hungry, and googling the directions for local eateries.
We went to a wedding at a fancy country club, it was family plate style service. The tables were the long rectangle type.They put the platters at both ends of the table, we were seated in the middle, never saw any of the food. Asked wait staff for some refills on the platters and where told sorry, its all gone. We left and went to a fast food place and went home. So I guess it was the worst wedding food we never had.
Either some people were being hella greedy or the catering should compensate the wed couple for not doing their jobs properly. Many of these sound like the catering should be named and shamed for taking people's money while failed at job basics
Bride's mom turned into a Momzilla and insisted the outdoor wedding reception be served by her friend who was just starting a small Mexican restaurant but had never catered a wedding.
Bride said no, and hired a professional caterer who had experience in outdoor venues and could provide nice vegetarian options.
Bride sends Momzilla to the professional with the guest's entre choices... but instead Momzilla fires the caterer and hires her amateur friend without telling the Bride.
Amateur decides that vegetarian means rice and beans (refried, which means lard) and sets up a burrito bar with no way of keeping the ingredients warm.
Guests have to eat cold Mexican food... and then it runs out.
Worst part? This was MY wedding! The shame.
The groom had a cardiac health scare 6mo before the wedding and the bride had the caterer switch to sugar free everything "to be heart healthy." Everyone got crazy diarrhea or abdominal cramping from a mix of all sugar substitutes on the market being used in the meal and cakes. I'd have refrained from eating if I had known, those artificial sweeteners really beat my guts up.
And sugar isn't even the thing to avoid for heart health, but bad fats instead. Btw artificial sweeteners have links to things like cancer, metabolic disorders and poor cardiovascular health so...
Going to some tastings with a friend or two can help you avoid at least some of these potential problems. It’s always a good thing when you can rely on your nearest and dearest for unbiased opinions. They can also give you some advice about the format of your reception food itself. Do you want a sit-down plated meal? Would you prefer a buffet? Or would a funky food truck be more your style?
An incredibly important factor to consider is whether your guests have any unique dietary preferences or potential allergies. You wouldn’t want to serve steak to vegans any more than you’d like to sideline someone with nut allergies by serving allergens in every single appetizer and main dish.
Worst story is one attended by my mother and sister.
- 100 degree day outside and no air conditioning in the hall
- One giant pot of baked beans plus a platter of very questionable sandwiches
- When the cake was cut it was still raw in the center
So, after eating nothing, and slipping out as soon as they could, mom and sister stopped at a restaurant on the main road back towards home. Soon they noticed some familiar faces coming into the restaurant. Yes, other hungry refugees from the wedding.
Went to a wedding and the cake was “sugar free”. This was back in the 80s. The baker who set up the cake was extremely rude to me ( I was the photographer and he didn’t want me to TOUCH THE CAKE- I was , like, 7 feet away) but he couldn’t help but gush how delicious it was and that he used ground up almonds instead of sugar. Long story short- even the children wouldn’t eat it. It had the texture and taste of uncooked oatmeal. It was beautiful though.
At a wine bar that served charcuterie however the bride and groom decided to just serve sliced meat and we had to pay to add cheese, nuts etc. They paid for the wine but it was very tiny pours. The groom kept bragging about how rich he is and couldn't wait to open the envelopes for "the cash". The bride was humiliated everyone was hungry but took a giant portion for herself. Everyone left hungry. Bets were made they would divorce in a year and they did. Selfish people for sure!
She wasn’t humiliated, if she took a huge portion for herself. She was putting on a SHOW that she was humiliated/embarassed. Massive difference. Someone who possessed actual shame would take a normal portion or a smaller portion so that their guests could also have enough to eat.
"Poached Chicken."
Boiled. It was plain boiled chicken with no seasonings.
When couples send out the invites, they usually inquire what their guests would prefer to eat and if there’s anything else to know about their preferences. That way, they know what to expect: how many vegetarian/pescatarian/vegan mains they’ll need.
Things get a bit more difficult when it’s the happy couple themselves who have a very specific diet.
For example, let’s say that the marrying couple is vegan and they don’t want to serve meat at the wedding due to ethical concerns. However, most of their family and friends are omnivores, and the couple doesn’t want to upset them either. A possible solution in this case would be to hire some talented chefs to create some truly stunning vegan meals that anyone would enjoy. That way, you can still stick to the vegan script while also keeping everyone else happy. Or, to put it simply, if your food’s delicious, many omnivores won’t care whether it’s meat or plant-based. But keep people hungry and you’ll have drama on your hands.
What’s the very best and worst wedding food that you’ve ever had the (dis)pleasure of tasting, dear Pandas? What did you serve at your own weddings? Tell us all about it in the comments!
No vegetarian option so everyone at my table gave me their garnishes so I could have a weak attempt at a salad.
This is the only one here so far where I'd like to have additional context. Did this OP tell the bride and groom they are vegetarian? In that case, shame on them. If not, OP has brought this upon themselves, most people don't think about a vegetarian or vegan option if there's no need to do so.
My brother decided fancy Mexican food was the thing. We had the entire restaurant.
We each got two tacos. The meat was overcooked, dry and flavorless. The food was cold. There was cheddar cheese on the tacos, no salsa on the tacos and none at our tables, no chips, and the drinks were double what we're used to paying. They even charged for the glass of water. He payed $75/person for this.
The cake was cute...... And simply awful tasting.
When we left I hit fast food for my kiddos.
We love Mexican food. Whatever this was wasn't that.
I showed up to a reception once that only had a “popcorn and ice cream bar”. The reception was scheduled around dinner time, and there was no previous mention of there not being real food provided on the invites or programs.
I live in Spain where it’s generally expected that you gift the couple at least what your dinner was worth. Think 100€s upwards. As a vegetarian in Spain I know that the most I’m going to eat is a fancy salad. One time I was given a plate of sliced tomatoes. 100€ for a plate of sliced tomatoes.
Went to a wedding at a mega church
Was told that there would be food trucks outside for the reception. Nope. The church put out a buffet for the wedding party only. Guests were not offered anything, even water.
We waited 2 hours for all the photos to be done, and realized there was no food. People were standing around giving side eye to the bride and groom as they sat at their cordoned-off table and ate
Couple of three foot Subway subs, jello shots and beers. Many many kids present (myself under 18 at the time), no sodas/juice/water. It was either find a cup in their cabinet and get tap, or make like my aunt and go to the gas station to get us some drinks and cookies because the jello shots were the dessert.
My cousin had a gourmet mac and cheese bar at his wedding. It worked like a cold stone where people point out their choices then then the server guy cooks/mixes the food. People were waiting in line for over half an hour for one guy to cook their selections, and then they ran out.
It was a wedding scheduled at dinner time and the only food was cupcakes. That you could only get one of. The bride and groom had their own cake. We left early to go get McDonald’s
How do people not know that you can’t schedule a reception at dinner time, and not serve dinner. So tacky.
I had been invited to a wedding reception for a Mormon bride & groom (I knew the father of the bride). The family was very wealthy. I show up, nicely dressed, with a gift. In the rather small room is a beautiful wedding cake in the middle of a large conference table. Around it were assortments of nuts, candies and flowers. Tons of flowers.
It was not a reception in the way I knew, but was actually an extension of the reception line when you file out of the ceremony. This took place at the venue, but the real reception with food and cake cutting would be later, in a ballroom (no dancing or booze, or coffee), with the elite guests who were Mormon. The affair I was invited to (just for the heathens), was limited to a large conference room at the venue.
I was insulted. However, I, a nonbeliever, was obviously only worthy of a few nuts while dropping off a gift (which I picked back up on my way out).
I never attended another “reception” while I lived in UT.
Yeah, ex-mormon here, they do stuff very differently. They also don't believe that coffee and booze is bad for the body. I don't understand the no dancing part however
Mormons are forbidden from having sex standing up because they fear it might lead to dancing.
Load More Replies...Mormon here. Please believe me when I say that the wealthy, "Utah bubble" Mormons certainly do not represent all of us. Most of us are just regular people who do our best to be kind and inclusive. And many of us have 'heathen' family and friends who we are proud to celebrate with and share our lives with.
Ah, yeah, Mormons. J. Smith and his visions, he being the one seeing God Father and Jesus Christ. Sure. What do you expect from a religious group founded by what I would call a con-man?
My friend couldn't attend her own mother's funeral due to their difference of beliefs. It's really quite tragic
What beliefs would prevent her from attending the funeral??
Load More Replies...A lot of generalizations and misinformation about Mormons on this thread. Most Mormons are regular people and missionary work is important to them so they do not want to isolate potential new members from activities or going to church. Going to the temple is different. One does need to be a member in good standing to enter there.
I don't get people who take the gift back in these stories. The gift isn't a tribute in exchange for a wedding experience. Taking a gift back is an open declaration that your relationship is purely transactional. Might as well slap 'em in the face with a glove and meet them on the common. If you discover the groom's been screwing your husband or something, fine, but otherwise...?
LMAO. Because inviting someone to your wedding and not letting them attend the actual celebration is all about the positive relationship you garnered, right? Oh they weren't close? Then why even invite them in the first place. I'm sure it's not for "transactional" reasons, right? You only being able to see this from that viewpoint says way more about you than it does about OP.
Load More Replies...Saw 2 Mormon "Elders" exiting my same train in Sweden, so I approached and said, in my best American accented English: Hi, where you from? They responded: We're not from around here. Me: No kidding. Them: Oh, we're from UT (in their best *duh* accent). Me: Well I don't expect all Mormons to live in UT. You *are* here for your church in Sweden, right? Can I buy you a beer?
Mormon teens have a separate prom from “gentiles” (the term LDS folks use for non-LDS people); once they reach age 16, they basically aren’t allowed to associate with anyone outside the religion. They live among the non-LDS and are typically pleasant and amiable but they definitely are exclusive in many ways.
Mormon misinformation is insane on this website. I live in the heart of a mormon suburb, I live with my grandparents who are mormon, and the "gentile" thing is false, and so is the 16 year old thing. Most of the mormon nuts live in Southern Utah.
Load More Replies...Backyard wedding and they said there would be food, it was dinner time reception. They served cold Chick-fil-A nuggets and veggie trays and they didn't have enough for everyone so people were fighting over the nuggets as they were brought out. Fun times. We left to go get food.
Best backyard wedding was my friend's...........Tons of fresh barbeque beef and pork hot out of the smoker, 2 margarita machines, 1 Jaegermeister machine running full tilt and 2 kegs of beer. Everyone left with the meat sweats and the promise of a massive hangover in the morning.
Went to a low budget wedding, which I fully support... not everyone has money. However, each table had one bottle of sparkling cider and that was it. No water, no nothing else for 3 hours. I had two young kids with me and we had to leave. I'm in Florida and this was a summer wedding.
Everyone's finances are different but this feels like a situation where you use whay budget you do have, get a Costco-type membership for the wedding, and stock up on food and drinks. I don't make much money but this still seems an obvious route to take. And, sure, there MAY not be a Costco in the area but the point is there are ways to save money and provide for your guests regardless of your budget.
It’s a toss up between the one where the food was good but we all got varying degrees of food poisoning, and the one where the wedding party spent 3 hours “taking photos” and everything sat in the warming oven for an extra hour and dried out to the point of being barely edible. They did not actually spend 3 hours taking photos, they spent an hour taking photos and then stopped at a bar on the way back and “lost track of time”. That wedding was in a tiny rural town where the only place to buy food was a small convenience store a half mile or so from the venue, and no snacks or drinks were provided for the guests while they waited for the wedding party.
A budget wedding in a church basement (nothing wrong with that). Dinner was “plated” though which seemed odd. Dinner consisted of a local/regional dish I’d never heard of called Chicken and Noodles. I swear it was chicken noodle soup with some cornstarch or something in it to thicken up served on a slice of wonder bread. Sides were fruit cocktail and carrot sticks. I legit thought I was in elementary school lunch.
Lovely couple, still married over 15 years later so they obviously prioritized the marriage over the wedding. We stopped at A&W on the way home.
This is silly. Someone was served Chicken and Noodles and was mad because it was..Chicken and Noodles. That's kinda like getting served Tater Tot Casserole and being upset there's Tater Tots on it. The corn belt serves some pretty literal food. It's Midwestern home style food, the type served at church dinners and farm family suppers. Pretty basic, but no weirder that serving salisbury steak or a casserole.
Outdoor wedding with a potluck buffet. During the ceremony we watched bugs swarm the food. The MOB tried to shoo the bugs away as best she could. While waiting in the buffet line we watched her admit defeat with the shooing and just stir the bugs into the dishes.
A destination wedding where they only served punch. It was during dinner time.
The cake, mints and nuts were fine. But the reception was in the cavernous church basement in March and it was really chilly, and the green punch was so cold it was nearly frozen and it turned your teeth and tongue green. Everyone had greenish lips too
"Buffet cocktail hour" was ritz crackers, turkey pepperoni and cheese, but no alcohol. Only drinks were orange juice, cranberry juice and sparkling water. Coke or Diet Coke was cash only. Sit-down dinner was microwaved lunch meats masquerading as "roast turkey" or "prime rib" with a gravy on top, corn niblets or peas, and those fancy-cut sweet pickles.
What is odd is that it wasn't a matter of money, as the bride's family was very comfortable and gave her a very nice budget.
A cut up tomato on some roasted cabbage. It was the vegetarian/vegan option. It was...not very filling. They also ran out of cake before I got any. I stopped at a taco truck on the way home.
Chicken and waffles where the chicken was somehow both undercooked AND burned, and the waffles were just sad.
I've never left a wedding hungry before.
Easily done, oven or grill far too hot, looks (over)cooked on the outside, still raw in the middle, particularly if cooked from frozen or even just fridge temperature. Always best, for any meat really, to allow is to get to room temperature before cooking, or make sure you cook long and slow, then of course use a meat thermometer to check before serving.
I went to two different weddings where there was no food and the only thing to eat was the cake. I feel like if you’re going to have a wedding near dinner time you should warn your guest that there will be no food. That way I can eat before the wedding or just not go. Each time I left early because I was hungry.
Lasagna that was really overcooked and mushy. I thought at least there is cake. Cake was burned - they just frosted over it.
McDonald’s on the way home.
I recently went to a wedding held at a kid's camp. All the guests were invited to stay in the (kid sized) cabins and the food was served buffet style thru out the weekend. I had to gently pull a worker aside to tell them everything I'd eaten that weekend had given me "super diarrhea" and request a cold turkey and mayo on bread. They were mortified and help me get some safe to eat food. Just knowing how hot it was outside (labor day weekend) and how long the food has been sitting out made me want to vom.
I got a salad that had a piece of actual dirty hay….like what you would find on a barn floor, except it was a fancy plated dinner at an art gallery. The courses were so spaced out with speeches that we left before dessert at 10:30pm, and were too tired to even try find another food option.
This reminds me of a wedding I helped a friend serve, she owns a restaurant that caters a ton of weddings. This was the first marriage of bride who was in her late 40's and held at the church where she grew up; reception in the Fellowship Hall. The Bride's mother had passed and you could tell all the older woman in the church had waited their entire lives for their friend's daughter's wedding; most were at least 75 years old. All they wanted was a piece of cake and to go home. After about 90 minutes of meeting and greeting the ladies of the church were falling asleep and bored out of their minds. The lead server suggested the bride and groom cut the cake as some of their guests were showing fatigue. Thank goodness they followed the recommendation - there was a rush for cake then for the door. Brides and Grooms - know your audience and don't expect older people to wait for hours for food, beverage or desert; they don't have much stamina.
Went to a wedding reception at a DoubleTree and boy that food was awful. Not sure about the vegetarian option, but I was served a piece of boiled chicken with flavorless bruschetta-like topping and some asparagus that did not have any seasoning. There were also unseasoned steamed garden vegetables. To make things worse, the water from the steamed vegetables got all over the other parts of the dish.
A tea party wedding (aka cake and punch) during dinner time. Good food but not substantial.
ETA- this “meal” was at like 6pm
Seems like vegetarians and vegans get the short end of the stick a lot. I’m not one myself, but I’ve eaten enough amazing Indian cuisine to know that good vegetarian/vegan food IS possible. I suppose it may be a matter of cost/pricing, however, if there are only a few (or only one!) vegetarian/vegan attendees to a particular wedding. That’s still no excuse, of course - IMO the wedding couple/planner/etc. should be responsible enough to inform their guests if there is no vegetarian/vegan option, or if it is something like “just some lettuce”.
My youngest son and his bride served pasta as the main meal. We had three choices of sauce to chose from when RSVPing: Alfredo, Meat, Marinara. They also had different pasta for each so the waiters knew what they were serving.
Load More Replies...I went to a reception in a small hotel, where Guests were served hog roast. As a vegetarian I was told to join the queue as they had vegetarian options available. When I finally got to the front of the line and asked for the vegetarian option, I was told there was a bowl of potato salad inside. I walked inside just in time to see another guest take the last spoonful of potato salad, which EVERY other guest had also had as a side for their hog roast. Needless to say I left the reception and ordered room service.
My cousin got married at 10AM on a Saturday. Her reception food was breakfast/brunch with bagels, fruit, waffles, OJ, coffee, tea, etc. It was wonderful! Her father gave her $15,000 for a wedding. She spent $3,000 on the wedding and they used the rest for a down payment on a house where they have lived for 27 years and raised 4 children. If I ever get married, I am doing it the way she did it. Small, simple, good food, buy a house, live happily ever-after.
Love it!! Your cousin is obviously a VERY smart-and very lucky, lol-lady!!
Load More Replies...I dont think that anyone should go to a wedding expecting to walk away full. But I do think that the bride and groom should advise guest if there will be no food or drinks. Also let them know when its a paid bar or you have to come out of your pocket for anything at the wedding. I get some people cannot afford to feed a lot of people for an event but if that is the case it should not be done around lunch or dinner time and again you should tell your guest hey eat before you come or you will be leaving the wedding hungry. But I think that is with every aspect of a wedding, like dont tell people its a no kids wedding then have the guest brought kids.
I agree, especially with the no kids and then allow other kids part. Me and my husband were invited to a wedding out of town, years ago, and told no kids. We would have had to arrange for a sitter for the whole weekend so we didn't end up going. I later saw wedding pics on FB and there were definitely kids there. I confronted the bride later about it and she told me that she originally just said that to limit the amount of kids. And our kids never act in public, so it wasn't that. Regardless, that was my last conversation with her.
Load More Replies...Are people that are this inconsiderate really capable of having a successful marriage? I guess some people are just thoughtless or absent-minded but a lot of them just seem to not care about others.
Went to a wedding recently when my friend disappeared just as the wedding dinner was starting. Unfortunately... he was the groom. He'd forgotten to pick up the cake and left the bride alone to go and pick it up! Just about anyone there (including me) would have done it if we'd realised. The bride put a good face on it but he was gone for long enough to miss the entire dinner. Including the important ritual of the bride & groom feeding each other soup... The bride's parents (not enthusiastic in the first place) were fuming.
I don't understand how anyone can have a reception without food and NOT put that critical bit of info in the invitation!
These poor people! One of the most important things to me when I got married was that our friends and family were fed well and had good drinks and a great time. We had different meat dishes, pasta dishes , vegetable dishes and salads. We had about 6 different passed appetizers for cocktail hour and an open bar that was not too overwhelming. We had a candy /sweets table for later as well. People still compliment us on our wedding food and drinks and it's been 14 years later.
Guests have said that my wedding had the best wedding food they had ever had, thankfully! Went to one where the caterers did not have facilities to "keep" the food outdoors. There was only enough ravioli for each guest to get one, and those who went for extra salad ended up with food poisoning.
So weird to me that commenters completely miss the point and complain that these entries only have transactional relationships because they expected food and drink. At a wedding. When they weren't told that there wouldn't be. You can't be this dense.
Seems like vegetarians and vegans get the short end of the stick a lot. I’m not one myself, but I’ve eaten enough amazing Indian cuisine to know that good vegetarian/vegan food IS possible. I suppose it may be a matter of cost/pricing, however, if there are only a few (or only one!) vegetarian/vegan attendees to a particular wedding. That’s still no excuse, of course - IMO the wedding couple/planner/etc. should be responsible enough to inform their guests if there is no vegetarian/vegan option, or if it is something like “just some lettuce”.
My youngest son and his bride served pasta as the main meal. We had three choices of sauce to chose from when RSVPing: Alfredo, Meat, Marinara. They also had different pasta for each so the waiters knew what they were serving.
Load More Replies...I went to a reception in a small hotel, where Guests were served hog roast. As a vegetarian I was told to join the queue as they had vegetarian options available. When I finally got to the front of the line and asked for the vegetarian option, I was told there was a bowl of potato salad inside. I walked inside just in time to see another guest take the last spoonful of potato salad, which EVERY other guest had also had as a side for their hog roast. Needless to say I left the reception and ordered room service.
My cousin got married at 10AM on a Saturday. Her reception food was breakfast/brunch with bagels, fruit, waffles, OJ, coffee, tea, etc. It was wonderful! Her father gave her $15,000 for a wedding. She spent $3,000 on the wedding and they used the rest for a down payment on a house where they have lived for 27 years and raised 4 children. If I ever get married, I am doing it the way she did it. Small, simple, good food, buy a house, live happily ever-after.
Love it!! Your cousin is obviously a VERY smart-and very lucky, lol-lady!!
Load More Replies...I dont think that anyone should go to a wedding expecting to walk away full. But I do think that the bride and groom should advise guest if there will be no food or drinks. Also let them know when its a paid bar or you have to come out of your pocket for anything at the wedding. I get some people cannot afford to feed a lot of people for an event but if that is the case it should not be done around lunch or dinner time and again you should tell your guest hey eat before you come or you will be leaving the wedding hungry. But I think that is with every aspect of a wedding, like dont tell people its a no kids wedding then have the guest brought kids.
I agree, especially with the no kids and then allow other kids part. Me and my husband were invited to a wedding out of town, years ago, and told no kids. We would have had to arrange for a sitter for the whole weekend so we didn't end up going. I later saw wedding pics on FB and there were definitely kids there. I confronted the bride later about it and she told me that she originally just said that to limit the amount of kids. And our kids never act in public, so it wasn't that. Regardless, that was my last conversation with her.
Load More Replies...Are people that are this inconsiderate really capable of having a successful marriage? I guess some people are just thoughtless or absent-minded but a lot of them just seem to not care about others.
Went to a wedding recently when my friend disappeared just as the wedding dinner was starting. Unfortunately... he was the groom. He'd forgotten to pick up the cake and left the bride alone to go and pick it up! Just about anyone there (including me) would have done it if we'd realised. The bride put a good face on it but he was gone for long enough to miss the entire dinner. Including the important ritual of the bride & groom feeding each other soup... The bride's parents (not enthusiastic in the first place) were fuming.
I don't understand how anyone can have a reception without food and NOT put that critical bit of info in the invitation!
These poor people! One of the most important things to me when I got married was that our friends and family were fed well and had good drinks and a great time. We had different meat dishes, pasta dishes , vegetable dishes and salads. We had about 6 different passed appetizers for cocktail hour and an open bar that was not too overwhelming. We had a candy /sweets table for later as well. People still compliment us on our wedding food and drinks and it's been 14 years later.
Guests have said that my wedding had the best wedding food they had ever had, thankfully! Went to one where the caterers did not have facilities to "keep" the food outdoors. There was only enough ravioli for each guest to get one, and those who went for extra salad ended up with food poisoning.
So weird to me that commenters completely miss the point and complain that these entries only have transactional relationships because they expected food and drink. At a wedding. When they weren't told that there wouldn't be. You can't be this dense.