NO DELIVERIES ON THANKSGIVING - PLAN AHEAD!

Turn the Season’s Bounty into a Winning Feast

As the days grow shorter and the holidays approach, now is the moment to shift into menu-mood and get ahead of the game. Drawing inspiration from our seasonal guide, we’ve crafted a checklist for Holiday Menu Planning for Chefs.
Click to VIEW FULL GUIDE

Stock Seasonal Anchors

Highlight several key ingredients that are both in season and pre-orderable, giving you a strong base for holiday catering menus. 

Key Items to Build Around:

Tip: Use these items as your pillars – “holiday squash trio”, “cranberry-persimmon chutney”, or a “chef’s take-out mini sourdough & sides” option.


Build Your Menu Framework

Map your service types

  • Sit-down service
  • Buffet / station service
  • Take-out / holiday meal kits
  • Corporate catering / drop-off trays

Match seasonal ingredients to service types

  • Squash bisque or roasted squash as first course for sit-down.
  • Cranberry-pomegranate salad station for buffet.
  • Mini sourdough #12749 bowls with carved white-meat and squash puree for take-out kits.
  • Ribeye carving station with russet potato #5426 sides for corporate event.

Consider prep, flow & yield

  • Lock quantities early based on guest estimates especially for pre-order products.
  • Plan prep workflows (peel & cube in advance, large batches).
  • Design menu items that scale well (sheet-roasted root veg, slow-braised squash, large-batch desserts).

Play With Flavor Profiles & Visual Storytelling

Use seasonal ingredients for more than just flavor—there’s story and visual appeal.

  • Use the vibrant colors of pomegranates, persimmons and cranberries as accents.
  • Showcase textures: crunchy roasted squash skins, creamy purees, crisp root veg.
  • Emphasize seasonal sourcing & quality you can count on.
  • Use packaging or plating that shows off autumn hues and form (turban squash bowls, mini sourdough vessels).

Procurement & Inventory Tips

  • Pre-order items: Items like butternut squash, kabocha squash, persimmons. Lock in early. 
  • Lead time matters: For large holiday service, you’ll want to secure your dairy, baking staples, protein and key produce now.
  • Storage & yield: Winter squash keeps well. Root vegetables, potatoes, whole dairy items—plan storage in your cold rooms ahead.
  • Supplies: Don’t neglect non-food items—take-out containers, lids, trays, plates.

Menu Item Ideas & Adaptations

  • Starter: Roasted delicata & honey-maple glaze, topped with pomegranate arils and microgreens.
  • Vegetable side: Butternut squash gratin with sage brown-butter breadcrumbs.
  • Salad: Mixed greens with fresh cranberries, sliced Fuyu persimmon, toasted pecans, goat cheese, citrus-vinaigrette.
  • Main: Choice ribeye served with russet potato purée & kabocha squash mash. 
  • Take-out or kit: Mini sourdough boule filled with butternut squash bisque, cover separate topping sauce.
  • Desserts: Limoncello Mascarpone cake #13913 or mini New York cheesecake #13917 served with pomegranate-cranberry compote. See all desserts here.

Staffing & Workflow Considerations

  • Stationing: For fast-moving holiday service, assign one chef to squash/root-veg prep, one to proteins, one to final plating/garnish.
  • Batch cooking: Squash and root veg benefit from batching—roast large trays, portion, hold warm.
  • Take-out kits: Pre-assemble components (bread, sauce, garnish) the day before. Use consistent packaging.
  • Menu briefings: Give your team a “seasonal story” hand-out: “This week we highlight honeynut squash & fresh cranberries” so they can speak confidently to guests or clients.

Marketing & Guest Messaging

  • Use language like “locally-sourced winter squash”, “fresh autumn cranberries & pomegranate accents”, “chef-crafted holiday take-out”.
  • In your menu or website, highlight that many items are pre-order only to create urgency.
  • Visual cues: Autumn-hued photos, warm lighting, rustic elements to reflect the produce and season.
  • Consider social-media posts featuring behind-the-scenes of squash prep, and cranberry sauce kitchen action.

Holiday Service Checklist

  • Lock in your ingredient order lists seasonal produce, baking essentials, protein, and carry out.
  •  Confirm storage and cold-room capacity.
  •  Draft your menu framework, assign prep workflows.
  •  Train staff on new seasonal items and guest messaging.
  •  Create take-out kits/packaging plan.
  •  Design plating & packaging visuals around warm fall colors.
  •  Launch marketing push: pre-order holiday sides, limited persimmon salad.

Contact Get Fresh Produce to place your seasonal pre-orders!

630-665-9665
orders@getfreshproduce.com