​After more than two years of struggling with the Coronavirus and its various strains, we are once again hopeful for an end to this terrible public health menace. We are even hoping to gather with our families for the autumn and winter holidays, Thanksgiving, Christmas and the New Year. Meanwhile, 700,000 Americans died of this illness, and many families are still waiting to honor their lost loved ones. In my July 2020 blog, “A Memorial Tea,†I remembered my dear sister, Margaret Murdock Pedulla, who died on March 31 last year. I imagined hosting a tea in her honor, focusing on her favorite color, green, her favorite flowers and including her favorite tea-time treats, deviled eggs, Scottish shortbread and dark See’s candies.
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​Visualize the Location and Scope of the Event and Start Planning Early
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​The memorial event was two separate but interconnected activities: the service in the cemetery and the reception at the nearby family home. Each required its own timeline and set of lists. The service required the design, printing and mailing of invitations, a program for the ceremony, meetings with the cemetery staff and hiring a bagpiper. A detailed food and beverage list was necessary for the reception, including inventories of seating arrangements, linens, dishes, silverware, and a meticulously planned menu. Kathleen is the queen of lists, and she masterminded most of the details just listed while I planned the ceremony itself. Needless to say, she did far more work on this project than anyone else and deserves all the credit.
Kathleen’s “Food and Beverage Layout Plan†will give you some insight into the careful thought she gave to every aspect of organizing and serving the elegant lunch that our guests enjoyed so much.
​Enlist a Competent Team with Excellent Communication Skills
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​We planned the cemetery service well in advance and enlisted various family members to speak or otherwise participate. Then we held a family meeting the night before the event to review the tasks of each participant, providing each with a folder containing specific instructions for his or her role at the service.Kathleen followed a similar procedure for the reception, contacting each team member well in advance with a written copy of the menu and a detailed list of who was responsible for preparing or obtaining each item on the menu. Members of the team who were responsible for seating, table settings and so forth were given similar written instructions.
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​Obviously, selecting the day, time and location is the first step in planning a complex event, but last-minute details can be just as crucial. Kathleen developed the amazing, multi-cultural lunch menu for the reception months in advance, and I did the same for Margaret’s biography, the eulogy and the chronology of the memorial service. However, some of the most meaningful details were completed in the very last seconds before we changed into our black dresses and put on our pearls to begin the family procession to the cemetery.Kathleen was up before dawn on the day of the service, baking the Irish Soda Bread, Margaret’s favorite, and then putting the Blackberry Cobbler in the oven. Meanwhile, I assembled the Cheddar and Chutney Tea Sandwiches, which needed to be as fresh as possible, just as Kathleen’s friend Kristen arrived to make the luscious Macaroni and Cheese from scratch and bake it along with the refrigerated Lasagna and the Baked Beans as the service at the cemetery was taking place. During this final hour, team members were also dispatched to pick up the two items that were purchased rather than home-made: hand-made spicy cheese and chili tamales and a glorious tray of ultra-fresh sushi.
​Kathleen’s Memorial Reception Menu
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Beer, Wine, Whiskey, Punch, Martinelli’s Sparkling Cider, Coffee, Tea, Cucumber WaterAppetizers:
Isaac’s Salsa and Pickled Okra, Guacamole and Chips
Antipasto Platter: cheeses, meats, olives, crackers, crudites, baguette
Kathy Lathrop’s Broccoli Spread
Kathleen’s Shrimp Ceviche
Irish Soda Bread with Irish Butter
Deviled Eggs
Sushi PlatterSalads:
Asian Peanut Noodles
Thai Green Bean Coleslaw
Potato Salad
Main Dishes:
Chili and Cheese Tamales
Baked Beans
Pulled Pork with Barbecue Sauce
Chutney and Cheese Tea Sandwiches
Isaac’s Honey Mustard Ham with Rolls for Ham Sliders
Kristen’s Macaroni and Cheese
Kathleen’s Spinach Lasagna
Desserts:
Fresh Strawberries, Raspberries and Blackberries with Honey-Vanilla Yogurt Sauce
Raspberry and Peach Trifle
Blackberry Cobbler
Red Velvet Bundt Cake with Cream Cheese Icing
Rose’s Triple Espresso Cake with Fudge Icing
Fregolotta (Italian Crumb Cake)
Three-Tiered Cookie Plate: Frosted Brownies, The Queen’s Shortbread, Lemon Bars
Bambi’s Chocolate Chip Cookies
See’s Candies
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​Though the last two years have been hard for all of us, we invite you to celebrate with us once again, the joy of family, the joy of food, the joy of Afternoon Tea. And a happy Thanksgiving to you all!



