SC - Appropriate notice?

LYN M PARKINSON allilyn at juno.com
Fri Mar 9 16:20:41 PST 2001


I think that depends on many factors--how large is the feast?  how
experience is the kitchen steward?  how elaborate do you want the feast
to be?  In a pinch, I've come up with a menu and recipes in a day, but
they were previously used recipes--redacted by others as well as me. 
T'sveeah gave me a year almost for a major kingdom feast, and that was
great.  I could do research at my leisure, buy things as sales came
along--chicken legs at 10 cents per pound in 10 pound bags--even get a
Pennsic class or two out of the research.  That's the ideal.  Generally,
a few months notice is a good rule of thumb, since notice has to go to
the kingdom newsletter several months in advance.  Gives the cook the
chance to do some original work if s/he wants.  I don't think that a
dayboard should be a different lead time than a feast.  

Regards,

Allison

allilyn at juno.com

________________________________________________________________
GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO!
Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less!
Join Juno today!  For your FREE software, visit:
http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.


More information about the Sca-cooks mailing list