How This Works for Showers
For bridal and baby showers, charcuterie boards are often used as the main spread when the group is smaller or when the shower is in a home, a restaurant back room, or a function space with limited setup time. They’re easy for guests to approach, take a little, and return to their seats without disrupting the flow. Boards also work well when the shower has a seated component (luncheon-style tables), but still wants a grazing option off to the side.
A grazing table makes sense when the shower is more open-house style, when the guest count is larger, or when the host wants one focal food area in the room. Guests interact with it in waves — right after arrival, again after mingling, and often once gifts are done. It usually supplements a light meal or replaces the need for formal plated food, depending on timing (late morning vs mid-afternoon changes expectations).
Dessert tends to land after the main food wave. A dessert cart works well once gifts are wrapped up or once the group transitions into casual conversation again, since it gives guests a clear place to grab something sweet without crowding the kitchen counter. Roaming cannoli is typically a later add-on for showers that want something interactive, but it works best when people are standing and circulating — it’s harder during the seated/gift-opening stretch.
Layout, Timing & Planning Considerations
Showers are often hosted in tighter, more detailed spaces — living rooms, dining rooms, private function rooms, or venues where décor and seating take up most of the footprint. That means food placement has to respect traffic lanes. If the gift table, seating, and food all end up in one corner, it becomes a logjam fast, especially once guests start taking photos and clustering.
Grazing tables need a stable surface and enough clearance for guests to approach without bumping chairs. In home settings, the best spot is usually along a wall or behind the main seating area — not in the kitchen doorway where everyone is already coming and going. For function rooms, it helps when the table can live near the perimeter so it doesn’t compete with the main focal area (often the guest-of-honor seat and gift setup).
Timing matters because showers often have a “pause” window. If gifts are scheduled, food is best fully set before that starts so guests can grab what they want first. Dessert carts and roaming cannoli generally work better after gifts, when people are moving again and the room opens up.
Indoor vs. outdoor showers change the plan. Outdoor patios can be great for space, but sun and wind can be an issue, especially earlier in the day. Shade or a covered option helps, and an indoor backup is useful if weather changes. Access is usually simpler than weddings, but stairs, tight hallways, and long carries from parking still affect setup timing — especially for larger grazing tables.
What Works Well / What to Expect
- Food works best when it’s ready before the gift-opening window, so guests aren’t getting up mid-gift to grab plates.
- Boards are a good fit for smaller showers or rooms where seating and décor eat up most of the space.
- Grazing tables work well for larger showers or open-house style arrivals, but they need clear approach space so chairs don’t block access.
- Dessert carts land nicely after gifts, when guests are circulating again and looking for something sweet.
- Roaming cannoli is easiest once people are standing and chatting — it’s awkward during seated portions of the shower.
How It Works
- Arrival & timing check – Arrival is typically planned for 60–90 minutes before guests start arriving, depending on the size of the setup and access. A quick check-in confirms where seating is going, where gifts will be, and which door or hallway needs to stay clear. If the shower timeline includes gifts at a specific time, setup is built around that.
- Setup & placement – Setup requires a cleared, stable surface and enough room to work around it without guests squeezing by. In home settings, this usually means a dining table, kitchen island (if it won’t clog traffic), or a dedicated buffet table along a wall. Dessert carts are typically staged and brought out later so they don’t compete with the main spread.
- During peak guest time – Guests graze in waves — right after arrival, then again once everyone’s settled. During gifts, the goal is minimal disruption, so everything is designed to be self-serve and easy to return to. Roaming cannoli is usually timed after the seated portion so it can move through the group naturally.
- Breakdown & cleanup – Breakdown happens after the agreed service window — often after the main mingling portion or after dessert service. Shared items are cleared, surfaces are wiped down, and the space is left tidy. If the venue needs the room reset quickly, that timing is planned in advance.
Service Area
CG Boards’ core service area is within roughly a 30-mile radius of Londonderry, which typically covers most of Southern New Hampshire and the Merrimack Valley. That includes showers in towns like Londonderry, Derry, Windham, Salem, Hudson, Pelham, Methuen, Lawrence, Andover, and North Andover, and sometimes out toward Haverhill, Lowell, Dracut, or Tewksbury, depending on the schedule. Events outside the core area may still be possible for an additional travel fee. If your shower is a bit farther out, send the town or venue, and it can be checked early.
FAQs
Showers often have staggered arrivals, especially if they’re mid-day and people are coming from different towns. Food can be timed so it’s ready close to the planned start, but if guests run late, boards and tables are designed to handle a gradual flow. If the whole timeline shifts (for example, gifts move back 30 minutes), it helps to know who will communicate that — host, planner, or venue contact. Timing is usually adjusted so food isn’t sitting out too early.
The cleanest approach is having food fully ready before gifts begin, so guests can grab what they want and settle in. During gifts, people usually don’t want to be standing in a line at the food table, so placement matters — it shouldn’t block sight lines or chair rows. If the room is tight, boards placed in two smaller spots can reduce mid-gift traffic. Dessert is often held until gifts are done, so it feels like a natural second phase.
It depends more on the room than the guest count. If the space has open wall space and a stable surface where guests can approach without bumping chairs, a grazing table can work even for a smaller group. If the room is seating-heavy and tight, boards are often a better fit because they’re easier to place and don’t require one large footprint. A quick description of the setup space usually makes the answer clear.
Outdoor showers are workable, but sun and wind can change timing and comfort quickly, especially earlier in the day. Shade or a covered patio makes a big difference, and it helps to plan an indoor backup spot if the weather turns. If the setup is on grass or an uneven patio, a cart needs extra care to stay stable. Timing is often planned closer to guest arrival, so food isn’t sitting in heat.
A seated luncheon shower usually has a clearer eating window, so portioning leans toward “everyone eats at once.” Open-house style showers are more about steady grazing over time, with guests coming and going in waves. A grazing table typically fits the open-house flow well, while boards can support a seated setup as a side spread. Sharing the expected length of the shower and whether guests will be seated helps portioning decisions.
Yes, but timing matters. Cake and cupcakes usually happen as one moment (often right before or after gifts), while a dessert cart works better as a later “grab something sweet when you feel like it” option. It also helps keep sweets out of the kitchen work zone if the shower is at home. Planning it for after gifts or after the main eating window tends to feel the most natural.
Roaming cannoli works best once the room is back in mingling mode — after gifts or after a seated portion ends. It needs clear walking lanes, so it’s hardest in tight living rooms with chairs packed in. In function rooms or larger homes, it’s usually easier because there’s more space to circulate. Timing is set so it doesn’t compete with speeches, games, or gift opening.
The basics go a long way: where setup will happen, whether there are stairs, how close parking is, and when the space is available for vendors to arrive. In restaurants or function rooms, load-in windows and which door to use are the big ones. In homes, narrow hallways, tight staircases, or a backyard-only access path can affect setup timing. A quick note from the host usually covers it.
