
Grab-and-go options also included Mason jars filled with Italian pasta salad.
Photo: Natalie Jenks/Orange Photography

Grilled corn on the cob with assorted toppings; roasted potato salad on chive sticks; watermelon cubes with feta and spinach; spinach salad with chopped eggs and microgreens in bacon cups; “hot dog” and “hamburger” macarons; and apple pie parfaits, by Windows Catering Company in Washington
Photo: Erika Rydberg for BizBash

Mac ’n’ cheese; chicken wings served with assorted sauces; kielbasas; Bavarian pretzels; and grilled chicken Caesar salad wraps, by the Garden at Studio Square NYC in New York
Photo: Nadia Chaudhury/BizBash

Gage turned shrimp and grits, a meal traditionally served on a plate, into hors d’ouevres by deep-frying the grits into patties and topping them with a single shrimp and remoulade sauce.
Photo: Erin Kelleher Photography

Buffet tables were set up throughout the three floors of venue with Southern fare such as cheddar cheese grits, barbecue beef brisket, and cornbread served in iron skillets.
Photo: Erin Kelleher Photography

Susan Gage served a beet and blood orange side salad in large clear standing bowls on each buffet table.
Photo: Erin Kelleher Photography

Gage took inspiration from the Lee Brothers cookbook, which the chefs spoke about the following day at a hosted luncheon, for her Vidalia onion tart with an herb pastry crust served on the buffet tables.
Photo: Erin Kelleher Photography

Tabasco onions and barbecue sauce accompanied the barbecue beef brisket.
Photo: Erin Kelleher Photography

In addition to buttered biscuits, the buffet tables held cornbread served in cast-iron skillets.
Photo: Erin Kelleher Photography

For the desserts, Willen kept it to quick bites that could be easily eaten while mingling. The menu included unusual treats such bourbon balls, incorporating one of the South's liquor staples.
Photo: Erin Kelleher Photography

The only dessert requiring more than one hand, yet still served in small portions, was butterscotch pots de créme topped with salted caramel and créme fraiche.
Photo: Erin Kelleher Photography

Salted-caramel brownies were the only dessert served for chocolate lovers.
Photo: Erin Kelleher Photography

The classic New Orleans praline—made with sugar, butter, and pecans—provided another easy-to-eat sweet.
Photo: Erin Kelleher Photography