Browsable party concepts, each with a built-in vote and just enough effort to start a
conversation. Filter by who's coming, group size, season, and the kind of night you want.
Everyone brings one Trader Joe's item under $15, blind to a category drawn on arrival — appetizer, dessert, wine, or wild card. Plate it all, taste it all, vote for the best find. The cheapest thing usually wins, and that's the joke.
AnyoneMedium groupAny seasonLow effort
Food & Cooking
Charcuterie Draft
Run it like a fantasy draft: each guest is assigned a slot — cheese, cured meat, carb, pickle/spread, wild card — and brings one excellent thing for it. Assemble one obscene board together. Chaos, but coordinated chaos.
AnyoneMedium groupAny seasonLow effort
Food & Cooking
Recipe Roulette
Everyone draws a course on arrival and cooks it on the spot from a shared pantry the host stocks. Half potluck, half cooking show. Vote for best dish and best disaster.
AnyoneMedium groupAny seasonMedium effort
Food & Cooking
One-Ingredient Night
The host names a single ingredient — citrus, chili, honey, anchovy — and every dish and drink must feature it, sweet or savory, however you like. Vote for the most surprising use. Constraints make people creative.
AnyoneMedium groupAny seasonMedium effort
Food & Cooking
Mystery Box Finale
The host hands out three "mystery" pantry items per guest; everyone improvises one shareable plate using all three plus the common table. A Chopped-style closer for the end of the night. Vote for best improvisation.
AnyoneMedium groupAny seasonMedium effort
Food & Cooking
Saturday Supper
A standing dinner on the same night every week or month — same table, low lift, open seat or two. The menu is whatever you can make without thinking; the point is that it simply happens, again and again, until it becomes the place your friendships live. The most powerful theme here is the one you repeat.
AnyoneMedium groupAny seasonLow effort
Food & Cooking
The Open Table
Radically low-lift recurring hosting: same night, open door, soup or pasta on the stove, come if you can. No RSVP anxiety, no menu negotiation, no performance. The casual dinner that actually happens beats the elaborate one that almost never does. This is hosting as a habit, not an event.
AnyoneLarge groupAny seasonLow effort
Food & Cooking
Comfort Food Confessional
Everyone brings the dish they make when nobody’s watching — the sad-desk noodles, the cereal-for-dinner ritual, the thing they’d never serve a guest. Plate it without shame and tell the story behind it. The least impressive food produces the most honest table.
Close friendsMedium groupAny seasonLow effort
A bespoke dinner-party concierge. Vote with conviction; bring something defensible.Ideas · Playbook