When Did Fast Food at Weddings Get So Fancy?
When Did Fast Food at Weddings Get So Fancy?
Dorothy ScarboroughMon, April 6, 2026 at 11:00 AM UTC
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When Did Fast Food at Weddings Get So Fancy?Courtesy of the Mark / Getty Images
It all started, as so many things do, with the middle school set. Fast food at formal events āgot very hot, hot, hot a few years back,ā says event planner Marcy Blum. āIt came out of the bar/bat mitzvah scene.ā Faced with the onerous task of menu selection, kids decided that steak tartare didnāt sound nearly as appealing as french fries and hot dogs.
Eventually the millennials caught on. At weddings from Santa Barbara to Savannah (and even, if you were really fancy, abroad), it became obligatory to bring out silver trays of Big Macs or In-N-Out ĀDouble-Doubles for the afterparty. Lately, though, couples have been moving past the novelty humor of the $777 Taco Bell wedding package and leveling up their late night snack options. Not that theyāre trading burgers for another round of filet mignon: Fast food staples remain the choice menu, except now those fries are coming from La Goulue, not Mickey Dās.
āIt may be comfort food, but all the ingredients are fresh and high-quality,ā says Alice Garretti, co-founder of Acquolina, the preferred caterer of fashion and art world parties. And at the same time that quality expectations are risingāeven for something just to satisfy the midnight munchiesāthe desire for less fuss has been filtering into the main reception dinner menu. āA number of years ago, smokes and foams and essences were in vogue,ā Garretti says. āNow people are steering away from anything that feels too fancy. They want the classics.ā
Bowls of tater tots overloaded with caviar are sure to delight.Kevork Djansezian - Getty Images
For a wedding at the New York Public Library, Acquolina, which is known for crafting extravagant edibles (like baked Alaskas that resemble the Sugar Plum Fairyās candy palace), served mini-meatballs. At other events Acquolina has done dim sum carts or little hot dogs topped with caviar.
The caviar, by the way, is key. āYouāre not just serving chicken nuggets, youāre doing Coqodaq,ā Blum says, referring to the Korean fried chicken restaurant known for serving wings with Ossetra and Beluga. Some couples go bigger still, bringing beloved institutions like Katzās Delicatessen to their weddings. āWe built a food truck for them,ā Blum recalls of one celebration, ābut Katzās brought the chefs and the rye bread.ā
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The Mark Hotel in New York has a Jean-Georges āHaute Dogā cart that can be rolled out for weddings and events. (You donāt have to be getting married at the Mark to book it.) The wieners are made with organic chicken and grass-fed beef and topped with condiments like the chefās signature kimchi relish. (For those who donāt have a party invite but are still hoping for a $6 bite, the original Haute Dog cart is generally parked outside the hotelās 77th Street entrance.)
But chicken nuggets seem to be most popular at the moment. At the wedding of Carlin Smith and Charlie Corcoran, which opens this section, the couple requested that La Goulue, the Manhattan bistro that recently opened an outpost in Southampton, make the snacks for their afterparty. To be clear, nuggets are not on the restaurantās regular menu. āFun food adds to the party ambience,ā says Blum.
She also points to another potential reason: GLP-1s. āThe reality is, people arenāt actually ordering less, they just donāt eat nearly as much.ā In that way fast food, particularly at an otherwise luxurious eventāand topped with caviarāis in itself a form of conspicuous consumption.
Top: For $5,000 and up, the Markās Haute Dog cart will serve franks at your reception.
This story appears in the April 2026 issue of Town & Country. SUBSCRIBE NOW
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