planning congregational celebrations
Jan. 7th, 2006 10:45 pmOne of the people said that well, we'll solicit donations to cover some of those costs, and I pointed out that they could be looking for non-monetary donations that would produce a lot of bang for the (proverbial) buck. The conversation went something like this:
Me: Look, we've got over 1500 people in this congregation; I can't be the only one who knows how to cook large dinners.
Him: You've cooked large dinners?
Me: Well, the largest was for 100 people.
Him: You can cook for 100 people? What, in your kitchen?
Me: No, in a commercial kitchen and with helpers, thankyouverymuch. But it's not hard, and there may be people who've done a lot more of this sort of thing. You should try to find out.
Him: You can cook for 100 people?
Me: I have a feeling I know where this is going.
So ok, I would be willing to be head cook for a congregational dinner, if they can meet some not-unreasonable expectations. I seem to have suprised a lot of people by cooking the entree (only one dish! easy!) for a 60-person Shabbat dinner a year ago when other plans fell through. But really, the meme I want to plant is that you don't have to run everything through the bank account first; even if you spend a lot and then hit up benefactors to pay that expense, you aren't that far ahead (compared to just soliciting a donation) and you've burned some of that donor goodwill while ignoring people who would have given you donations of labor. I wonder if it will take.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-08 06:57 pm (UTC)(A poor teacher once told his wife: "If I were as rich as Rothschild, I would be richer than Rothschild." His wife asked: "How so?" He answered: "I would do a little teaching on the side.")