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BrunchGreekKosher

Kosher Greek Menu for a Brunch

6–20 guests · late morning · casual

By Iona Whitfield, Senior Food EditorPublished 15 February 2026 · Last reviewed 1 May 2026

Overview

A kosher greek brunch is a specific brief with specific answers. Kosher catering requires not just the right ingredients but the separation of meat and dairy at the cooking and serving level. For a mixed-diet party, this usually means choosing either a meat menu or a dairy menu, not both. Combined with a greek approach, you get a menu that: mezze format; phyllo-wrapped parcels travel well.

What to Avoid

  • pork
  • shellfish
  • mixing meat and dairy
  • non-kosher-certified products

Menu Ideas

The following dishes from greek cooking work well for this combination:

  • spanakopitaNote: avoid pork and shellfish in preparation.
  • moussakaNaturally compatible with kosher requirements.
  • souvlakiNaturally compatible with kosher requirements.

Drinks Pairing

Mimosas, Bloody Marys, coffee, juice. For kosher guests, verify all drinks are compatible — particularly wines (some contain dairy-based fining agents) and cocktails with cream liqueurs.

Quantity Guide

For a brunch of 6–20 people: plan $15–$45 per head for food, which should comfortably cover a two-course meal or a substantial buffet. For exact piece counts, use the Portion Calculator.

Make-Ahead Notes

Greek food for a brunch responds well to advance preparation. I would schedule two cooking sessions: one 2–3 days before the event for any braises, sauces, or baked elements; one the morning of the event for final seasoning, garnishes, and anything that needs a fresh component.

Frequently Asked Questions

Other dietary options

All dietary options

Plan further

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