In Hungary, where my husband András, our kids, and I travel to visit family each summer, a gathering—planned or impromptu—centers around a giant snacking board crowded with everything under the sun: sausages, Trappist cheeses, and loads of wax peppers, plus snappy cucumbers and spring onions sometimes plucked straight from the soil. It’s not a tidy, orderly cheese plate with fanned slices of fruit or tidy piles of berries. It is pure chaos, heft, and audacity—and endless in its generosity. Nearby on a plate, or sometimes still tucked in a bread bag, are stacks of buttered bread to pile it all on, plus eggs, mustard, sauerkraut, and dozens of kinds of pickles. The idea: guests can eat as little (or more likely as much) as they want in the way they want, with zero formality expected.
The ethos of a Hungarian snacking tray, or hidegtál, is as advantageous for host as it is for guests. For starters, there is little forethought required; you can bake, hunt, gather, and practically fake your way to a beautiful spread on a single board or platter, and bring it to the table—under your favorite plum tree or in the shade of a simple porch—in one fell swoop. There’s no running about for plates and forks (fingers work), no fussing or pouring (drinks like beer, fizzy water, or soda are often plopped down in their original bottles). Your focus as host goes immediately and wholly to your company, conversation, and laughter. Guests of all ages, from crawlers to grandparents, can circle in and nibble at will.
Perhaps the best part of a proper snack tray in Hungary is that it’s an all-in-one meal. Teeming with proteins and veggies and even sweets—like poppy-flecked pastries, butter cookies, or flaky stuffed strudels—when it’s done, your duty as a host is, too. (Read more.)
The Last Judgment
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