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Easy Outdoor-Entertaining Tips

Which vases to use or what to make for dessert? Follow these tricks for a flawless outdoor party

Easy Outdoor-Entertaining Tips
Deborah Jaffe
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For Any Outdoor 'Do
Make a table runner. Leftover wallpaper or wrapping paper works great and costs nothing.

Dress up outdoor chairs. Tie a colorful sash around the back and tuck a sprig of rosemary into the bow, suggests Los Angeles event planner Mindy Weiss.

Do some windproofing. To avoid chasing paper plates and napkins around the yard, weight them down with pretty rocks or shells. Wrap utensils in napkins and tie with paper twine. Keep the tablecloth secure by sandwiching each corner with a pair of mutually attracting magnets.

Make a one-bloom centerpiece. There’s no need for an expensive arrangement. Place a small colored vase with one bloom inside a larger hurricane lamp or clear glass vase.

Use herbs for a centerpiece. “Herbs in small glasses look fantastic,” says Los Angeles event planner Yifat Oren. “You can use clear or colored glass, everyday or vintage bottles, in the same or different shapes and heights. And you can do just a single herb in a glass — like rosemary, lavender, or thyme — or mix them.” Another idea, from Katie Brown, author of Katie Brown’s Outdoor Entertaining: Taking the Party Outside (Little, Brown, $30, www.amazon.com): Use pots of lavender as combination centerpiece, place card, and favor. Onto each pot, tie a tag that has a name card on one side and a recipe using the herb on the other.

Set up a lemonade stand, suggests Brown, to give guests something to do the minute they arrive and to help with hydration on hot afternoons. Stock it with glasses, an ice bucket, a vase of mint sprigs in water, and straws.

Freeze mint leaves in ice cubes to add to lemonade or water for a cool, refreshing zing. To make the cubes last longer outside the refrigerator, Brown suggests setting a bowl of ice inside a larger bowl filled with half ice and half water.

Make misters. On hot days, fill spray bottles with ice water so guests can mist themselves.

For a Barbecue
Set up the grill downwind of guests and away from the house and dining area to avoid getting smoked out.

Use a timer and a meat thermometer when grilling. Then, if you’re distracted, you won’t burn the food.

Make the main course grill-it-yourself. Get guests mingling — and lighten your load — by providing the fixings for kabobs or pizzas they can build and grill exactly to their liking.

Grill an easy dessert: Cinnamon-grilled peaches, courtesy of Steven Raichlen, author of The Barbecue! Bible (Workman, $20, www.amazon.com). Skewer quartered peaches with a cinnamon stick and a mint leaf. Baste with a mix of equal parts butter, brown sugar, and bourbon. Then grill, basting and turning once so the peaches are golden brown on both sides. Serve in martini glasses atop vanilla ice cream drizzled with some of the bourbon sauce. Garnish with mint sprigs.
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