Wedding catering guide

What to Serve at a Nigerian Wedding

A strong Nigerian wedding menu should feel generous, familiar to Nigerian guests, and easy enough for first-time guests to enjoy. Use this guide to build a balanced food brief before you ask Miliki Spot about wedding catering.

Last updated: May 21, 2026

Fast answer for wedding menu planning

  • Build the menu around a reliable centre: jollof rice, another rice option, one or two soups, a swallow option, grilled or peppered dishes, sides and pastries.
  • Use egusi, pounded yam, suya and puff puff as anchor dishes because they are recognisable and work well in an event menu.
  • Do not treat this as a fixed package. Final availability, setup, staff, guest count, minimum order and deposit details should be confirmed by email after Miliki Spot understands the event.
  • If guests include children, elders, non-Nigerian guests or people with allergies, mention that in the catering enquiry before the menu is finalised.

Menu shape

Start with the role each dish plays

A wedding menu becomes easier to plan when every dish has a job. That prevents a menu that is large but unbalanced.

Menu role Why it matters Miliki Spot examples to discuss Planning note
Rice base Rice is usually the safest crowd anchor because it is familiar, filling and easy to serve. Jollof rice, fried rice or special rice. Useful for mixed guest groups and guests new to Nigerian food.
Soup and swallow This gives the menu a more traditional Nigerian centre. Assorted egusi, efo riro, okra, pounded yam, amala or eba. Ask how it will be served and labelled so guests know the right pairing.
Grilled and peppered dishes These add aroma, spice and sharing energy to the table. Suya, asun or pepper soup. Good for evening food, buffet extras or guest favourites.
Sides and softeners Sides help guests build a plate that suits their appetite and comfort level. Plantain, moi moi, akara and salad-style accompaniments where available. Useful for younger guests and people who want a milder plate.
Sweet finishers Small sweet items help close the meal and work well for guests walking around. Puff puff. Ask whether these should be part of the buffet or served separately.

Guest mix

Plan for the people in the room, not only the dishes you love

Nigerian weddings often bring together relatives, friends, elders, children, colleagues and guests who may be trying Nigerian food for the first time. Your menu should give each group a clear route into the food.

For Nigerian guests who know the food

Make sure the menu includes recognisable favourites such as jollof rice, egusi, pounded yam, suya or puff puff. This keeps the wedding meal feeling culturally grounded.

For first-time guests

Include a route that does not require guests to understand soup and swallow straight away: rice, plantain, grilled items and pastries are easier entry points.

For families with dietary questions

Collect allergen and dietary notes early. Do not assume a dish is suitable from the name alone; ask Miliki Spot before the final menu is confirmed.

Before you enquire

What to send Miliki Spot before asking for a wedding catering quote

  1. Wedding date and rough service time.
  2. Venue postcode or area.
  3. Estimated guest count, clearly labelled as an estimate if not final.
  4. Whether you need food only, food plus setup, or food plus setup and staff.
  5. Priority dishes such as jollof rice, egusi, suya, pounded yam or puff puff.
  6. Dietary or allergen notes that need discussion.

Useful next pages

Related guides

Keep learning

Ready to order or enquire?

Ready to try Nigerian food or plan catering?

Order your favourites now, browse the full menu, or speak to Miliki Spot about wedding and event catering.