Caterer: Constellation Culinary Group
Venue: The Temple House in Miami Beach, Florida
Photographer: Claudia Amalia (@claudiaamaliaphotography)
Overview: In October 2024, Constellation catered a Día de los Muertos–themed Halloween celebration at Miami Beach’s Temple House. The client, a financial services company, wanted the event to encourage cross-team mingling, build informal connections and integrate culturally diverse teams into Miami’s community—while educating guests on Mexican traditions, which are a vital part of the city’s identity.
Menu Highlights: With chefs and attendants guiding each station, guests were encouraged to interact, ask questions and customize their meals. This participatory format naturally encouraged mingling, aligning with the client’s goal of building connections across teams. The show-stopping food stations included:
- Pâté & Rillette “Candles” Altar: Small pâté shooters disguised as candles melted with butter flames, served with crisps printed with portraits of iconic Mexican figures.
- Tartare & Aguachiles Bar: Guests poured vibrant watermelon, cucumber-mint or passionfruit aguachiles over tartares of salmon; shrimp and avocado; or nopales and hearts of palm.
- Guacamole & Tostada Station: Fresh guacamole mixed tableside in molcajetes, paired with bold toppings like wagyu and truffle; spicy tuna; and crema and caviar—plus chapulines (grasshoppers) for the adventurous.
- Vegetable Stand: A live tamale-making demonstration introduced guests to the tradition of masa spreading and folding, with varieties like black bean, mushroom humita and chayote with roasted peppers.
- Tacos & Moles: Authentic market-style service with clay pots of mole and fillings cooked in a large discada pan, including pumpkin mole rojo, chicken with pico de gallo and a hearty beef-chorizo mix.
- Desserts: Mexican chocolate mousse framed in gold chocolate, rice pudding wrapped in colorful paper, pan de muerto, horchata shooters, churros, paletas, tres leches cake and rumchata cheesecake.
Décor Details: Constellation partnered with Gilded Group Décor to deliver an altar-inspired, richly layered design that combined cultural symbolism with festivity. Lighting and sound from The Temple House elevated the energy, with the venue’s 360-degree projection mapping system displaying vivid Dia de Los Muertos- and Mexico-themed images.
Takeaway Tips for Planners: For planners considering their own Día de los Muertos or Halloween event, Constellation recommends:
- Design with intention
Partner with creative vendors to build ambiance rooted in cultural tradition. - Make food interactive
Live cooking and chef-led demos create education and entertainment in one. - Tell a story through flavor
Authentic dishes with heritage elevate the theme. - Think visually
Stations and dishes should double as décor and social content. - Encourage engagement
Staffed stations prompt conversation, mingling and cultural learning.
Have a candidate for Event Spotlight? Send an email to Sara Perez Webber (sara@cfe-news.com).


