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Wedding menus with elegant floral design placed on a white plate, featuring personalised names and event details.

Elegant wedding menus with a colourful floral border, perfect for adding a personalised touch to your wedding table setting.

1) What to communicate (and why it matters)

Clarity is kind. Guests with allergies or dietary needs want confidence in their choices, and your caterer needs a simple way to confirm who’s eating what. A good menu strikes a balance: enough information to be useful, but not so much that it overwhelms the design.

Aim to cover three things:

  • Dietary suitability at a glance
    Use small icons or initials for vegetarian, vegan and gluten-free dishes (more on symbols below). If an item can be adapted—e.g., “can be made GF”—note that briefly.
  • plain-English allergen notes
    You don’t need to print a legal treatise. A short line such as “All dishes prepared in a kitchen handling common allergens” sets expectations, while asterisks or a QR code can point to specifics.
  • Children’s and special menus
    If you’re catering for children or a small group with bespoke meals, signpost them separately so parents and waiting staff can find them quickly.

Good to know: If you’re using a digital element for your wedding admin, a discreet QR code can link to a live allergen list, seating info or even your digital RSVP website. Guests can scan it for the fine detail while your printed card stays calm and elegant.

Wedding menu with elegant floral heart design, displayed on a white plate with gold trim and glassware on a beige table.

This wedding menu features a delicate floral heart motif, perfect for adding a refined touch to your reception table setting.

2) A clear, compact icon system for dietary requirements

Icons make dietary suitability obvious without adding long strings of text. Keep your set small, consistent and easy to understand.

Recommended core icons (UK weddings):

  • V or a leaf icon for Vegetarian
  • VE or a plant icon for Vegan
  • GF or a wheat-crossed icon for Gluten-free
  • Optional: DF for Dairy-free; NF for Nut-free (use only if genuinely applicable)

Design tips:

  • Use one style: line icons, not a mix of filled and outline. Keep sizes identical (typically 10–12pt).
  • Keep contrast high: icons should be legible at arm’s length; mid-grey or a single brand colour works well.
  • Place icons consistently: at the end of the dish name or below it on a separate, lighter line.
  • Provide a legend: at the bottom of the card or on the reverse—e.g., “V = Vegetarian · VE = Vegan · GF = Gluten-free”.
  • Don’t over-signal: if almost every dish is suitable for a diet, say that once in the legend rather than repeating an icon six times.

Example layout:

Wild mushroom arancini — truffle aioli (V)

Citrus-roasted salmon — fennel & caper dressing (GF)

Roasted squash risotto — sage, toasted seeds (VE, GF)

If you haven’t chosen a look yet, browse menu designs by style—try a romantic floral wedding menu, sleek modern layouts, pared-back minimal menus, characterful rustic designs or timeless classic options.

Wedding menus with botanical and butterfly border design displayed on a white plate with a brown rim, flat-lay view.

Elegant wedding menus featuring a botanical and butterfly motif, perfect for adding a natural touch to your table settings.

3) Allergen information: asterisks, full words or QR code?

There’s more than one correct approach. Choose the method that keeps information accurate and your design tidy.

Option A: Asterisks + footer list (best for most menus)

Use a discreet asterisk (*) after the dish name. Then add a small note at the bottom of the card with the meaning.

How it looks:

  • Cornish crab bruschetta*
  • Herb-crusted lamb**

Footer:

  • * contains crustaceans; ** contains mustard. Prepared in a kitchen handling all major allergens.

Pros: Short, neat, easy to scan.

Cons: You must keep the legend accurate to the final dish list.

Option B: Full allergen words inline (best for very small menus)

Write allergens in brackets after the dish.

Example:

Dark chocolate tart (milk, eggs, wheat)

Pros: No legend needed; helpful for buffet cards.

Cons: Can look busy; watch line lengths on narrow formats (e.g., DL).

Option C: QR code to full list (best for evolving menus)

Add a small QR code that links to a live menu page holding the full allergen matrix and any late changes.

Microcopy ideas:

  • “Full allergen details and adaptations: scan the code.”
  • “For ingredients and allergen info, please scan.”

Pros: Always up-to-date; keeps the print minimal.

Cons: Needs reliable signal at the venue; keep the QR small and unobtrusive.

Practical tip: Pair your printed card with a digital backup—your wedding website & RSVP is a handy home for the detailed allergen table (PDF or webpage). Guests with strict requirements will appreciate the extra layer of reassurance.

Tone that reassures without alarming

A short, calm note is enough. For example:

  • “Please speak to your server about allergens and adaptations.”
  • “Our kitchen handles all common allergens; cross-contamination is possible.”

Avoid heavy red warning triangles or all-caps. Clear text, light icons and consistent placement do the job better.

Where to put everything

  • After each dish: icons and asterisks
  • Footer: legend and a one-line disclaimer
  • Reverse or side two (if applicable): detailed notes (or pop the QR here)
  • Table plan/escort cards: if you’ve pre-selected meals, match notes to guest names quietly—initials or a tiny icon can help staff.

4) Children’s options: when to label separately

If more than a handful of children are attending—or you’ve agreed a simpler dish for teens—label these items distinctly so parents and servers can find them instantly. Three tidy approaches:

  • Dedicated subsection
    Add a small heading—“Children’s Menu”—with 1–2 choices beneath. Keep copy short and friendly.
  • Inline with icon
    Add a “Child” icon or “K” marker after the dish name where applicable.
  • Separate mini card
    Place a small tent card at each child’s setting listing their dish. This avoids cluttering the main menu and makes service smoother.

Design note: Pair your children’s section with a relaxed illustration or softer type, but keep the visual system consistent with the main card so the overall look remains cohesive.

5) Design choices that keep the card clean

  • Hierarchy first: Dish name in bold; short description on the next line in lighter weight; icons at the end.
  • Limit typestyles: Two weights of one font family are typically enough.
  • Use space: If your menu is long, consider a larger size (A5 or 5×7) or print one shared menu on thicker stock for each table.
  • Group icons: Place multiple icons together in round brackets—“(VE, GF)”—to save space.
  • Keep contrasts gentle: Black on white is crisp; if using colour, ensure enough contrast for legibility in evening light.
  • Consistency across the suite: Match icons and tone of voice to your other pieces—invites, place cards and orders of service—for a considered, joined-up feel. You can browse coordinating wedding invitation templates and then pick a matching menu design from the main wedding menu collection.
Frequently Asked Questions

FAQs: Dietary icons & allergen labelling for wedding menu cards

Below are concise answers you can apply straight away, whether you’re printing one menu per guest or one per table. Adapt to your caterer’s guidance and your venue’s policies.

Do I need to list every single allergen on the printed card?

Not necessarily. Many couples use asterisks and a concise footer note, with full details accessible via a QR code or at the bar. The goal is clarity without crowding.

Which dietary icons should I include?

Stick to a small core set—V (Vegetarian), VE (Vegan), GF (Gluten-free)—and add DF or NF only if helpful. Provide a legend at the bottom so there’s no guesswork.

Where should icons go?

Place them at the end of the dish name or on a light, secondary line below. Keep sizing and spacing consistent throughout the card.

Is a QR code appropriate for a formal wedding?

Yes—if it’s small and tidy. Put it in the footer or on the back, and label it politely (“Scan for full allergen details”). It keeps the front face elegant.

What’s the best way to handle “can be made GF/VE” dishes?

Use a simple note beneath the dish—e.g., “GF on request”—or state this once in the footer: “Many dishes can be adapted; please speak to your server.”

Should I print a separate children’s menu?

If you have more than a handful of children, a mini section (or individual tent cards) makes life easier for parents and waiting staff, and keeps the main menu clean.

Can I match the menu icons to my invitation style?

Absolutely. If you’ve chosen, say, a floral menu to echo your invites, keep icons simple and let the artwork lead. For a sleek look, opt for a modern or minimal template.

How can I make the menu easy for staff to use?

Consistency is key: same icon order, same placement, same legend across all tables. If guests pre-selected dishes, consider subtle initials or a micro-icon on place cards to assist service.

Next steps: Choose a design that suits your day, then add a simple legend, a handful of icons and—if helpful—a discreet QR code. You can start with the full range of wedding menu templates and coordinate them with your wedding invitations.

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