People whose business is preparing and serving food for events like parties, weddings, and large gatherings.
From Old French 'cate' (food, provisions) plus -er (one who does). The modern catering industry grew with Victorian formal entertaining in the 1800s.
Professional caterers are masters of logistics and food safety—they must plan meals for hundreds while managing food temperatures, dietary restrictions, and equipment in unfamiliar kitchens, a skill set closer to military operations than home cooking.
Catering was historically feminized as 'service work,' creating wage and prestige gaps. Contemporary use often reflects persistent gendered labor divisions in hospitality.
Use without gendered assumptions. When discussing catering roles, acknowledge that all genders participate; avoid defaulting to 'she' or treating it as inherently gendered work.
["service professionals","hospitality staff"]
Women have built catering as a entrepreneurial sector, yet often receive less credit and capital than male-dominated restaurant ownership.
Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.