

Ana
Ana is a Southern stay-at-home mom of three who bakes the way most people breathe — constantly, naturally, without making a fuss about it. She shows up at new neighbors’ doors with a tin of cookies before the boxes are even unpacked, and she has never once come home from a potluck with anything left in her dish. She Brings Food is where she puts the recipes her family counts on and her neighbors keep asking for.
10 Potluck Recipes That Won’t Come Home in the Same Dish
I have a reputation. When I walk into a church supper, people look at my dish. When I sign up for the school potluck, people ask what I’m bringing. This isn’t bragging — it’s the result of years of showing up with food that gets eaten first while watching other dishes come home still full.
The secret isn’t complicated recipes. It’s recipes that taste great at room temperature, travel without falling apart, and make people come back for seconds.
The Potluck Winners
Church Potluck Casserole
The dish that built my reputation. Chicken, stuffing, cream sauce — feeds 20, travels in its pan, and the dish always comes home empty. A decade of potlucks and nobody is tired of it yet.
Block Party Baked Beans
Sweet, smoky, thick enough that the serving spoon stands up. Doubled for crowd size — because regular portions are an insult at a block party.
Potluck Deviled Eggs
Paprika, pickle relish, touch of mustard. I make 48 at a time in a deviled egg carrier and still run out before the main course hits the table.
Neighborhood Cookout Pie
The pie I bring to summer cookouts — travels well, slices clean, and disappears before the burgers are off the grill. My not-so-secret weapon at every block party since we moved here.
Chicken Spaghetti
Velveeta, Rotel, chicken, spaghetti. Church supper food that is objectively not fancy but is unarguably the first dish to empty. The crockpot version means zero oven juggling.
Baked Mac and Cheese
Three cheeses, golden bubbly crust. The mac and cheese that makes people whisper “who brought this?” at potlucks and then hunt you down to ask for the recipe.
Pasta Salad
Cold, colorful, and it gets better the longer it sits — which is perfect because potluck food always sits for an hour. Italian dressing, veggies, and deli meat. Make it the night before and don’t even think about it until serving time.
Seven Layer Salad
Lettuce, peas, bacon, cheese, eggs, onion, creamy dressing — assembled in a clear bowl so everyone can see the gorgeous layers. Retro Southern, yes. Delicious and photogenic, absolutely.
Broccoli Salad
Raw broccoli, crispy bacon, sweet raisins, sunflower seeds, mayo-vinegar dressing. The salad that converts people who say they don’t eat broccoli. I’ve witnessed the conversion happen in real time and it’s beautiful.
Potato Salad
Mustard-based, with pickle and egg. My mama’s recipe — not the heavy mayo kind. Holds up in summer heat, travels in a cooler, and tastes like the Fourth of July tastes in my memory.
Ana’s Potluck Tips
Pick food that’s good at room temp. It’ll sit an hour. If it needs to be hot, bring a crockpot.
Bring a serving spoon. Nobody ever has enough. Be the hero.
Label your dish. Tape your name to the bottom. I’ve lost three casserole dishes to potluck amnesia and I’m still bitter.
Frequently Asked Questions
What can I make the night before?
Everything except deviled eggs (fill morning-of so they don’t get watery). Salads and casseroles are all better the next day.
Safest potluck food in summer?
Pasta salad, baked beans, and broccoli salad hold up best. Watch mayo-heavy dishes without a cooler.
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Ana
Ana is a Southern stay-at-home mom of three who bakes the way most people breathe — constantly, naturally, without making a fuss about it. She shows up at new neighbors’ doors with a tin of cookies before the boxes are even unpacked, and she has never once come home from a potluck with anything left in her dish. She Brings Food is where she puts the recipes her family counts on and her neighbors keep asking for.















