table setting for a mid-summer outdoor party

The Long-Table Hostess Gift Guide: Outdoor Dinner Parties Done Right

The hostess gift sits in a strange middle space. Bring nothing and you feel like a freeloader. Bring a bottle of wine and you’re one of nine people who brought wine. Bring something elaborate and you’ve overshot the assignment. The right hostess gift: small, specific, useful, gracefully presented, is one of those small social skills that takes a surprising amount of thought to land.

This guide is for the guest who shows up at a friend’s outdoor dinner party with something better than a bottle of pinot. Every recommendation we have for you is shelf-stable, beautifully packaged, and made by hand at our Maryland facility. Some of these are also great as the favors a host hands out at the end of the night — the kind of gesture that sends guests home remembering the evening rather than the cleanup.

string and lantern lights hanging in a tree

For the broader picture across all event favors, our guide to honey party favors covers wedding, shower, and corporate options together. This post focuses on the dinner-party scale: a long table outdoors, eight to fifteen guests, candles instead of overhead lights, and a host who actually cooked.

The Midsummer Tradition That Inspired This Post

The Nordic tradition of Midsummer’s Eve is what got us thinking about outdoor dinner party hospitality differently. Midsummer celebrations across Sweden, Denmark, and the Baltic countries center on long tables outdoors, fresh wildflowers, candles burning past midnight, and the unhurried meal that anchors the longest day of the year. The aesthetic is deliberately imperfect — mismatched chairs, garden flowers grabbed twenty minutes before guests arrive, food that’s simple but obviously made by hand. The point isn’t the photographs. It’s the time spent.

That ethos translates to any backyard summer dinner, garden lunch, or porch supper that runs late into the evening. The hostess gift that suits this kind of gathering is small, beautiful, useful, and grounded in something real — a jar of honey from a farm you can name, a candle that smells like the garden, a tea that’ll pair with breakfast the next morning. Anything that says “I noticed you put effort into this” without trying to compete with the host’s own work.

Picnic setup with wine glasses, bottles, and fruits on a blanket outdoors.

Hostess Gifts You Bring to the Door

This is the kind of gift you hand the host within thirty seconds of walking in. It is not so substantial that it requires explanation, it is not so casual that it disappears into a bag of stuff to put away later. The right hostess gift gets unwrapped, gets set somewhere visible on the counter, and gets remembered.

Under $30: The Standard Hostess Gift

  • A jar of varietal honey from our Eastern Shore honey collection ($18-$29). A single jar of Sourwood (thick with a caramel finish), Buckwheat (rich and malty), or Tupelo (smooth with a buttery finish) tells the host a small but specific story about where their gift came from. Pair with a wooden honey dipper for a complete hand-at-the-door gift.
  • A luxe soy candle ($35). Hand-poured, single-wick, burns cleanly through a long evening. The kind of candle the host lights the next time guests come over and remembers who brought it.
  • A honey lollipops variety bag ($29). Eight year-round flavors in a bag — Bourbon, Cinnamon, and Original Honey are the strongest picks for adult dinner-party hosts. Doubles as a stir-stick for after-dinner tea. Every year-round flavor is OU kosher certified.

Three jars of 'Bee Inspired' honey stacked on a marble surface with flowers and honeycomb.

$30 to $60: The Considerate Hostess Gift

  • The Honey Gift Set at $50. A curated set of varietal honeys arranged for tasting and everyday use. The right gift for a host who actually cooks, the kind of person who’ll use Buckwheat in a barbecue glaze and Sourwood on a cheese board the following weekend.
  • The Seasonal Honey Tasting Trio at $36. Three farm-grown seasonal honeys that reflect the season they were harvested (Spring, Summer, Autumn). The specific varietals rotate based on what we have available, but the seasonal logic holds every time. Three distinct bloom windows. Three noticeably different honeys. Strong pick for a host with a real interest in food sourcing.
  • The Petite gift sets at $48. The Petite Spring Awakening (rose-forward), Petite Summer Radiance (berry-forward), Petite Lavender Set, or Petite Nectar+Honey Set. Body care as a hostess gift signals that you noticed the host is the one doing all the work. This one is for them, not for the dinner party.
  • The Tea for Two Tower at $55. Two mini jars of tea (Raven Earl Grey and Bee’s Knees) paired with three mini jars of raw honey and a wooden honey dipper, all in one tower. The hostess gift for the friend whose home you’re at twice a month.

Bee-Inspired products including jars and a bag on a wooden surface with decorative elements.

$60 to $305: For the Host Hosting You Often

  • The Lavender Experience Set ($305) or Experience Love Gift Set ($303). A complete self care ritual all in one box. The gift for a host whose hospitality you’ve genuinely benefited from over the years.
  • Spring Awakening Experience Gift Set ($159). Our full sized rose garden body care set wrapped in a reusable canvas sack. Perfect for the host who deserves more than just one moment of relief for all their hard work.
  • The Farm to Body Sack ($116). Our lavender body care bundle also in a reusable canvas sack that the host will keep using long after the products are gone. Particularly meaningful for a host whose home you’ve spent a lot of evenings in.

Collection of body butter jars and containers with lavender flowers and ribbons on a light background

Take-Home Favors When You Are the Host

The other side of the dinner party equation: when you’re the one cooking. A small favor sent home with each guest extends the evening past the moment they walk out the door. This isn’t the wedding favor table, it’s smaller, more personal, and tied to whatever conversation happened over dinner. A few options that work for the dinner-party scale:

  • Honey body butter party favors ($12) in your pick of four scents. The Citrus Blossom, Rose Garden, Haute Cocoa, and Peace of Mind body butter favors each come in a single-serve jar with its own muslin bag, sold in 6-packs. The favor that lands most reliably across mixed dinner-party demographics.
  • Honey body scrub party favors at $12 in the same three scents. The Rose Garden with real dried rose petals visible in the jar — the most photogenic favor in our lineup. The Citrus Blossom with orange blossom and geranium for spring and summer parties. The Peace of Mind with Bulgarian lavender and citrus for spa-themed events. Each is a single-serve 2oz glass jar in a muslin drawstring bag, sold in 6-packs.
  • Bee’s Knees tea favors in 6-packs ($7.50ea) The right pick for a dinner party that ran late and ended over tea. Caffeine-free and naturally sweet, this is the tea that lands well with both committed tea drinkers and people who don’t usually drink tea.
  • Raven Earl Grey tea favors in 6-packs ($7.50ea). The morning-after favor. For an evening dinner party, sending guests home with a caffeinated breakfast tea for the next morning is the rare gesture that gets remembered and also gets used within twenty-four hours.
  • single honey party favor ($7.50ea). One 3oz jar of raw honey in a muslin drawstring bag, sold in 6-packs. Star K kosher certified. The classic.

Decorated outdoor table with floral arrangements and bottles labeled 'Bee Happy' in a garden setting.

    If You’re Hosting: The Honey-Forward Menu

    This guide is mostly about gifts, but if you’re the one putting the dinner together, a few honey-forward recipes integrate beautifully with the gifts your guests bring and the favors you send home. Each links to the full recipe in our recipes blog.

    Table setting with 'Bee Inspired' products and a name card on a lace tablecloth.

    How to Present a Hostess Gift

    The presentation does most of the work that distinguishes a thoughtful gift from a casual one. A few small choices that turn a good gift into a memorable one:

    Tie it with kitchen twine. A simple length of natural twine around a jar or a muslin bag instantly elevates the package. Skip ribbon as ribbon reads holiday or wedding. Twine reads garden dinner.

    Add a sprig of something. A single sprig of fresh rosemary, a small bundle of lavender, or a sprig of thyme tucked into the twine signals that you took an extra two minutes. For an outdoor summer dinner, the herb sprig also doubles as something the host can use the next morning.

    Hand it to the host directly, not to the kitchen counter. The act of handing it to the host with a small note about why you chose it (“I thought you’d like this Sourwood with cheese” or “the honey-and-tea pairing reminded me of how you make breakfast”) lands harder than dropping it on the counter while the host is finishing the cocktail.

    Time it right. Bring the gift at the moment of arrival, not later. A hostess gift handed at the door sets the tone for the evening. A hostess gift produced at the end of the meal feels like an afterthought.

    Bee Inspired Party Favor on dining table setting with plates, glasses, and a decorative bag on a floral tablecloth.

    Considerations Most Guests Don’t Plan For

    A few things worth thinking about when choosing a hostess gift for an outdoor dinner party.

    Match the formality. A long-table backyard dinner with sixteen people doesn’t want the same gift as an intimate four-person porch supper. The single jar of honey suits the larger casual gathering. The Petite gift sets suit the smaller, more intimate dinner where the host has clearly thought about every detail.

    Avoid duplicating the menu. If you know the host is serving cheese, a jar of honey works because it complements the meal. If you know the host is serving honey-glazed something, bringing more honey is redundant. When in doubt, body care or candles will never duplicate the menu.

    Vegan and dietary considerations. Honey is not vegan because it’s produced by bees. The body butter favors and lip products contain honey or beeswax. For vegan hosts, the tea favors and the candles are the inclusive picks from our lineup.

    Kosher hosts. All of our raw honey is Star K kosher certified. All year-round honey lollipop flavors plus the seasonal Apples and Honey are OU kosher certified. The seasonal Dark Chocolate Dipped lollipops are not kosher certified.

    The repeat-host scenario. If you’re at the same friend’s home several times a year, vary the gift across visits. The same Honey Gift Set every time becomes a running joke (or a slightly stale gesture). Rotating through honey, body care, candles, and tea keeps the gift feeling considered each time.

    Outdoor picnic table with food and drinks on a sunny day

    From Our Maryland Facility to Your Dinner Party

    Bee Inspired’s body care, candles, and gift sets are hand-mixed and packaged at our facility in Owings Mills, Maryland. Our honey comes from our own hives at Chesterhaven Beach Farm on Maryland’s Eastern Shore and from ethical beekeepers across the United States and internationally. Every product on this page is genuinely small-batch.

    For Maryland-based guests heading to a dinner party in Bethesda, Annapolis, the Eastern Shore, or anywhere in Baltimore proper: ordering a hostess gift from a local artisan brand gives the gift an immediate story. “This is from a farm on the Eastern Shore” is more intimate than “I picked this up at the wine store.”

    A portion of every purchase supports our Roots & Wings initiative, which directs funds toward bee conservation, environmental restoration, and youth programs in underserved communities. To date, the initiative has contributed over $340,000 to those causes.

    Start Your Hostess Gift Selection

    Browse our honey gifts collection for the full range of dinner-party-appropriate gifts organized by price, or explore our party favors collection if you’re hosting and looking for take-home favors. For a comprehensive overview across every gifting occasion, our honey gift guide covers Mother’s Day, Valentine’s Day, holiday gifting, and everything in between.

    Tag us @beeinspiredgoods on Instagram if you bring (or receive) one of these as a hostess gift. We love seeing how they land — especially the ones tied with kitchen twine and a sprig of garden rosemary.

    Table setting with 'Bee Inspired' body scrub party favors and bags on a sunset background.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What’s a good hostess gift for an outdoor dinner party?

    The strongest hostess gifts for outdoor dinner parties are small, beautiful, and useful: a single jar of varietal honey from our Eastern Shore collection, a hand-poured soy candle, or one of our Petite gift sets. The Honey Gift Set works particularly well for a host who actually cooks. For a friend whose home you’re at frequently, the Tea for Two Tower or the Lavender Experience Set steps it up without crossing into wedding-gift territory.

    How much should I spend on a hostess gift?

    For a casual backyard dinner with eight to twelve guests, $20 to $40 is the standard range. For a more intimate dinner where the host has clearly put significant work in, $40 to $75 lands well. For a longtime friend whose hospitality you’ve genuinely benefited from over the years, $75 to $100 acknowledges that without overshooting.

    Is honey a good hostess gift?

    Honey is one of the strongest hostess gift formats. It is shelf-stable so the host doesn’t feel pressure to use it immediately, beautiful in a glass jar, and traceable to a specific origin if you’re bringing single-varietal honey. Sourwood, Buckwheat, and Tupelo are the varietals most likely to surprise a host who only knows clover honey from the grocery store. Pair with a wooden honey dipper and a sprig of rosemary tied with kitchen twine for a complete hand-to-the-door gift.

    Can I give honey body care as a hostess gift?

    Yes, and body care is the gift that signals you noticed the host is the one doing all the work. Our Petite gift sets and the Lavender or Rose Garden Experience Sets all suit this role. The advantage of body care over an edible gift: it doesn’t compete with the menu the host has already planned.

    What’s a unique hostess gift that won’t feel generic?

    Skip the bottle of wine. Bring the Seasonal Honey Tasting Trio of farm-grown Maryland honeys, a Petite gift set tied with twine and a sprig of garden herbs, or a single rare honey varietal (Sourwood, Tupelo, or one of the seasonal farm honeys) the host has likely never tried. The story attached to the gift — where the bees were, when the harvest happened, what the honey tastes like — is the differentiator.

    Are Bee Inspired hostess gifts made in Maryland?

    Yes. Our body care, candles, and gift set assembly all happen at our facility in Owings Mills, Maryland. Our honey comes from our own hives at Chesterhaven Beach Farm on Maryland’s Eastern Shore and from ethical beekeepers across the United States and internationally. For Maryland-based dinner party guests, ordering from a local artisan brand gives the gift an immediate story.

    Outdoor setting with a long table set for a meal, featuring a gift guide for the long-table hostess from Beeinspiredgoods.com.


    Kara holding a hive frame in doorway of cabin

    About the Author

    Kara waxes about the bees, creates and tests recipes with her friend Joyce, and does her best to share what she’s learning about the bees, honey, ingredients we use and more. Read more about Kara