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As a full service, off-site kosher caterer, ZCater is always at your service. Whether your party is large or small, you can find the same level of service and dedication that characterizes each event ZCater caters. And, there's one thing you can always be sure of... the food is delicious and there is plenty of it!
Call one of our Event Coordinators at (888) 922 8371 to further discuss your upcoming event needs.
Kosher Event Catering
ZCater - a catering business (a division of Art of the Party) was established in Chino in 1985 and founded in New York City in 1965. ZCater is proud to be the preferred kosher caterer at many temples and numerous homes in Chino. ZCater can provide you with full service catering for any of your Chino special occasions. Whether you are hosting a special once-in-a-lifetime event like a bar/bat mitzvah in Chino or a wedding ZCater is here to help.
ZCater is available to cater your Chino events in your home, synagogue, park, museum, or anywhere else you'd like. We provide the expertise to make your next event truly memorable. ZCater consultants will sit down with you and help you determine your precise catering needs for your special occasion. We can supply you with professional servers, bartenders and all the help you'll require.
Our suggested menus are designed to show you how to best accommodate the necessities of your occasion with an array of choices in appetizers, satisfying salads, tantalizing main courses and delicious desserts. Our kosher and kosher-style catering menus have been expanded to include pastas and several authentic Italian and Mediterranean cuisines. By your request, using only kosher products and disposable cookware, we can create a delectable kosher menu for your upcoming Chino event.
To view our menu files and a list of Chino temples, please click on the following links.
We believe that flavor and food quality can exist in balance with religious observance. ZCater has worked to develop flavorful kosher cuisine that encompasses the standards of excellence.
We offer personalized and professional service with customized menus for individuals as well as large gatherings.
Please contact us at (888) ZCater1
Chino history:
Chino is a city in San Bernardino County, California, United States. It is located in the western end of the Riverside-San Bernardino Area and it is easily accessible via the Chino Valley (71) and Pomona (60) freeways.
Chino is bounded by Chino Hills to the west, unincorporated San Bernardino County (near Montclair) to the north, Ontario to the northeast, unincorporated San Bernardino County to the southeast, and unincorporated Riverside County to the south. The population was 67,168 at the 2000 census, but as of 2007 the population of Chino has grown to 82,830.
Chino and its surroundings have long been a center of agriculture and dairy farming, serving the considerable demands for milk products in Southern California and much of the southwestern United States. Chino’s rich agricultural history dates back to the Spanish land grant forming Rancho Santa Ana del Chino. The area specialized in orchard, row crops and dairy. Downtown Chino is home to satellite branches of the San Bernardino County Library and Chaffey Community College, the Chino Community Theatre, the Chino Boxing Club and a weekly Farmer's Market. In 2008 the City of Chino was awarded the prestigious "100 Best Communities for Youth" award for the second time in three years. Chino hosted shooting events for the 1984 Summer Olympics at the Prado Olympic Shooting Park in the Prado Regional Park. Two California state prisons for adults (California Institution for Men and California Institution for Women), as well as the Heman G. Stark Youth Correctional Facility, lie within the city limits.
The land grant on which the town was founded was called Rancho Santa Ana del Chino. Santa Ana is Spanish for Saint Anne, but the exact meaning of "Chino" has been explained in different ways. One explanation is that the "Chino," (curly-haired person or mixed-race person) was the chief of the local Native American village. The president of the Chino Valley Historical Society, drawing on US Civil War-era letters, designates the "curl" referenced in the toponym as that at the top of the grama grass that abounded in the valley.
Chino is located at 34°1′4″N 117°41′24″W / 34.01778°N 117.69°W / 34.01778; -117.69 (34.017765, -117.689990). According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 54.5 km² (21.1 mi²). 54.5 km² (21.0 mi²) of it is land and 0.05% is water.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_California