What Size Catering Pot Do I Need? South African People-to-Litres Guide
Quick Answer: For stews and rice, calculate 0.4–0.5 litres per person. A 20-litre catering pot serves 40–50 people; a 30-litre pot serves 60–75 people. The Bon Voyage NW series covers 8L to 50L — matching every South African catering volume from a school kitchen to a wedding of 200 people.
Buying a catering pot that is too small means running out of food mid-service. Buying one that is too large means food sitting in an oversized pot and burning on the bottom. This guide gives you the definitive South African catering pot sizing formula with a clear people-to-litres reference table.
The Basic Formula: Litres Per Person
As a rule of thumb for South African catering contexts:
- Stew (meat and vegetables): 0.4–0.5 litres per person. For 50 people, use a 20–25 litre pot.
- Pap (stiff maize porridge): 0.3 litres per person. Pap swells during cooking — start with about half the final volume of water. For 50 people, 15 litres is sufficient.
- Rice: 0.2–0.25 litres dry rice per person (rice expands roughly 3x). Use a wider pot rather than a taller one for even cooking.
- Soup or umngqusho: 0.5–0.6 litres per person for a main-sized serving.
South African Catering Pot Size Chart
| BV NW Size | Capacity | People (Stew) | People (Pap) | Price (ZAR) | Typical User |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NW8 | 8 L | 15–20 | 25–30 | ~R289 | Small spaza, crèche |
| NW10 | 10 L | 20–25 | 30–40 | ~R339 | Small kitchen, household events |
| NW14 | 14 L | 28–35 | 45–55 | ~R389 | Tavern, community kitchen |
| NW20 (🏆 Most popular) | 20 L | 40–50 | 65–80 | ~R489 | Stokvel, tavern, school |
| NW25 | 25 L | 50–62 | 80–100 | ~R549 | School feeding, corporate catering |
| NW30 | 30 L | 60–75 | 100–120 | ~R629 | Wedding, funeral |
| NW40 | 40 L | 80–100 | 130–160 | ~R779 | Large events, hospitals |
| NW50 | 50 L | 100–125 | 165–200 | ~R939 | Very large events, institutions |
How Many Pots Do You Need?
Most professional catering setups use multiple pots cooking simultaneously rather than a single very large pot. This gives flexibility — one pot for meat stew, one for vegetables or pap, one for rice. As a practical guide:
- Event of 50 people: 1x NW20 (stew) + 1x NW14 (pap or rice)
- Event of 100 people: 2x NW25 or 1x NW30 + 1x NW20 + 1x NW14
- Event of 200 people: 2x NW40 or 3x NW25 depending on menu
- Funeral (50–200 mourners with after-tears and unveiling): see our dedicated funeral catering pot guide — covers day-of meal, 7-day Setshele, 30-day Setlametlo, 1-year unveiling, and the buy-vs-rent ROI calculator.
Important Sizing Rules for Catering
- Fill to 70–80% capacity. Never fill a catering pot to the brim. You need space for boiling and stirring, and overfilled pots spill and burn.
- Allow for seconds. In South African catering contexts (funerals, stokvels, township events), guests often take second helpings. Build in a 20% buffer on top of your people count.
- Different dishes cook at different densities. Pap is denser than stew. The same 20L pot serves more people for pap than for a watery stew. Use the figures in the table above, not a one-size-fits-all formula.
Frequently Asked Questions
What size pot do I need to cook for 100 people?
An NW40 (40 litres) will serve 80–100 people for a standard meat stew. If you need more, use two NW25 pots simultaneously. For pap for 100 people, an NW30 is sufficient.
What size pot do I need to cook for 50 people?
An NW20 (20 litres) comfortably serves 40–50 people for a stew. If cooking pap as well, add an NW14 or NW10 for the pap separately.
What size pot do I need to cook for 30 people?
An NW14 (14 litres) is ideal for 28–35 people for a stew. For pap, an NW10 is sufficient.
What size pot do I need to cook pap for 50 people?
Pap for 50 people requires about 15 litres of capacity. An NW14 or NW20 is suitable. Remember: pap swells as it cooks, so start with about half the volume of water (7.5–10 litres) and add stiff maize meal gradually.
Can I use the BV NW catering pots on gas burners?
Yes. The BV NW aluminium catering pots work on gas, electric, and wood/coal fire stoves. They are not induction-compatible (aluminium is not magnetic). For high-volume outdoor catering on gas burners, they are the standard South African choice.