Taverna is a Greek catering booking landing page template built for food-driven events. It pairs a warm, sun-bleached Pastoral Calm aesthetic with a modular card grid that flips between raw preparation and finished feast moments. Event planners, Greek-American families, and office managers can browse service styles, explore menus, and reserve their feast through a focused three-step booking form.
by Rocket studio
Taverna is a single-page catering booking landing page template designed to showcase authentic Greek village-style food. The design leads with a Polaroid-collage hero, moves through a Before/After card grid, and closes with a sticky "Reserve Your Feast" call to action. Every section earns the booking before the form ever appears.
This template serves anyone who needs a high-converting restaurant landing page for a Greek catering business. The layout is built around three distinct buyer types, each with different motivations and browsing habits.
Generic catering websites bury the food under walls of text. Visitors leave before they feel anything. This landing page template solves that by letting the food do the talking first, building appetite through visuals before the form ever appears.
You get a complete, ready-to-customize restaurant landing page with every section pre-built and a visual identity fully defined. The template removes the need to design from scratch, saving time and keeping quality consistent.




Theme
Pastoral Calm
Creative direction
Before/After Reveal
Color system
Fire & Earth
Style
Card Grid (Modular)
Direction
Booking/Scheduling
Page Sections
Before/after Card Grid with Flip Reveal
Sticky Booking Bar and Three-step Form
Service Styles Bento Layout
Menu Preview with PDF Download
Polaroid Collage Hero Section
Event-specific Testimonials Row
Can I customize the colors and fonts in this template?
Does the template include the booking form and service style selector?
Is this template suitable for both weddings and corporate events?
Can the menu section display actual dishes and support a PDF download?
What makes this different from a generic restaurant website template?
This template includes purpose-built sections and interaction patterns designed to support catering bookings. Each feature exists to serve a specific buyer need identified in the brief.
Each card in the grid displays two states. One image shows the raw preparation: marble counters, a whole lamb before the fire, unbaked pastry. The other reveals the finished moment: carved platters, golden phyllo towers, guests reaching across a table. Scrolling through the grid takes visitors on a complete journey from ingredients to celebration.
After the second row of cards, a sticky bottom bar appears with the primary call to action. Tapping it opens a focused three-step form: event date and guest count first, then a service-style selector covering buffet spread, family-style platters, live carving station, and mezze grazing, then venue address and dietary notes. Form fields support details like name, event date, guest count, and event location.
Four service formats are displayed in a bento-style layout, each with capacity information. This section helps customers quickly match their event size and format to the right offering, reducing ambiguity and supporting faster bookings.
A dish-category preview section lets food lovers browse highlights like souvlaki, spanakopita, lamb chops, tzatziki, feta, and baklava before committing. A secondary call to action invites visitors to download a full PDF menu, giving cautious buyers a low-friction way to explore further.
Three event-specific quotes showcase real feedback from past clients, each including event type, guest count, and location. Placing reviews near the booking form puts social proof exactly where patrons are making decisions, which is when trust matters most.
The homepage opens with overlapping Polaroid-style image snapshots scattered at slight angles across the viewport. Each image feels found rather than styled, golden-lit and warm. A hand-lettered serif headline reads "We Bring the Village to You," setting the emotional tone immediately on the first screen.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Hero Polaroid Collage | Opens the page with warm, scrapbook-style food images and a bold serif headline |
| Before/After Card Grid | Guides visitors from raw prep to finished feast through flipping modular cards |
| Service Styles Bento | Displays four catering formats with capacity details in a sleek grid layout |
| Testimonials Row | Builds trust with event-specific client reviews near the booking decision point |
| Menu Preview Section | Showcases dish categories and supports a PDF download for cautious visitors |
| Sticky Booking Bar | Anchors the primary "Reserve Your Feast" call to action across the lower page |
| Footer Flow | Closes the landing page with contact details and brand links |
The visual identity follows a Pastoral Calm theme rooted in a Fire and Earth color system. The palette feels tactile and sun-touched, like a terracotta bowl of warm honey resting on a linen cloth outdoors. Every design choice supports the essence of an authentic Greek village table.
This template is built mobile-first, because event planners book on phones and families browse on tablets. The layout responds cleanly across every screen size without sacrificing the visual richness of the card grid.
This landing page is structured so that every section builds confidence before asking for action. The result is a booking flow that feels natural rather than pushy, and a restaurant website that works as hard as the kitchen does.
This template is designed to support a range of restaurant business needs beyond a single event type. It is well-suited for catering operators who want to boost their restaurant's online presence and launch quickly without building from scratch.