Injera — Ethiopian Catering Landing Page Template
The Injera template is a modular card-grid landing page designed for Ethiopian catering services. It combines a birds-eye feast illustration header, hover-expanding dish cards, parchment-style testimonial cards, and a sticky "Plan Your Feast" call-to-action. The result is a sensory-rich, click-through page that moves event planners from curious to convinced before they reach the bottom.
by Rocket studio
Quick summary
This is a single-page, click-through catering landing page built around communal Ethiopian food culture. The template uses a modular card grid, bold Neo-Retro illustration, and a warm spice-inspired palette to guide office managers, couples, and nonprofit directors toward one action: submitting a catering inquiry.
Who this template is for
This template is designed for Ethiopian catering businesses that serve corporate and event clients. It works especially well for operators who want their page to feel as generous as the food they serve.
- Office managers planning cultural appreciation lunches for 50 or more guests
- Couples designing wedding receptions built around communal, shared dining
- Nonprofit directors booking catering for fundraising galas with large guest counts
What problem this template solves
Most catering pages feel cold. They list a menu, post a phone number, and stop there. Ethiopian food deserves better. Sharing injera from a communal plate is an act of warmth and connection, and your landing page should say the same. This template closes the gap between dry logistics and a genuine invitation.
- Visitors leave generic catering pages without understanding what makes the experience different
- Event planners need to feel the food before they can sell the idea to their clients
- A page without visual momentum loses the inquiry before the scroll is finished
What you get with this template
You get a fully structured, ready-to-customize landing page with every section already planned. The layout moves visitors from first impression to click-through without requiring a form on the page.
- A full-viewport header illustration of a communal injera platter with a floating call-to-action card
- A modular dish grid mixing food cards, parchment testimonial cards, and vintage halftone event photos
- Three event-tier cards covering office lunch, wedding reception, and gala scale with guest counts and pull-quotes
- A final full-width "Tell Us the Date" click-through card and an ultra-minimal footer
Feature list
This template is built with specific visual and functional components that reflect the communal tradition of Ethiopian dining.
Birds-Eye Feast Illustration Header
The header fills the full viewport with a retro Ethiopian modernist illustration. Hands reach in from every edge, tearing pieces of injera together. The headline "We Bring the Feast" appears in hand-lettered type, and a sticky "Plan Your Feast" button follows the visitor on scroll.
Hover-Expanding Dish Cards
Each food card in the grid expands on hover to reveal a close-up illustration, an ingredient story, and a spice-heat indicator. Dishes like doro wat are presented with the spices, garlic, onions, and peppers that make them distinctive. Cards carry a secondary "See This Menu" call-to-action linking to specific package pages.
Parchment Testimonial Cards
Testimonial cards are styled as handwritten notes on parchment. They sit inside the dish grid, making social proof feel personal rather than corporate. Testimonials highlight the atmosphere and the experience past guests remember most.
Halftone Event Photo Cards
Event photo cards use a vintage halftone filter that matches the Neo-Retro aesthetic. They show past events with real guest counts and pull-quotes, making the scale of the catering operation tangible to a first-time visitor.
Three-Tier Event Scale Section
Three cards cover the core event types: office cultural lunch, wedding reception, and large-scale gala. Each card shows capacity, menu format, and a short pull-quote, allowing event planners to quickly identify the right offering for their occasion.
Full-Width Final Call-to-Action Card
The page closes with a single full-width card reading "Tell Us the Date." There is no form on this page. The card clicks through to the catering inquiry page, keeping the landing page focused and friction-free.
Page sections overview
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Hero Illustration Header | Establish feast atmosphere and anchor sticky call to action |
| Dish Grid Mosaic | Showcase food, social proof, and event photos |
| Event Tier Cards | Match service scale to each visitor type |
| Final call to action Card | Drive click-through to catering inquiry page |
| Ultra-Minimal Footer | Close page without visual distraction |
Design & branding system
The visual identity follows a Neo-Retro Ethiopian Modernist direction. The palette is drawn from the spices and textures of Ethiopia itself, making every color choice feel grounded in culture rather than trend.
- Parchment white (#F5EFE0) base with clay (#C4956A) card borders and teff brown (#3B2316) body text
- Turmeric gold (#E2A832) highlights pricing and calls-to-action; smoked paprika (#8B3A2A) activates on hover
- Fraunces serif for display headings; DM Sans for body text; geometric Habesha textile patterns woven into card borders and illustration details
Mobile & speed optimization
The template is designed desktop-first for event planners working at a desk, and it carries full mobile support for on-the-go decision-making.
- CSS-driven hover animations and scroll-linked parallax keep the hero illustration responsive across screen sizes
- Server components handle the static card grid, keeping page load light without sacrificing the richness of the visual content
- Sticky call-to-action button remains accessible at every scroll position on both desktop and mobile viewports
How this template helps you convert
The page is structured as a sensory journey. By the time a visitor reaches the final card, they are not evaluating catering options; they are already planning the table.
- The hero illustration creates immediate emotional buy-in through communal imagery and a clear "Plan Your Feast" call-to-action above the fold.
- The dish grid builds appetite and trust together, mixing delicious food cards with testimonial notes and real event photos showing satisfied guests.
- The event-tier section and final click-through card remove decision friction by matching scale to need and offering one clear next step.
Other information about this template
This template is grounded in the cultural story of injera and the communal way of eating that makes Ethiopian dining distinctive. Injera is a traditional Ethiopian flatbread made primarily from teff flour, a nutrient-rich grain. Teff is a good source of protein, making injera an excellent option for vegan and vegetarian guests. The fermentation process gives injera its distinctive spongy texture and characteristic holes that soak up stews and sauces.
Ethiopian food is usually characterized as spicy curries or stews, called Wat, made from vegetables and meats served on injera, which acts as both a plate and a utensil. The act of breaking off a piece of injera and offering it to another person is considered a gesture of friendship and hospitality in Ethiopian culture. Ethiopian cuisine is celebrated for its rich flavors, often enhanced by the traditional spice mix called berbere, built from berbere red peppers, garlic, onions, and warming spices.
The injera communal feast Ethiopian catering landing page template is designed specifically for promoting events rooted in Ethiopian food culture. The color palette uses berbere red and turmeric gold in the traditional way, evoking the warmth of Addis Ababa. The template content is ready to adapt and can support a blog link, additional menu pages, or a broader event catering site.
- The template is fully structured and ready to customize with your own menu, dishes, and guest capacity details
- The design uses communal dining imagery and cultural storytelling to add context beyond a standard catering menu
- Teff flour-based injera, doro wat, misir wot, and other traditional Ethiopian dishes are referenced throughout the card layout
- The page is considered a click-through design, meaning no form lives here; all inquiry traffic flows to a dedicated page




Theme
Neo-Retro
Creative direction
Immersive Visual
Color system
Warm Stone
Style
Card Grid (Modular)
Direction
Click-Through
Page Sections
Full-viewport Feast Illustration Header
Hover-expanding Dish Card Grid
Parchment Testimonial Cards
Three-tier Event Scale Section
Halftone Event Photo Cards
Click-through Final Call to Action Card
Related questions
What type of catering business is this template built for?
Does this template include a contact form or booking form?
Can I update the menu items and event tiers shown on the page?
Is Ethiopian food explained for guests who are experiencing it for the first time?
What screen sizes does this template support?