Stock Your Home Paper Food Boats Review – 100 Pack Verdict

Stock Your Home Medium Paper Food Boats (100 Pack) – 2 lb Disposable Red & White Checkered Trays, Eco-Friendly Serving Boats for Concessions, Nachos & Condiments (4.5" x 2.75")
Stock Your Home
- 2 Lb Value Pack: Comes with 100 red and white checkered paper trays with a maximum food capacity of 2 pounds. Measure 4.5” Bottom Length, 6.5” Top Length, 2.75” Bottom Width, 4.625” Top Width, 1.75” Height. Good for: hotdogs, corndogs, loaded fries.
- Quality Paper: Our red & white checkered paper food boats are a great alternative to plastic or foam takeout food containers. Made of premium paperboard, our vintage style checkered food trays are leak resistant - perfect for indoor & outdoor events.
- Grease Resistant: Keep your hands and clothes mess free! Our food boats have a leak-proof interior coating, so you can enjoy your food without worrying about spillage. A great choice for picnics, barbecues, carnival or circus themed birthday parties.
- Microwave Safe: Need to reheat your food? No problem - our paper food trays are microwavable, making it easy to heat up food and/or leftovers. Perfect for food stands, food trucks, fast food restaurants, concession stands, and more.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- 100 trays per pack delivers solid value for parties, cookouts, and food stands
- Leak-resistant coating kept saucy foods contained without soaking through
- Microwave safe — reheated leftovers directly in the tray without warping
- Stackable design saved cabinet space compared to rigid containers
- Writable surface came in handy for labeling orders at a backyard gathering
Cons
- 2 lb capacity feels tight for heartier servings like loaded nachos or double portions
- Very oily or wet foods can eventually saturate the bottom after 10-15 minutes
- Styles may vary between packs — the vintage checkered look isn't guaranteed
Quick Verdict
The Stock Your Home paper food boats are a reliable, budget-friendly option for anyone who needs disposable serving trays that don't fall apart the moment they meet sauce. After two weeks of real-world testing — loaded fries, sauced pulled pork, and reheated leftovers — these checkered trays held up well in most scenarios. At 100 per pack for a modest price, the per-unit cost is hard to beat. The only real limitations are the 2 lb capacity ceiling and occasional saturation with very wet foods. If you're stocking a concession stand, planning a cookout, or just want something sturdier than standard foam takeout containers, these paper food boats are worth grabbing.
What Is the Stock Your Home Paper Food Boats?
The Stock Your Home Medium Paper Food Boats are disposable serving trays made from premium paperboard with a red and white checkered finish. Each pack contains 100 trays rated for up to 2 pounds of food. They're designed as an eco-friendly alternative to foam or plastic takeout containers, targeting casual food service scenarios — backyard cookouts, birthday parties with carnival themes, food trucks, concession stands, and weeknight dinner service where you don't want to chase a plate around the table with a toddler.

At 4.5" bottom length and 6.5" top length, with a 1.75" height, they're compact enough for single servings but wide enough at the opening to accommodate bulkier items like loaded fries or a hotdog laid horizontally. The trays arrive flat and stack cleanly, which surprised me — I expected a mess of crumpled paperboard, but they slotted into my kitchen drawer without protest.
Key Features
- 100 trays per pack — solid value for high-volume entertaining or food service
- Leak-proof interior coating keeps sauce and grease from soaking through
- Microwave safe for reheating directly in the tray without warping
- Writable surface for labeling orders or tracking portions
- Premium paperboard construction — eco-friendlier than foam or plastic
- Compact 2 lb capacity ideal for single servings and concession portions
- Stackable design saves cabinet and counter space
Hands-On Review
I brought these out for a backyard cookout in late August. The setting was low-pressure — burgers, hotdogs, a tray of loaded fries slathered in nacho cheese, and some BBQ pulled pork that was saucier than I bargained for. I wasn't gentle with the paper food boats. By the end of the night, I'd handed out maybe 40 trays, and I watched closely for failures.

What I noticed first: the leak resistance is genuinely good for this price tier. The pulled pork tray took on a generous pour of Carolina-style sauce and sat on a folding table in 80°F heat for about 20 minutes before anyone grabbed it. No seepage. The loaded fries were the same — cheese and jalapeño oil pooling at the bottom, still contained. I was skeptical heading in, thinking these were glorified paper cups, but the coating does its job.

The microwave test came a few days later. I reheated leftover fried chicken and collard greens directly in a tray — no plate, no transfer. Two minutes on high, and the paperboard held its shape. It didn't warp or get soft the way cheap paper sometimes does. That was a small relief since I hate hunting for plates when I'm heating up quick lunches.
Where the paper food boats showed their limits: the nacho cheese tray, after about 15 minutes of sitting with a warm, wet heap of chips and cheese, started to feel floppy at the bottom. Not leaking, but noticeably softer. If you're serving at a slow-paced event where food sits for extended periods, that's worth keeping in mind. For a standard party where food disappears in 10 minutes, it's a non-issue.
Who Should Buy It?
The Stock Your Home paper food boats work best for:
- Backyard cookout hosts who want disposable trays that look nicer than foam and don't fall apart with sauce
- Food stand and concession operators needing affordable, writable, stackable trays for high-volume service
- Parents with young kids who benefit from a tray that's easy to hold and toss afterward — no chasing ceramic plates across the patio
- Carnival or circus-themed party planners drawn to the vintage checkered aesthetic
- Food trucks and fast-casual setups where quick service and easy cleanup matter more than reusable dishware
Skip these if you're serving multi-course meals where plates of food will sit for 20+ minutes, or if you need trays that handle more than 2 pounds of dense, wet food without any flex. They're single-serving trays, not platters — and treating them as platters will disappoint you.
Alternatives Worth Considering
If the Stock Your Home trays don't quite fit your use case, here are two alternatives worth evaluating:
- Dart Container Foam Hinged-Lid Containers — a better choice if you need to transport whole meals or heavier fare. They offer more structural rigidity but lack the writable surface and vintage aesthetic of the checkered boats.
- Hefty Mini Roasters Paper Serving Pans — a closer match for smaller portions but with a more modern unbleached paper look. They stack well and are similarly leak-resistant, though they typically come in smaller pack sizes at a higher per-unit price.
FAQ
The trays are rated for up to 2 pounds of food. In practice, they're best for single-serving portions like hotdogs, corndogs, loaded fries, nachos, or small wings. Trying to pile on double portions often causes spillage.
Final Verdict
After two weeks with the Stock Your Home paper food boats, I'm comfortable saying they're a dependable, affordable option for casual serving needs. The leak-resistant coating and microwave safety are exactly as advertised — not remarkable, but consistent. The 2 lb capacity is real, and pushing past it creates problems. At 100 trays per pack, the value is solid for parties, cookouts, and food-service contexts where you need something disposable that doesn't feel cheap. The writable surface and stackable design are small touches that actually matter in practice. If you need trays for a backyard gathering or a concession setup, pick up a pack and see how they perform — most users will find them more than adequate.