Tips for homemade wedding cakes? Plan and `don’t go wild’
Published 5:45 am Tuesday, June 30, 2020
- This May 2018 photo shows a cake in New York. In these coronavirus times, some couples are making their own weddings cakes for their smaller, at-home weddings.
NEW YORK — Even in a pandemic, folks are getting married. And where there’s a wedding — even a small one in the backyard — there’s usually a cake.
Home bakers looking to make their own wedding cakes don’t need a fancy, multi-tiered tower. But how can they create something that rises above the ordinary?
First, don’t be overly ambitious, said Jocelyn Delk Adams, cookbook author and founder of the Grandbaby Cakes blog. People tend to put a lot of pressure on themselves when making wedding cakes.
“Don’t go too wild,” she cautioned. Make a practice cake or two so you feel prepared for the big day.
Preparation is the key, agreed baker Ron Ben-Israel, owner of Ron Ben-Israel Cakes in New York City.
“Prepare and simplify the process by writing down all of the different stages,” he said. “Separate out the pieces of the process, and write down what each will require.”
List the ingredients you will need and make sure you can find them all, since items like flour and baking powder might be in short supply.
Ben-Israel emphasizes the need to find your cake recipes, including fillings and icings, from a reliable source.
The good news is that cake layers can be baked and frozen, well wrapped, weeks in advance. Defrost the wrapped cakes in the fridge. Ben-Israel said it’s easier to assemble and decorate cakes straight from the fridge (not the freezer, because of possible condensation as they defrost).
Fillings and icings can be made days ahead. Remove them from the fridge and let them reach room temperature, then blend them again and spread at room temperature.
And shortcuts are OK, said Adams: “If you don’t feel like you are good technically at baking, don’t be afraid to doctor up a cake mix! There are so many ways you can make a cake mix feel more special.”
For example, crumb layer of frosting is an important technique of applying a very thin layer of frosting to the cake and allowing it to firm up before you apply the final, thicker layer. The first layer might pick up some crumbs, but then seals them in, so the subsequent icing layer won’t pull up more crumbs and mess up the clean look of the cake. This is important when you are frosting a chocolate cake with white frosting, for instance.
Single-tier cakes are simpler, and if you are looking to do more than one tier, Ben-Israel urged you to read up on how to structure a multi-layered cake. Check out videos on YouTube to learn the physics of it.
As for decoration, Ben-Israel and Adams both advised keeping it simple. Ben-Israel said you might skip the piping altogether, or if you do want to use a bag with pastry tips, “think of Keith Haring and cover the whole cake with doodles. Don’t go for straight lines.”
He also advocated for candies, sprinkles and edible flowers (not sprayed with anything). He suggested using multicolored candies to create a stained-glass-window effect.
If you are feeling extra-creative, Ben-Israel said, mix some food colors with a clear alcohol such as vodka, and paint them like water colors over the frosting.
One perk of baking a cake for a small wedding party: You can really think about the flavors that the couple loves.
“Your cake can reflect the personality of you and your fiancé in a way that might not have felt possible when you are hosting a big wedding and worrying about being a people-pleaser,” said Adams.
Erin Butler, director of volunteer services for City Harvest, a hunger-relief organization in New York, knows exactly what she wants for her cake when she gets married this summer to fiancé Ben Cohen.
“The first time Ben came to visit my family in Florida, I took him to get a Publix supermarket cake, which is totally reminiscent of my childhood,” she said. It was the cake her family bought for every celebratory occasion, and Butler and Cohen dug into Google forums, searching for the recipe.
“There are certain traditions that we are throwing away, but this Publix-inspired wedding cake feels like a real important piece of the puzzle in making our wedding feel special,” she said.
Adams also suggests thinking beyond cake.
“You actually don’t have to adhere to the traditions so much right now,” she said. “The tradition is really cutting the dessert together, so you could cut a pie together, if that’s what you like.”
Try to have fun with the process, she said, maybe making the cake together and creating that memory.
“It will make it taste sweeter — the fact that you created that cake or dessert together for your special day.”