Wedding Cake
Wedding
Cakes: Looks Good, Taste Good
A wedding cake is a traditional luscious desert shared with
the guest
in a wedding feast after the ceremonial rite. It is also considered as
the centerpiece of the wedding banquet. It is usually large,
multi-layered, and with heavy icings as decoration. Miniature figurines
that represent the bride and groom more often put on top of the cake.
The tiered spire of a famous medieval church called St.
Bride's in
London, England gave the inspiration for the layered design of our
wedding cakes.
The wedding cake tradition originated back during the
medieval era. It
is required of for each one of the wedding guest to bring a petite
cake. These cakes would be stacked up and arranged in layers. These
stacks of cakes would ultimately become as one cake.
Our contemporary wedding cake is said to evolve from this
traditional
practice. In most all celebrations all over the world, sweets or
deserts are part of any feast. It is evident in records of the ancient
Roman that during wedding banquets sweets are being given away.
By tradition, it is a practice that this luscious desert was
thrown,
instead of being eaten, on the bride. As this is believed to surround
lots of fertility blessings for the newly weds. Fortunately, this odd
tradition changed, and the cake is now eaten as noticed during the
couple's romantic sharing of the first slice. This stands for the
formation of a new family.
Another custom in the ancient times is that the new wife
serves the
whole of the cake to the family of the groom. This symbolizes the
transfer of the bride's domestic labor to her husband's family.
To add up to the antique custom of the olden time is the
observance of
the practice that the bridesmaid place a slice of wedding cake
underneath her pillow while she sleeps on it, for reasons that her
would-be-husband will appear in her dream. Portion of the cake can also
be stock up and on the couple's first wedding anniversary or on the
occasion of the christening of their firstborn child.
These days people don't see the connection of the wedding
cake with
having plenty of offsprings. But instead the wedding cake has turn out
to be the first meal shared by the bride and groom. Today's couples do
the slicing before everyone and they feed each other. Supports that
both of them will provide each other for the rest of their lives
symbolize the cake cutting ceremony.
Here are among some of the fancy ideas that could be used in
a wedding cake as a sign of fertility:
· Succulent fruits and fresh flowers make an
attractive decoration.
· White and creamy cake is a reminder of an
Italian culture, while a fruit cake if more of a Greek practice.
· A memorable piece of cake topper that is very
significant in your life.
· Fondant icing, it has very smooth surface that
resembles simplicity and elegance.
· Pick a favorite cake in lieu of the traditional
white wedding cakes.
Wedding cakes are often viewed with its symbolic
value than the
enjoyment and pleasure of eating it. Today's cakes are no more the
plain white ones with boring frostings; instead these cakes can be
visual as well as a culinary showpiece. Lists of interesting cake icing
are described to suit the couple's palate.
Buttercream is a soft and velvety butter-based frosting that
can cover
the whole cake representing a traditional appearance. It comes in
different flavors like vanilla, chocolate, lemon, espresso, coconut, or
hazelnut. A buttercream-iced cake is required to be kept in a cold
place.
Royal Icing is used to make the other cake accessories such
as the
flowers and the other edible cake decorations. It becomes hard when it
dried up.
Marzipan is a sugary, soft paste prepared from ground almonds, sugar
and egg whites. It can be used beneath other icings or as a finishing
frosting itself. Colors can be added on it and shaped into flowers or
other decorative shapes, as a savory alternative to gum paste or sugar.
The wedding cake we are familiar with today had its
beginning several
hundred years ago, in a confection that celebrated the wedding ceremony
of Queen Victoria's daughter in 1859. The stacked and tiered like that
of a hat boxes. Wedding cake developed from there. As time passed by, a
lot of enhancement had been made which contributed to what it is today.
Wedding cakes these days are to a great extent more creative. It is
more of a personal expression of technique and come in an assortment of
figures, palate and decorations.
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