Food fashions come and go, and the “traditional”
white iced wedding cake is no exception. The
Brisbane Courier (Brisbane, Australia) of 23 June 1909 explained the
current wedding fads:
NEW FASHIONS IN THE WEDDING CAKE.
(“Daily Mail”)
The wedding cake, luscious and delicate of taste, with its
thick layer of almond paste, and its wonderful exterior covering of ornamental
sugar-icing wrought in various devices, is an institution in our midst,
honoured by long patronage, and full appreciation.
But even it is subject to the changes of fashion, and the way
in which it is dealt with under modern auspices make it play a less conspicuous
part in the wedding ceremonies of today than it did five and twenty years ago.
Its place on the buffet, though it is conspicuous, is not the
proud monument of the occasion it presented when the assembled guests sat down
together at the hospitable board, and the happy bride and her groom were faced
by the most important item of the feast.
The cutting of the cake in those days preceded the speeches
that were made. Now there are no speeches, save in some cases, if the briefly
uttered good wishes of the best man or one of the officiating clergy (by no
means the rule) can be dignified by the title, and the bride’s task of cutting
the cake is made the most perfunctory of ceremonies.
The strong hand of the newly made husband used to be required
to guide the timid bride’s usage of the specially provided knife, saw one side,
sharp steel the other, a knife that would cut through the outer crust of sugar
and cleave the cake beneath in the neatest manner. There were many tender sighs
and smiles through tears when the touching little ceremony was performed in
olden times.
But that which happens now is different. A clever cake-maker
invented the labour-saving device of sawing wedges out of the cake before the
wedding, and leaving the bride the easy task of pretending only to cut the
slices. Now he goes a step further on her behalf, and behold the cake is often
bound round with ribbons, which the bride slits across with the knife, thus
releasing the already cloven pieces in an instant and without anybody’s help.
When wedding cakes were round and low and dumpy, with a
modest-sized Temple of hymen placed on the top, instead of the tall and
imposing affairs they are now, the girls who fluttered round the blushing bride
coaxed her to pass the tiniest morsel of cake through the gleaming gold
circlet, her wedding ring, for thus treated the cake was considered and
absolute guide “when dreamed over” to the identity of the future husband.
One superstition however, kills another, and when the bride
refused to take her ring off because it was considered unlucky to do so her
maids were obliged to be contented without the mystic rite. And now they eat
the cake when it is handed round with the rest of the refreshments or refuse
it, if they are “on a diet,” or “putting on weight,” but never think of soiling
their pillow-slips by sleeping on it, with the avowed object of dreaming of
“him.” But all the same, the wedding cake remains a vital item of the bridal
feast, and each maker of the delightful comestible has his particular recipe,
the secret of which is known only to himself. The perfect wedding cake cannot
be built in a day, or even a week, as its maturity is half the charm, and time
only will impart this important feature of success. A very large cake will take
two years to mature, and a smaller one should not be cut into before some
months have elapsed. This may, perhaps, explain the fact why even the most
expensive private chef is not always successful in concocting a wedding cake. The
outside may have the specious appearance of a rich and inviting looking cake,
but instances have been known where the cake has turned out a disastrous
failure owing to the fact that it has been baked in an oven unsuitable for the
exigent requirements of the wedding cake, and that too little time is given to
its maturity. “Even the state of the weather may affect the baking of a wedding
cake,” remarked an expert, “and women would be surprised if they knew the
number of cakes that are not ‘passed’ by the wedding-cake maker because there
may be some minute flaw in the baking.
Brides to take a keen interest in the ornamentation of the
wedding cake often insist upon giving some individual tough in its decoration.
At some weddings the cake, in addition to its own decorations
of festoons of silver leaves and trails of sugar orange blossoms, is adorned
with a touch of colour in the form of pink roses or any flower that is
preferred by the bride. This, however, says the expert maker, is strictly
against the correct etiquette of the wedding cake decoration. Cut flowers, to
the superstitious, symbolize death, and should never be used as ornaments for
the bridal cake.
The filling of the boxes for sending away is generally
entrusted to the hands of the expert, who gives the following advice to the
amateur packer: “Cut a solid wedge of cake that will absolutely fill the box
right to the very top: wrap it first in a piece of tinfoil, and then in another
covering of white paper; tie it round with white satin ribbon, and insert it
securely in the box.”
The mistake so often made by the non-professional packer is
to cut a thin piece of cake which speedily crumbles into pieces when it comes
in contact with the official stamp.
“Those who wish to keep wedding cake must not enclose it in a
tin box as is so often the custom,” is another piece of advice given by an
expert, for then the cake invariably turns musty and unpleasant.
“The best way to preserve it is simply to wrap the cake in a
white cloth, and then to place it in a wooden box. In this way the cake will
keep well for almost any length of time.”
The
recipe for the day must be for a wedding cake of course, and I have chosen one
for you from the Bruce Herald (New
Zealand) of 16 November, 1895.
English Wedding Cake.
The season of weddings being with us, a recipe for genuine
English wedding cake is not amiss: One pound each of fresh butter, powdered
sugar, ground almonds and flour, 1 ½ pounds of mixed candied peel, 2 pounds of
currants, three-quarters of an ounce of mixed ground spice, 6 or 7 eggs and a
glass of rum or brandy. Work the butter to a cream. Then mix with it the sugar
and the spice, stirring it well together. Break the eggs and mix them one or
two at a time into the ingredients, beating them well together as you add each.
Then mix in the currants – well washed and dried – and the peel cut into fine
shreds, next the almonds, beating the whole well together, and lastly work in
the flour and pour in the spirit. Have ready a cake hoop well lined with
buttered paper and bake in a hot oven. The great secret is to work each
ingredient in thoroughly and separately. When the cake is quite cold, cover it
an inch or more thick with the following: Mix 1 pound 4 ounces of ground
almonds with not quite 2 pounds of the finest icing sugar, the raw whites of 7
or 8 eggs and a teaspoonful of essence of vanilla. Work it into a stiff dry
paste and use. The next day cover this again with a thick layer of royal icing
made by working together for 12 to 15 minutes the whites of three large or four
small eggs, with a teaspoonful of lemon juice and 1 pound 4 ounces of icing
sugar. When this is a smooth thick past, put it onto the cake with a broad
knife, dipping this into cold water as you work. Let this icing stand for a day
and then ornament with piping, fruit, flowers, etc.
4 comments:
When I was about 6 years old, my cousin got married, and my mother urged me to take a piece of wedding cake home so I could sleep on it and dream of my future husband. Maybe it's because she put it in a waxed paper bag that I had no dreams (that I remember) that night? I'm sure if I had asked my cousin to pass a little piece through her wedding ring, there would have been good dreams!
Very glad to know more about that custom.
Hi korenni - those old customs are fun, aren't they?
I have heard that superstition as well, korenni.
I've also heard that the happy couple were supposed to eat the year old cake at their first anniversary.
Ick.
The saving of the upper tier of the cake to eat at the first wedding anniversary is popular here in Oz too - or it used to be before the fashion for mud cakes etc etc as wedding cakes, rather than the 'traditional' fruit cake.
An alternative I have come across is saving it for the first child's christening (which I guess was more relevant in the days when that often co-incided with the first anniversary! )
Post a Comment