History + Tradition + Modern Bride: the Cake!

Ask most any bride: her wedding cake, wreathed in hand-crafted sugar roses and sometimes worth as much as her wedding gown, is the ultimate vehicle for self-expression. Princess Diana’s five-foot tall cake, adorned with marzipan Windsor coats of arms, was so vital to the royal union that two copies were made, the extra serving as a stunt double in case of accidents. Modern cake designs can range from the fussily subtle (icing patterns that echo the embroidery on the bride’s dress, for instance) to the downright outrageous: cakes resembling favorite cycling paths, log cabins, iPods, snow plows, or Hawaiian volcanoes (that actually spew smoke). There is the very infamous full-size edible replica of the bride herself; another, the town square from “Back to the Future.”

(Photo courtesy of Caryn's Cakes)

The history of the nuptial pastry, though, is even stranger than these modern rituals suggests.  In ancient Rome, marriages were sealed when the groom smashed a barley cake over the bride’s head. (Luckily, tiaras were not fashionable then.) In medieval England, newlyweds smooched over a pile of buns, supposedly ensuring a prosperous future. Unmarried guests sometimes took home a little piece of cake to tuck under their pillow.

(not very pretty....)

Perhaps this was preferable to eating it. One early British recipe for “Bride’s Pye” mixed cockscombs, lamb testicles, sweetbreads, oysters and (mercifully) plenty of spices. Another version called for boiled calf’s feet.

By the mid sixteenth century, though, sugar was becoming plentiful in England. The more refined the sugar, the whiter it was. Pure white icing soon became a wedding cake staple. Not only did the color allude to the bride’s virginity, as Carol Wilson points out in her Gastronomica article “Wedding Cake: A Slice of History,” but the whiteness was “a status symbol, a display of the family’s wealth.” Later, tiered cakes, with their cement-like supports of decorative dried icing, also advertised affluence. Formal wedding cakes became bigger and more elaborate through the Victorian age. In 1947, when Queen Elizabeth II (then Princess Elizabeth) wed Prince Philip, the cake weighed 500 pounds.

It’s just dessert, right? It disappears with the guests. But today’s most famous cakes become immortal. Pieces of Queen Victoria’s 167-year-old wedding cake were on display at Windsor Castle in 2009, for instance.

And a slice of the 1871 wedding cake of her daughter, Princess Louise, was recently auctioned off at an antiques fair for $215.  It was a scandalous wedding: Louise married “a commoner".  But there was nothing common about the cake, which took three months to create.  Wrapped in parchment paper, the slice was stashed in a “cabinet of curiosity” for all these years. Its texture has been described as “firm.”

Seeing the Royal trend for over the top elaborate cakes.... I wonder what the Kate and Prince William's cake will look like? :) Just a few more days and then we will all know! 

 

Happy Planning!

Visit us at A Music City Event or call 615.727.3903

Never miss another update!

Subscribe to MCE Blog to have new tips, advice and Real Nashville Weddings sent directly to you.

And no, we never ever ever share your e-mail with anyone. Period