T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2691.1 | I know someone who does them | CSC32::R_GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Wed Oct 24 1990 15:03 | 8 |
| Would you be looking for the recipe... or for a bakery/someone who
makes that style cake.
I have the name of someone (not with me) who lives in Boston and does
make the "traditional" cakes. I can furnish the info if you'd like!?
Bob G.
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2691.2 | | CURIE::PJEFFRIES | | Thu Oct 25 1990 11:02 | 16 |
| I think that you are refering to is "grooms cake" which used to be given
out in little white boxes at the reception. This is usually baked in
sheet cake form frosted and then boxed. To make a wedding cake of the
dark fruit cake could end up with a real problem, one because of the
weight, and two because of the dark moisture seeping through the white
frosting. This would depend on the size of the cake. A small one might
work out ok.
This is also a very expensive cake to bake. When I bake wedding cakes,
I usually charge $1.25 per slice for an ordinary white, yellow or
chocolate cake. A fruit cake would probably cost out at around $3.00
per slice. That could be why bakeries don't offer fruit cake. Also to
try to bake a large tier for the bottom could be a bit of a problem
because if its bigger than 8" it should be baked in an angel food cake
pan or it won't be done in the middle. Fruit cake needs a long time in
a slow oven.
I have baked a lot of fruit cakes, if you want more info send mail.
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2691.3 | | TLE::EIKENBERRY | A goal is a dream with a deadline | Fri Oct 26 1990 10:17 | 11 |
| > per slice. That could be why bakeries don't offer fruit cake. Also to
> try to bake a large tier for the bottom could be a bit of a problem
> because if its bigger than 8" it should be baked in an angel food cake
> pan or it won't be done in the middle. Fruit cake needs a long time in
Are you saying that any cake that is larger than 8" would need to be baked
in an angel food cake pan, or just fruit cakes? (I've done 12" x 3" round
standard yellow cakes, without any special pans, so I'm curious.)
--Sharon
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2691.4 | | CURIE::PJEFFRIES | | Fri Oct 26 1990 11:21 | 4 |
| I was refering to fruit cakes, and it's because of the long slow
cooking time. The outside would be completely dried out or burned by
the time the center was cooked. Most fruit cakes bake at 300 or 325
degrees for about 60 or 70 minutes, for a standard size.
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2691.5 | British wedding cake? | BROKE::THATTE | Nisha Thatte | Fri Oct 26 1990 13:18 | 8 |
|
Are you talking about the traditional British wedding cake? A heavy dry-ish
fruit cake with hard frosting that lasts a long time?
You might want to check British cook books. (or get someone to bring one back
from England -- that's where my wedding rehearsal cake came from :-) )
-- Nisha
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2691.6 | | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Mon Oct 29 1990 02:54 | 14 |
|
re .2 (and the last note). We in Britain have no tradition of a
"Groom's cake" - only of a multi-tier wedding cake made from a solid
fruit cake, topped with marzipan and iced with "Royal icing".
I have never heard of a "bleed through" problem - and the upper tier is
traitionally kept for use as a christening cake or as an anniversary
cake - so they last *years* when properly stored!
I have a recipe at home somewhere if nobody can find one (my
grandmother was a Master Confectioner - and for would be feminists
amongst the resadership this is a title given to both men and women)
/. Ian .\
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2691.7 | | CURIE::PJEFFRIES | | Mon Oct 29 1990 08:09 | 3 |
| If one frosts the cake with marzapan, there wouldn't be a "bleeding
through problem, but here in the States, most bakeries use a buttercream
frosting.
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2691.8 | Brits, eh? | CINAMN::MHOWARD | | Mon Oct 29 1990 17:02 | 8 |
| Thank you all for the information. My fiance and I decided to go to a
commercial bakery, and we ordered a carrot cake with white icing, as
close as we could get to the dark cake we were looking for. When I was
a child, I attended a wedding that had the dark fruitcake-like quality,
so the folks involved must have had English ancestry. I never knew
that before.
Carry on!
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2691.9 | Fanny Farmer Baking book | TYGON::WILDE | illegal possession of a GNU | Thu Nov 01 1990 16:20 | 6 |
| I seem to remember the traditional wedding cake (loaded with fruit, very
heavy, etc.) recipe for a three tiered cake was in the fanny farmer baking book.
If not there, it will surely be in my other 20 year old book. I will check
tonight.
D
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