I'm having an entire outdoor wedding (ceremony/reception/etc) and I just realized that I have no idea what to do with the Cake. The other food is being made fresh on site (BBQ style wedding). But How can I display my cake and keep it SAFE from bacteria? I was wondering if they rent anything like a chilled (we have access to electricity in the pavillion) display table, like a buffett table that runs refrigeration? I want to both DISPLAY and EAT (safely) the cake. The cake is a huge centerpeice to ANY wedding, and I don't like the suggestions I've heard from the bakers (Leave it in an SUV with the air conditioning running until cake cutting time) etc.
What are all you lovely ladies doing for your cake at your outdoor weddings?
Re: HELP! What do I do with the Cake?
Everything the light touches is my kingdom.
the baker I had called told me that the best idea he had seen was to just leave it in an SUV with the A/C on. He said other than that, being made of buttercream, it'd turn into a melty gooey and unstable mess. He advised to just keep it indoors somewhere until cake cutting time, but if we do that, I might as well just go with cupcakes as they are easier to transport, and if the cake's not going to be sitting there for dinner, then it doesn't really matter what it looks like.
We're arriving to decorate and set up and then doing photos aproximately 2 hours prior to the ceremony. We are having a short ceremony (hopefully under 35 minutes) and no cocktail hour moving straight to dinner for 1 to 1.5 hours, followed by cake cutting, so the cake would be in 80-90 degree weather hopefully for no more than 3-4 hours, but I'm still worried. Here in the north east, it is extremely humid in the summers.
Is there anyway you can have the cake delievered during the ceremony?
I really wouldn't be too worried about poisoning from a cake. Especially if it's not cheesecake. If anything I'd be more worried that the meat is going to be handled properly over getting food poisoning from cake.
I would really be more concerned about the icing than the cake itself. And I'd be most concerned that the icing will melt in that heat and your cake will fall more than I'd be concerned about bacteria.
It really depends on the temperature. If it's 80 or 90 degrees, I'd have it delivered just before the reception starts and keep it as a centerpiece outside as long as you can.
My friends were married in 95 degree heat several years ago. During toasts, someone noticed the cake was leaning and about to fall. Several groomsmen ran over, held it up, they cut it quickly, and it was whisked off to be cut. No one got salmonella - promise.
[QUOTE]Our wedding was entirely outside as well. It was in October, but it was around 80 degrees the day of the wedding. Our cake had buttercream icing and was delivered a couple of hours before the ceremony. It sat outside under the tent from the time it arrive until the reception was over with no melted icing or spoilage. To be honest, I never even gave it a thought that the cake would be outside in the heat and might spoil.
Posted by xBrynnx[/QUOTE]
<div>This is pretty much what happened with us too. It was outside for at least 5 hours, under the shade of the tent only, with temps in the mid-80's and it was fine. the icing didn't melt, it tasted fine. I think you are over-thinking this. </div>
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On the other hand my sister's cake sat out for several hours in warm temps, and although the buttercream did get a little bit melty and come colors ran a bit, no one got sick and the cake was delicious.