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3 Liters of Olive Oil, 11 Dozen Eggs, 9 Pounds of Butter...

2008_09_10-Ingredients.jpg...and a few other things. Can you guess what this pile is for?

 
 

2008_09_10-Ingredients2.jpgIf you said "wedding cakes" - you're right! I am through with shopping and ready to get started on the cakes for my wedding - now less than two weeks away. I already tested the ice cream I'll be making and that is well underway. The cakes are slightly more daunting, but not too much so, since I am trying to take a rather relaxed approach - as detailed in this post.

I have been carefully planning the cakes; I used the online recipe quantity calculator to multiply out my ingredients. I ended up with these dizzying amounts of eggs, butter, chocolate, olive oil, lemons and sugar - still very economical at Trader Joe's.

Have you ever made a giant batch of cake? Any good tips? Most of these cakes will be baked in regular-sized pans, but I am making just a couple in very large pans with an extra heating core to help them out. I am also baking them in my brand new oven that also happens to be at least 40 years old - and about half the size of a regular oven. Needless to say, there is an oven thermometer firmly ensconced in a place of honor. Wish me luck.

Watch for more on the cakes soon with recipes so you can bake along (if you're so inclined). And check out Jill and Raquel's wedding cakes for more inspiration as well.

Jill's cake
Raquel's cake

(Images: Faith Hopler)

Tags

Desserts for a Crowd, Inspiration, wedding, wedding cake, wedding food

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Comments (17)

I made your lemon olive oil cake last Friday -- it was superb!

However, I found it tricky to avoid getting that under-baked fall because of all the eggs. I tested it with a skewer which came out clean, but then it fell anyway, and I got a little bit of that visually unattractive compression on the inside.

But it was still delicious!

posted by mschatelaine on September 10th 2008 at 12:09pm
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Oh, and are you being coy about the ice cream flavour(s) you finally went with? Keeping us guessing?

posted by mschatelaine on September 10th 2008 at 12:10pm
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test

posted by Aaron on September 10th 2008 at 12:12pm
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This might be crazy -- but I've noticed that with really big pans, it's hard not to have the center dry out. Have you considered using square pans (so that you can combine multiple pans per layer?)

posted by clamme on September 10th 2008 at 12:19pm
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i'm about to embark on making my first wedding cake, too. the catch: it can't have dairy or eggs (bride is allergic). so i'm making at least one trial run, tiers and all-- good thing there are only 35 wedding guests! i guess my advice, having never made an actual wedding cake yet, is to make a trial run (or at least a partial trial run). that's my plan, anyway.

good luck. looking forward to seeing the results!

posted by vanessa.vichitvadakan on September 10th 2008 at 12:26pm
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Hey vanessa, I have a vegan chocolate cake recipe that is moist, delicious and SO EASY to make.
If you want it, I can give it to you!

posted by revolution9 on September 10th 2008 at 12:52pm
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Smitten Kitchen baked a wedding cake a while ago. She has tonnnnnnns of tips!

www.smittenkitchen.com

posted by snickitysnack on September 10th 2008 at 2:14pm
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i have a smaller-than-normal electric oven (probably from the '70s) that i've been using for about 4 years now, and a couple of my general rules are to set the temperature to 25 degrees less than called for, and bake for less time (or at least check earlier than i normally would). i also have a baking stone in there to help keep the temperature stable.

i've been to a wedding where the bride and groom made their own wedding cake (a gorgeous 3-tier carrot cake), and also had a dessert buffet whose contributors were bridal party members. i really appreciated that they invested their own time and effort into even one part of the meal - it added an intimacy and comfort to the celebration that i've missed at other weddings.

good luck!

posted by bokeh on September 10th 2008 at 2:47pm
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wow...DIY wedding cake. Good luck!

posted by reggiesoang on September 10th 2008 at 3:25pm
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I ditto on the bigger cake pans resulting in a drier finished product; I would also consider test baking once if you have time; I have found that for anything, but especially baking, taking one recipe and multiplying for a larger result does not always work-sometimes the sheer volume changes the needs of the recipe; or find someone online or local who could help.
best wishes and congrats!

posted by Rndrc on September 10th 2008 at 3:53pm
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hi revolution9,
thx for the offer! i have a recipe i'm committing to (and that i happen to looove) because it's too late to test run anything else, but i would love to see what ya got! email me at [my screen name]@ gmail.com if you get a sec.

the tricky part has been the frosting which i feel has a tendency to be awful, especially when butter and eggs aren't used. i'm going with a ganache made with a soy cream and earth balance. the trial run of it went well tonight. whew!

posted by vanessa.vichitvadakan on September 10th 2008 at 5:51pm
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Just a note on baking cakes in very large pans - it might be easier to bake each layer individually instead of making one cake and cutting it into layers. Even with a core heater, your cake runs the risk of crispy sides. Baking each layer ensures that your cake stays moist and you don't have to worry about cutting even layers. The overall time spent baking will still be the same.

Also, you can stack layers for storing by sprinkling granulated sugar on the tops and stacking (assuming there will be parchment on the bottoms). The sugar should prevent sticking.

Good luck! I can't wait to see the results!!!

posted by Oven Mitzie on September 10th 2008 at 7:17pm
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Oven Mitzie has an excellent point regarding the layers and storing them. Wilton (the cake pan manufacturers) offers decorating books which are kind of cheesy but offer lots of beginners' info on assembling and baking large cakes or layers. Good luck and congratulations!

posted by jgphotomom on September 10th 2008 at 7:47pm
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Baking can be very temperamental. I've always been told to be careful making oversized baking recipes (ie doubling or tripling) because the added volume can weigh down the batter and change the amount of air in it, and the saturation of liquids will be affected by the amount of stirring/beating and volume of ingredients you use which can change the chemical reactions that cause rising etc. Also, having a larger batch means having to beat the batter more which will release the gluten from the flour and that will change the texture, and especially with the lemon olive oil cake that has egg whites you run a really high risk of everything just falling. plus the problems mentioned by others about using larger pans.

It will take longer, but I think you will have more luck if you bake the cakes in the intended batch and pan sizes.

posted by roseslaw on September 10th 2008 at 9:04pm
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I wonder if bake even strips would help with the problem of dry edges in larger cakes?

http://www.shopbakersnook.com/m5_view_item.html?m5:item=3921

posted by mschatelaine on September 11th 2008 at 12:27am
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mmm dry edges and crispy cake sides! my favorite!

posted by Aaron on September 12th 2008 at 12:44pm
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Having recently done a wedding cake (Mid August, 3 tiers, 16" and under), I would avoid using a core. I find them to be an extra step.
Bake your layers individually (plus it will cut back on your nightly stress), add sime simple syrup when cool... and freeze. Don't forget to buy extra cake boards to flip things out of the pan on. It's a simple thing, but a big help.
The biggest thing is to leave yourself enough time to re-chill your cake when doing crumb coats and final icing coats. Adding extra time will ensure you have time for a tragedy or mishap to happen, shake it off, and have plenty of time to get things situated.

posted by sarahrae on September 14th 2008 at 1:55pm
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