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Assembling a Wedding Cake

By:   Frances Crouter

If you're an experienced baker, making a wedding cake is well within your reach.

Start with the largest cake layer and tackle the base first. Finishing the bottom tier makes assembling the rest of the cake seem easy!

1. This wedding cake was created using a simple white cake filled with lime curd, a pineapple-rum filling, and coconut frosting.

2. With a long serrated knife, trim the "skin" off of the top and bottom of the cake layers. Trim the top of the cake to create a flat surface. (Wrap remaining cake rounds in plastic while you assemble one layer at a time.)

  • Start by looking down at the cake and your knife hand to make sure you're holding the knife blade level.
  • Crouch down to eye level with the cake, and turn the cake with one hand to score the outer edge and mark where you're going to make your cut.
  • (This is when cake turntables come in handy--but a cardboard cake round can be used as well.)

    3. Slice ("torte") the cake into 3/8"-thick to 1/2"-thick layers. The thicker the layers, the more rustic the look. Cutting a cake round into multiple thin layers requires more skill, more filling, and more time, but the look is very elegant and refined--think of a Dobos Torte (although those layers are actually baked individually).

    • Each cake round should yield 2-3 layers, depending upon how thickly you cut them, how full your pans were and how high the cake rose in the oven.
    • Special insulated baking strips are available that moderate a cake pan's temperature and help cakes bake evenly, without pronounced rounding in the center. Using these strips can help reduce the amount of cake you'll need to trim to get a flat surface.

      4. Before adding filling or frosting, brush each cake layer with simple syrup. Pay particular attention to the edges, as this is where the cake will begin to dry out.

        5. Spread a generous layer of filling on each cake layer. If you're using a soft filling, like mousse or whipped cream, pipe a ring of buttercream around the edge of the cake to contain the filling.

          6. Carefully stack your next cake layer on the frosted or filled bottom layer. Crouch down at eye level to be sure you've stacked the layers evenly. Brush the layer with syrup, and spread with filling.

            7. When you've added the top layer, brush it with syrup, and add a generous dollop of frosting. Don't worry about crumbs; you're going to spread this layer of frosting fairly thin and refrigerate the cake to create a "crumb coat" that will seal in the cake and fillings before you frost and decorate the cake. (This stage is also referred to as "masking the cake.")

              8. Refrigerate the cake for at least an hour, until the frosting is firm to the touch. Note: butter- and cream cheese-based frostings will firm up more than frostings made with shortening. If you're using whipped cream as a frosting, you can apply a thin layer of jam to help contain the crumbs. There's no need for the extra crumb coat.

              Frost the cake round to create a smooth, even coating.

                9. Refrigerate the finished cake, and repeat with the remaining tiers. The filled, frosted cake layers can be refrigerated for up to two days before the wedding without losing quality--but it's best to use a separate refrigerator so that the cake won't absorb strong smells from other foods in the fridge.

                Ready to stack and decorate the cake? See Decorating a Wedding Cake.

                  Comments
                  Bronwyn 
                  Jun. 30, 2009 8:33 pm
                  Keep in mind that if you are doing more than one tier, like the finished photo, you will need dowels and cardboard or plastic cake rounds, otherwise your cake will collapse!
                   
                  grammaonthego 
                  Jul. 6, 2009 3:51 pm
                  The website for Buttercream.com states that their wedding cake frostings contain no shortening...I'd like a recipe of that type...Any suggestions??
                   
                  Jul. 7, 2009 12:02 pm
                  Hi grammaonthego. You can always use all butter in your frostings—the flavor is much better, in my opinion. But butter melts at body temperature (which is what makes all-butter frostings literally melt in your mouth) so it can get really soft in hot weather. If you live in a warm climate and are making a cake for an outdoor wedding, a shortening- and butter-based frosting will hold up better over several hours. But if that's not a concern, I'm a fan of the Easiest, Most Delicious Meringue Buttercream recipe on our site. You can also find more recipes by searching our Frostings and Fillings recipes, or you can do an ingredient search: type in "butter" as an ingredient you want, "shortening" as an ingredient you don't want, and "frosting" as an additional keyword. You'll get a list of all of the butter-based frosting recipes in our collection.
                   
                  Gabrielle 
                  Jul. 7, 2009 8:57 pm
                  BEAUTIFUL CAKE HOW FABULOUS
                   
                  Jul. 11, 2009 3:59 am
                  Beautiful cake. http://severaltips.blogspot.com
                   
                  Jul. 12, 2009 8:33 pm
                  oh gorgeous! I really want to take this up as a hobby!
                   
                  Jul. 26, 2009 10:21 am
                  I make layered cakes often using icing and puddings. I am trying out a fruit filling today. What is the reason for a simple syrup? I have never used it. Thanks!!
                   
                  Jul. 29, 2009 4:35 pm
                  N8SMOM, The simple syrup makes for a nice moist cake. I see this recipe calls for a brandy simple syrup but the syrup can be flavored with just about anything you like, it does not need to be alcohol. One of my personal faves is a chocolate cake moistened with a Grand Marnier (orange liquer) simple syrup, a classic combination. Take the extra time, it really is worth it and all your friends will wonder why your cakes are so much more flavorful and moist than theirs!
                   
                  Aug. 5, 2009 11:47 pm
                  Wow i'm going to boookmark thos!
                   
                  nyoung5 
                  Aug. 26, 2009 5:46 am
                  What is the purpose of trimming the "skin" off of the top and bottom of the layers? Wouldn't it make it easier to ice if these were left?
                   
                  beanmcl 
                  Sep. 1, 2009 4:33 am
                  How do you make the simple syrup?
                   
                  SweetChelsey 
                  Sep. 7, 2009 3:28 pm
                  You trim the skin off so it is even. If it is uneven, the cake will either crack or be all wobbly (Usually causing the other layer to crack)
                   
                   
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