Do You Freeze Your Cakes And Bake Ahead?
Decorating By sweetneice Updated 19 Feb 2014 , 2:23pm by Simply MiMi
Hey guys! I always bake and decorate the day before an order is due, including wedding cakes to ensure freshness. I've always had this concern of my cake drying out or not tasting fresh to the client if I froze it or baked it too far in advance. Now that I'm moving into more of a busier pace with these cakes, I just want to know is it REALLY ok and taste the same if you bake 3-4 days ahead and freeze it? This may alleviate some extreme tiredness if I could do this and it still taste great. I'm very serious about making sure my clients get fresh moist cake as all of us are, so Im a bit paranoid. However, I will take the word of my fellow cakesters bc I trust you! Thanks guys! I would love to hear how you do it!
AI always purposefully get my cakes in the freezer at least overnight.ive frozen wedding cakes for weeks with no adverse effect.
i do! just beware that some recipes do not freeze as well as others. i hve found cakes with a creamed butter and sugar method to not freeze well, the texture changes and seems to dry out.
Thanks guys for all your suggestions! I will definitely try it first and see what happens!
I freeze my cakes all the time and people LOVE them (and it's creamed butter/sugar) I usually do ALL of my baking on Wednesday for the weeks orders. The day before I need them I pull them out and fill them, then let them settle in the fridge overnight stacked like they will end up, then day of I frost/decor/deliver. It works great for me and I will make up to 6-7 wedding cakes a week on my own using this system. At a wedding show this weekend I had many quests say that most of the cakes were dry and mine were by far the best, and they were eating cake that had been frozen for over a week... I even freeze my samples up to 4 months and people still love them. I make sure they are wrapped really well with no cake exposed. For longer freezing I will wrap twice or wrap it and put it in a box.
AWoooow! Thats amazing!!! Maybe i can increase how many i do using that method. Im so exhausted from baking, decorating, and making icing the same day that i felt it best to ask if there was another way without compromising my product and moistness. Thanks a million bakingkat!
You've answered the question that's been worrying me. I'm doing my daughters wedding cake in September this year (300 gumpaste flowers already nestling in box) and the bottom two tiers are fruit, nuts and booze so I'm starting them around June but the third and fourth will be sponge. The thought of baking cakes the day before the wedding (I'm the florist too!) has me out like a wet rag!
If I can freeze these sponge cakes which are going to be soused in a champagne syrup a few weeks before the wedding that will be great.
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