I dearly wish I had taken pictures of the fancy cakes I baked last summer when they were in the car. Then I could have shown you that they didactually survive being in my car.Alas. I must have been too panicked about delivering them in pristine condition despite the scorching heat. You will just have to take my word for it! Instead, I will share a few photos of a smaller, much simpler cake I made for a baby shower.
Transportis the most terrifying part of baking a wedding cake. After spending about 24 hours actively working on these cakes, I had to put them in the back of my car, where I couldn’t see or protect them, and drive them away from my house.
I am a big believer in “practice makes perfect,” so I practiced transpo, as well! I gingerly placed that trial bridal cake in my trunk and drove 20 minutes away, down windy two-lane roads, to see whether the cake would arrive at the bride’s house in one piece. It did! What a relief.
And the Big Day went without a hitch, as well, all cakes delivered as pristine as they started.
There is a lot of mixed advice online for home bakers about how to transport a wedding cake. Here is my two cents, as a home baker who has done this now several times.
1. Do all the decorating prior to stacking the tiers.
As I was researching, I saw several posts on baking forums about people who wanted to stack their tiers and decorate them on site, in reverse order. This is definitely asking for trouble. Yes, handling the decorated tiers is tricky and scary. You have to try not to touch the sides of the cake at all while you stack them. But you will have more opportunity to react to mistakes if you work smaller first. (Hey—ssshh—you can align the ugliest sides of each tier and place them at the back of the cake if you piped the designs before assembly, instead of just hoping that all your piping will be 100% uniform and perfect all the way around. I’m just saying.)
2. Stack the tiers of yourcake at home.
I have tried assembling the cake on site, as well as assembling the cake at home. When I assembled the cake on site, I was so nervous (hey, caterers and event staff are watching you!) that I almost dropped the top tier of the wedding cake on the floor while I was trying to set it on top of the rest of the cake. Miraculously, I did not…but that mistake would have been hard to cover up with extra frosting!
So much can go wrong on site. More, probably, than can go wrong at home, where you can work methodically and react to any catastrophes.
Not only that, but if you transport the tiersseparately, you have to worry about two, three, or four separate cakes sliding around in your car every time you turn or brake! Seriously, who can take that kind of anxiety?
I recommend stacking the tiers of your wedding cake at home! (Please note that this advice is not meant for extremely tall cakes, such as those over four tiers, or those taller than 16″.) Make sure your bottom tier is firmly supported by a cake board (and use a swirl of frosting to glue the bottom tier down) that can bear the weight of the whole cake, so that you can lift the stacked cake as a unit. Also, if you are using ribbons, it is a good idea to put the ribbons on prior to stacking the tiers, so that you don’t scrape or smudge the frosting! (If you read my post about the bridal cake, you may have noticed that the top tier of this cake is also ribbon wrapped, and it doesn’t appear to be in the photo above…this is because the ribbon for the top tier had to hide the seam between the layers. There’s the exception to the ribbon-first suggestion.)
After you stack the tiers, pipe some extra frosting all the way around the base of each tier, in any pattern or design that fits the rest of the cake decor. This hides the seams, yes, but it also adds a little “glue” to hold the layers precisely in place, a sweet encouragement for each tier to stay put exactly where you want it.
3. Properly dowelthe cake tiers.
Make sure to dowel each layer prior to stacking for proper structural support. Use wooden dowels: they are strong and narrow, so you can cut them evenly in one stroke, and they will easily support the weight of the cake tiers above!
For transport, it is very important that you drive a long, sharpened wooden dowel down through the center of the whole cake, carefully boring through the cardboard cake circles that support each tier until you reach the base of the cake. Many bakers like to do this with the cake already on the serving board, pressingthe point of the dowel down into the serving board.
All of this ensures that the tiers don’t slide around. The center dowel will keep the cake upright and centered.
I have read a few horror stories about cakes breaking apart around the central wooden dowel. This is extremely unlikely, unless several other things have already gone very wrong. If the baked cake is a hot mess, by which I mean underbaked or overbaked, then it could be crumbly or sludgy, which wouldn’t be structurally sound to begin with. Or, if the cake tiers are not glued to the cake board with a swirl of frosting, then they could potentially slide right off the cake board given enough centripetal force around a turn. But, as I said…pretty unlikely.
Stack the tiers. Dowel the center of the cake.
4. Chill the cake for 24 hours.
Cold cake. I can’t recommend this step enough. Cold buttercreamis kind of like armor for the cake.You can touch it gently without leaving a fingerprint. This also means that it will help hold the cake together during transport. When the frosting is cold, it won’t slide down or around every time you hit an inevitable bump in the road. Cold cake, people. Cold cake.
If you don’t have enough room in your fridge to store the entire stacked cake safely (i.e., without other things potentially touching it), then chill the tiers separately in protective containers. But it would be best to chill the stack, as well, even just for a brief period, because the frosting you pipe to hide the seams between layers will also help gluethe stacked tiers in place better if it is cold. (My process was: chill the tiers separately overnight, as pictured above, then stack them a few hours before I needed to drive to the reception site, so they could have some extra chill time; I also threatened everyone in my house on pain of death not to open the fridge or even think about anything in the fridge until I took the cake out. Ha. Thanks to my understanding family!)
5. Use non-skid padding.
You can buy non-skid drawer and shelf liners at any big box store. It looks like a thinly padded tight grid. This stuff is your best friend when you are transporting a wedding cake.
Simply clean out the back of your car, and vacuum it so there will be minimal dust and grit. I drive a crossover SUV, which has a flat, open trunk. This helps with transferring the cake into the car, plus providing an open space where it won’t touch anything; I recommend you borrow an SUV or minivan if you don’t have one and need to deliver a fancy cake somewhere.
Next, lay a very large piece of non-skid padding down right in the center of the trunk area. I actually used several pieces of non-skid padding all next to each other. This just seemed safer to me…even though I’m sure I was going overboard…
Carefully walk the cake out to the car and place it squarely on the non-skid padding.
Did you notice that cake is very heavy? Seriously, a tiered cake has some heft to it. This weight will bear down on that non-skid padding and help hold it in place!
6. Make your car cold.
You car is not a refrigerator, but you should get it as close as possible. Turn the AC on full power and make your car cold (no, this will not dry your cake out, unless, perhaps, you have a naked cake: the frosting is a moisture barrier for the sponge underneath; moreover, most cars do not have AC vents in the trunk area, so the air will not be blowing directly on the cake itself). Give your car at least a 5 minute head start before you put the cake inside. This is especially important on warm or humid days. Better for you to wear a jacket in June than for the cake frosting to melt! Additionally, since your cake will be coming out of a cold refrigerator before transpo, keeping your car cool will make it less likely that the cake will start to sweat while you drive.
7. Drive like no one else is on the road.
Okay, this part is a little awkward…but when I’m delivering a fancy wedding cake, or any tiered cake, I drive like I own the road.
Like no one else is on it.
Like it definitely doesn’t matter or inconvenience anyone if I go 10 miles under the speed limit. (At which point, I also make a mental note to give a little more grace to randomly slow drivers when I am the one in a hurry.)
Because at the end of this car trip, it doesn’t matter if another car or two sped around you and the drivers glared at you menacingly as they passed. It doesn’t matter if someone honked at you.
It matters that you arrive with a cake that does not have its frosting smushed in or sagging (with many thanks to taking sharp turns at 15mph.).
Rest assured, all of the previous steps, such as doweling and chilling and non-skid padding, are really doing most of the work to keep your cake beautiful. But drive carefully anyway. Drive like you have your precious baby rolling around unfastened in your trunk, and her life depends on your ability to gain absolutely zero sideways momentum when you turn. Because you do.
Because if—heaven forbid—you arrive at the venue and your cake is somehow less pristine than when you loaded it into the car, wouldn’t you regret notdriving like a little, old person? Wouldn’t you always wonder if you could have saved the poor beautiful beast by driving ultra cautiously?
It’s one car trip. An important, nerve-wracking car trip. But the other cars on the road won’t deliberately hit you if you go slowly. They will just earn a funny story about why they are late if they can’t pass you. Don’t let anyone pressure you into driving in such a way that you put your darling wedding cake at risk. That would be heartbreaking.
So drive like no one else is on the road. Put on your blinkers if anyone tailgates you, or if you know you are going to be irrationally slow where there is no passing lane. And then ignore all the other cars.
The final not-so-little component you need for the actual drive is: trust. Trust and prayer. Because you know you did everything right. You did the doweling and the chilling and the non-skid padding. And this was literally made to be driven to the venue. You’re only doing what must be done, come what may. So when you have to stomp on the brakes in order to avoid running a red light at the bottom of a long hill, or when you roll right over a huge pothole (because the other option was sideswiping a minivan), you just have to trust and pray that the cake will be fine, and there’s nothing you can do about it from the driver’s seat anyway.
Last notes
If your wedding cake is supposed to sit on top of a metal cake plateau at the reception site,do nottransport it on top of the cake plateau! Instead, when you are stacking your tiers, “glue” the bottom tier to a sturdy, foil-lined cake board with some frosting. The board should be thick and strong enough to bear the weight of the entire cake. (If the foil look is not appealing to the bride, or doesn’t quite match the metal of the plateau, you can always wrap the edge of this in ribbon when you deliver the cake.) Then, when you get to the reception site, place the cake on top of the plateau. You can also pipe some extra frosting around the base of the plateau, if desired.
Which brings me to the second major note: always bring at least 1 cup extra frosting with you during transport, along with a piping bag and frosting spatulas, to touch up any frosting that gets injured or smudged during transport. When I made the big, fancy bridal cake last summer, a few of the frosting dots fell off, not in the car, but while the florist was adding a cascade of flowers to the cake! A wedding cake will be photographed more than any other dessert ever will, and you will regret it if you didn’t bring extra frosting to do on-site touch-ups.
And the third important thing is to call ahead to the venue so you know what to expect when you get there. It is a good idea to request a catering cart to wheel your cake to the table where it will be displayed. It is also a good idea to find out things likewhich entrance should I use, and is this a high-traffic area? are there stairs or hills I will need to navigate? how do I get from the entrance to the cake table? Let them know what time to expect you and/or ask them what the venue schedule is on the big day.Get the name of the person you should call when you get there. Bring a cake cutting diagram for the caterers if you are at all concerned about portion sizes (they will probably not need this, but if you need a very specific number of servings, it doesn’t hurt to make sure they are aware of that!), or if you have any special instructions such asplease do cut and serve the top tier of cake; the bride and groom have commissioned a fresh one for their anniversary and will not be saving this top tier.
Don’t forget to look for the back of the cake as you are placing it on the display table, and actually position it appropriately.
My final encouragement is: you can do this! Transporting a wedding cake, or any tiered cake, from your safe home where you baked it to the site where it will be cut and enjoyed, is scary. But you can do it, and you should be proud of yourself!
A few thoughts about real flowers on your wedding cake
If the bride has requested real flowers or something that is not food on top of the cake, while lovely, this creates a weird gray zone of responsibility (flowers aren’t food…are they food safe? bug- and pesticide-free? flavorless?…do you have to monitor the flowers, or actually place them on the cake, or does the florist’s expertise somehow also include taking immaculate care of the most important dessert at the party?). I highly recommend you find a way to communicate with the florist prior to the big day, so you can both get on the same page.
Happily, when I played the “professional” baker last summer, the florist was a dear friend, and basically a genius, and she was completely on the same page about issues of flowers and food safety. She and I met a month in advance and talked about the design the bride wanted, our concerns about pulling it off, and the ways we planned to work together when I delivered the cake.
If you are making a wedding cake that is due to be covered in real flowers, then meeting with the florist is a high priority! Wouldn’t you hate it, for example, if the bride requested live peonies, and your cake somehow ended up crawling with ants (which is how peonies open) because neither you nor the florist communicated about that issue? Or, less dramatic and more likely, if the live flowers are poisonous or were treated with pesticides that should not be ingested, and they are directly touching the cake you made?
In the event of live flowers, do your research: advocate for your cake, and for food safety (ideally, prior to the actual reception site…but do it here, as well!), and for the flavor and the form of the cake you worked so hard to make.
Even after you talk with the florist and straighten out the details, I recommend you do not leave your cake alone at the reception site until after the flowers are in place. Assume that anyone who gets near the cake will accidentally mess up the design (hey, they didn’t bake it, and it isn’t their baby, so they may not even realize this has happened!). You may need to stay and take care of/guard your cake until the reception starts. No one will mess it up on purpose, but anything can happen! And won’t you be happier if the bride is happier and the cake is absolutely perfect?
The florist for this wedding was beautiful and thoughtful, and she had a great eye for detail. She decided to use silk flowers for food safety—andshe wrapped the stems with plastic wrap, so that we could be truly confident about the food safety of everything on the cake. I was so lucky to be working with her! I helped her place all of the flowers on the cake (minor heart palpitations as we jabbed giant clumps of flowers into my perfect cake), and thenshe helped spota few of the frosting dots that needed to be fixed after we adjusted all the flower arrangements!
From start to finish, this was an epic experience for me. As a home baker, to bake and decorate two display cakes and four sheet cakes—270 servings of cake—in my own kitchen took such a tremendous amount of time and love and attention to detail. I’m so glad I had the opportunity to help the lovely newlyweds make their wedding day amazing!