Groom's cake

Groom's cake

Groom's cake in the shape of a Texas Longhorns football helmet
Type Cake
Course Dessert
Place of origin England, United States
Region or state Southern states
Main ingredients chocolate, fruit
Cookbook: Groom's cake  Media: Groom's cake

A groom's cake is a wedding tradition originating in Victorian England,[1] but observed more often in the modern age in the American South. While a wedding cake may often be decorated in white and light in texture or color, the groom's cake can take a variety of forms, many incorporating chocolate or fruit.[2] Cheesecake sometimes serves as a groom's cake. The groom's cake is often served at a table separate from the wedding cake at a wedding reception or wedding breakfast, though it may be served as a dessert for a rehearsal dinner.

History

The tradition of the groom's cake began in Britain. The groom's cake was often richer than the bride's, since stronger flavors such as chocolate, fruitcake, and alcohol were considered more appropriate to "the stronger sex." Groom's cakes during the Victorian era were heavy, dense fruitcakes. A characteristic recipe for the groom's fruit cake was published in the “The British Baker" in 1897.[3] Eventually, flour cakes, either white or chocolate, supplanted fruit cakes as the most popular choice.

Groom’s cake is a tradition most popular in the southeastern United States. It was brought over from Britain by colonists. The Southern groom's cake was traditionally a dark-liquor soaked fruitcake, especially in Virginia. The white-iced bride's cake was considered too light for masculinity[4] Chocolate groom's cakes became popular in the late 19th century, and can be any flavor, such as carrot cake, red velvet cake, etc."[3]

Groom's cakes are usually served at the wedding reception as a second flavor choice to the guests, but are often served at the rehearsal dinner in some regions. Groom's Cakes are often decorated to reflect the groom's hobbies, such as golfing, fishing, or hunting. The movie Steel Magnolias features a famous scene with a red velvet groom's cake shaped as a giant armadillo.

Another tradition was to cut a piece of the cake and put it in a small box, then present the box to an unmarried woman attending the wedding.[5] The woman was not expected to eat the cake, but rather to put it under her pillow. Superstition held that this tradition would help an unmarried woman find a husband.[5]

References

  1. "US-style 'groom's cake' for William and Kate". The Daily Telegraph. London. 2011-03-28.
  2. "What is a Groom's cake?". WeddingChannel.com. Retrieved 2009-01-08.
  3. 1 2 Charsley, Simon R. (1992). Wedding Cakes and Cultural History. Routledge. p. 23. ISBN 978-0415026482.
  4. Bette, Mathew (2000). Cake. New York: Friedman/Fairfax.
  5. 1 2 Gray, Melanie (1998-05-28). "Wedding cakes sharing space with a groom's cake". The Time Union.
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