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  #1  
Old 06-17-2011, 07:43 PM
VandalSquirrel VandalSquirrel is offline
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Originally Posted by nittanygirl View Post
Lol I was explaining this to some people here (Kentucky) and they were like, "really???"
I DEFINITELY want a cookie table and to go easy on the cake. Half the people I know don't eat cake at weddings anyways.
I want my grandma to be there so badly, so I hope she is able to make cookies for my wedding. That would mean so much to me because I always hoped to have her there, obviously, and she is the one who I always cooked with growing up. I owe her a lot.

I'd also like to do hard tack in the colors, but it really depends on the colors and the season. Don't want it to melt and get gross.
Hardtack at a wedding? That's different, I've never heard of it. I have eaten so many "Sailor Boy" pilot bread meals in the field I just can't imagine it in any other setting.

If I ever get married I'm probably going to have a traditional Norwegian cake (kransekake, made with almonds, sugar and eggs, no flour! and shaped in concentric rings), and depending on my spouse's background there may be some cake or dessert he wants. I'd love a Scandinavian cookie table/plates because a lot of those can be made ahead of time and represent me more than regular wedding cake. Krumkake, fattigman, rosettes, and all other kinds of tasty things with cream and berries.
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  #2  
Old 06-17-2011, 08:29 PM
AznSAE AznSAE is offline
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has anyone here ever been to a wedding where there was a fake cake for show and sheet cake served to the quest instead? i went to a wedding last month where they did this. the sheet cake was still pretty good though.

i googled fake cakes and apparently this happens more than i thought.
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  #3  
Old 06-17-2011, 09:17 PM
Leslie Anne Leslie Anne is offline
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Yes, a friend of mine used a fake cake for show and served sheetcake. They were on a real tight budget. I'm pretty sure the bride got the cake off e b a y.

ETA:

Just searched and found some listed under Display Wedding Cake.

Not fantastic but it would certainly do in a pinch.
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Last edited by Leslie Anne; 06-17-2011 at 09:30 PM.
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  #4  
Old 06-21-2011, 03:35 PM
ms_gwyn ms_gwyn is offline
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Originally Posted by AznSAE View Post
has anyone here ever been to a wedding where there was a fake cake for show and sheet cake served to the quest instead? i went to a wedding last month where they did this. the sheet cake was still pretty good though.

i googled fake cakes and apparently this happens more than i thought.
When I get my business up and running, this will be an item for the budget people.....
Used Styrofoam and fondant for decoration, have a real piece inserted for cutting and then roll out the sheetcake (in the back of course) for service. It still the same recipe and filling.

The majority of the cost of a wedding cake is the decorations and the man hours.
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Old 06-19-2011, 10:58 PM
nittanygirl nittanygirl is offline
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Originally Posted by VandalSquirrel View Post
Hardtack at a wedding? That's different, I've never heard of it. I have eaten so many "Sailor Boy" pilot bread meals in the field I just can't imagine it in any other setting.
It's more of a thing that is personal to me.
My grandma and I make hard tack at Christmas together.
Like if I could do little jars or bags as favors...
Idk. I probably wouldn't do it, but it's just one of those things that I think would be different that people don't see every day.
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Old 06-20-2011, 07:01 PM
VandalSquirrel VandalSquirrel is offline
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Originally Posted by nittanygirl View Post
It's more of a thing that is personal to me.
My grandma and I make hard tack at Christmas together.
Like if I could do little jars or bags as favors...
Idk. I probably wouldn't do it, but it's just one of those things that I think would be different that people don't see every day.
I was thinking it was a regional thing like a cookie table that I was just unaware of since I'm from somewhere else. I've had Sailor Boy pilot bread at more than one wedding (or other milestone life event) when the couple is Alaska Native or First Nation and the reception is more potlatch in style than just a wedding reception.
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Old 06-20-2011, 10:36 PM
southbymidwest southbymidwest is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by VandalSquirrel View Post
I was thinking it was a regional thing like a cookie table that I was just unaware of since I'm from somewhere else. I've had Sailor Boy pilot bread at more than one wedding (or other milestone life event) when the couple is Alaska Native or First Nation and the reception is more potlatch in style than just a wedding reception.
I think nittanygirl is talking about making candy hard tack- basically sugar, karo syrup, water, flavoring and food color. It is cooked until it reaches the hard crack stage, is poured out, cooled, and scored/cracked, like a hard candy. The irregular pieces are then coated in powdered sugar. Very popular at Christmas- especially red/cinnamon and green/spearmint. But it can rip out your fillings if you aren't careful. Yeow!
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Old 06-21-2011, 12:19 AM
VandalSquirrel VandalSquirrel is offline
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Originally Posted by southbymidwest View Post
I think nittanygirl is talking about making candy hard tack- basically sugar, karo syrup, water, flavoring and food color. It is cooked until it reaches the hard crack stage, is poured out, cooled, and scored/cracked, like a hard candy. The irregular pieces are then coated in powdered sugar. Very popular at Christmas- especially red/cinnamon and green/spearmint. But it can rip out your fillings if you aren't careful. Yeow!
Ok that makes a lot more sense than hard tack like pioneer or gold rush crackers. Hard crack/hard candy, like jolly ranchers.
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  #9  
Old 06-21-2011, 02:21 PM
nittanygirl nittanygirl is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by southbymidwest View Post
I think nittanygirl is talking about making candy hard tack- basically sugar, karo syrup, water, flavoring and food color. It is cooked until it reaches the hard crack stage, is poured out, cooled, and scored/cracked, like a hard candy. The irregular pieces are then coated in powdered sugar. Very popular at Christmas- especially red/cinnamon and green/spearmint. But it can rip out your fillings if you aren't careful. Yeow!
yep that's what i was talking about.
good stuff though, but you do have to be careful with dental work lol
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