DIY Wedding Cake Tips: Preserving Your Top Wedding Cake Tier
Don't
let those yummy wedding cake memories end with the last bite. Savor the
flavor of your wedding with this guide to cake preservation.

Hands
off that cake tier! Avoid opening up the cake in the freezer -- the
more often you expose the cake, the less fresh it will be on your
anniversary.
How To Wrap Up Your Cake Tier
Instruct
catering staff to take off the top tier of the wedding cake and box it
for transport. Appoint a "cake captain" (one of your family members or
friends) to take it home. Once it's home, that person should do the
following:
1. Remove the sugar flowers and set them aside.
2.
Chill the cake well before wrapping it up so that the icing hardens.
This way it won't stick to the plastic wrap and make a mess.
3. Wrap the (unadorned) cake in several layers of plastic wrap -- not aluminum foil, which can cause freezer burn.
4. Seal the wrapped cake in an air-tight bag and place it in the freezer.
5.
Snag a ribbon (from your bouquet, the centerpieces, your hair, a gift)
and tie it around the cake package to mark it so that you don't mistake
it for anything else.
Know Your Cake's Shelf Life
Some
cakes freeze better than others. The more delicate the cake
ingredients, the drier your cake will become in the freezer. Cakes with a
longer shelf life: Chocolate, hazelnut, almond, and carrot cake. Cakes
that may not last as long in the freezer: white cake, cake with fresh
fruit, and cakes with whipped cream fillings.
Consider Ordering A Copycat Cake
If
you have a cake that won't hold up in the freezer, do as many couples
do and order a fresh cake tier in the same flavor as your original
wedding cake for your one-year anniversary. Even if you have a heartier
cake, Sylvia Weinstock, of Sylvia Weinstock Cakes in New York,
recommends storing cakes for no longer than two months, and forgoing the
first-anniversary tradition. Like anything else, after a year in the
freezer, any cake will be a bit stale. If you do decide to save your
cake for the full year, focus on the nostalgia, not the flavor.
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