Let Them Eat Cake



WRITER CREDIT: 
Let Them Eat Cake | Preferably tiered and swathed in buttercream
Charleston baker Jim Smeal, who’s been making his signature wedding cakes in the Lowcountry since 1979, has seen trends come and go (nice knowing you, naked cakes!). One thing has remained constant, however: Done well, a cake can set the tone of a wedding. “It’s not just a cake, but the centerpiece of a wedding,” he says. “It’s something that’s making a statement about you.” We asked Smeal to share some tips on how to get it right. 
 
Go inside or go fondant
 
Charleston summers aren’t kind to the buttercream Smeal uses to finish his cakes. “If you put the cake table in a sunny spot, that’s a big no-no,” he says. And forget placing it under a clear tent. “That’s like putting it in a greenhouse.” If you’re planning an outdoor wedding, find a totally shaded spot for the cake or, better yet, go with fondant icing. 
 
Save the cake for last
 
Choose your color scheme and have a general idea of the look of your reception before deciding on a cake, typically six months out from your wedding. 
 
 
Pinterest is your friend
 
Smeal likes to get a sense of what a couple’s style is and work from there. “We look at their whole design board and pull something out of that,” he says. For instance, he may decorate a cake with the same vine pattern that appears on the bride’s dress. 
 
Color is key
 
“Don’t be afraid of not having a white-white cake,” Smeal urges his clients.. “Color can make a cake more interesting and it photographs much better if there’s some contrast.”
 
Let the groom have his cake
 
Time was, a groom’s cake was a quirky Southern tradition, but social media has upped the ante for brides who want to surprise their husbands-to-be with everything from confectionary reproductions of the Millenium Falcon to Clemson Memorial Stadium. Fun for sure, but Smeal advises to save these cakes for the rehearsal dinner, which is more about “making a fuss about the groom.”

The Wedding Row

August 12 2019
We love it when Charleston is the backdrop for a budding romance, and we love it even more when a couple who started here returns for their “I do’s.” So it went with Amanda and Joey, who both...

August 12 2019
When a gal can name how many days she’s dated her beau (“One thousand and nine, but who’s counting?” laughs Erin), you know she’s ready for him to put a ring on it. When Matthew obliged, he and his...

August 8 2019
Sometimes it’s just so better said coming straight from the bride, so away we go into hearing it all from Houstin, Texas, resident Megan… (besides, we’re pretty sure we couldn’t get away with calling...

August 8 2019
We’re sure that Laura and Brian wanted their wedding day at Lowndes Grove Plantation to go on forever, because, duh, but we have to say we want it to, too! Why, now? Take a look at their insanely...

August 7 2019
Leave it to a couple from Texas to make a big splash of a wedding here in Charleston. Not only did Alicia and Walker pick an iconic mansion, the William Aiken House, for their reception, but they...

August 6 2019
“For months before the wedding,” says Mike, “Taryn would say, ‘Just wait! You won’t believe how amazing this day is going to be.’ ”And amazing it was. From the perfectly planned pink palette to the...

July 31 2019
August is just around the corner (like tomorrow, oh-em-gee) and school is about to be back in session. Do we hear all of those moms emitting a sigh of relief? To celebrate the end of this dreadfully...

July 30 2019
Kelly and Will met in an elementary school in 2013 … not while they were attending, of course, but while they were both teaching in Cleveland, Mississippi, for Teach for America Corps. Every...