Groom-to-be Grant Nejedlo attempts to make his own wedding cake.
Groom-to-be Grant Nejedlo attempts to make his own wedding cake.

Iโ€™m to be married in Mississippi in April. As a testament to my genius, Iโ€™m going to bake my own wedding cake and hopefully save some money in the wedding budget.

Iโ€™m a successful cookie baker and assumed my white-chocolate-chip-macadamia-nut wisdom would translate into three-tier, perfectly manicured brilliance. After reading several library books on the subject, I gave a single-tier, 12-inch cake a shot. The two yellow levels, with Italian butter cream frosting and blackberry curd filling, came out looking like a gutted Ewok. Sunken in the middle and oozing curdled blackberry, the thing looked hideous. Worse yet, it tasted horrible โ€”dense, fatty and emanating insubordination while petrifying on its shelf in the refrigerator. I studied the cake periodically in an attempt to discover what had gone so wrong, eventually throwing the entire thing out.

In search of answers, I looked to the internet and found www.cakesmadeeasy.com. Front and center on the opening page reads, โ€œOnce you buy mixing bowls, cake pans, spatulas, decorating bags, tips & couplers (not to mention ingredients) youโ€™ve spent over $100. Since many beginners never really learn to decorate cakes properly, they do what they can, and simply hope for the best! Sometimes they get lucky โ€ฆ and sometimes their kids get cake scraps in their lunches. Not only is this embarrassing, itโ€™s a huge waste of time and money!โ€

The webpage struck a chord. Believing that tools make the man and technique can be acquired, Iโ€™ve spent about $120 in utensilsโ€”with nothing to show for it.

The wedding receptionโ€™s focal point on the line, I made slight corrections and incorporated a baking coreโ€”a handy little device to keep cakes from collapsingโ€”in my next attempt: a 12-inch yellow cake, with powdered sugar frosting and lemon curd filling. I constructed a perfectly baked bottom layer with a top layer equally as golden brown. I meticulously filled the two layers with lemon curd and, upon stacking the thing, watched the top layer slide right off its mate, forewarning doom.

Iโ€™m trying to construct a monster dessert capable of withstanding a Mississippi spring, and I canโ€™t make it work in a Reno winter.

I spoke with my pastor, Jake, about my issues. Jakeโ€™s actually a blasphemer friend of mine and Katโ€™s [Kat Kerlin, RN&R special projects editor] from the Peace Corps who recently was ordained online and will be performing our wedding. His advice was to โ€œtry simpler cakes.โ€ Carrot is his favorite. Eager to please, I heeded my officiantโ€™s request and put together a 9-inch carrot cake with cream cheese frosting.

While the cream cheese frosting came out a tad weak, the cake was strong. My previous weeksโ€™ efforts to create a tasty and aesthetically pleasing cake reached fruition. I covered the cake with pecans and thought myself the craftiest artisan in Reno. I went so far as to commission my civil engineer brother, Eric, to construct a multi-level cake stand resembling a sugar pine.

Imagine Katโ€™s frustration. Ask me if I know anything about colors, hotel reservations or what Iโ€™m wearing April 12th, then ask me if I know what six flavors of cake Iโ€™m prepared to serve at my wedding.

Iโ€™m going to be baking cakes every weekend until April with a newly exaggerated sense of my own ability. The scary part is any sort of screw up, and Iโ€™m running to the Piggly Wiggly in my tuxedo to buy a case of Hostess cupcakes.

I can almost hear the Southern contingent now: โ€œThat Grant, bless his heart for thinking he could do such a thing.โ€

Wish me luck.

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