Sunday, October 14, 2007

Ace of Cakes: Sweet Enough to Watch

What do weddings, birthday parties, graduations and retirement parties all have in common? Besides marking various stages in ones life, each is a celebration featuring cake. You know, that sweet treat that comes in so many flavors and with so many different fillings and frostings that there seems to be something for everyone. And while bakers and chefs- and even supermarkets- around the world sell millions of cakes each year, not all cakes are created equally. Especially those made by Chef Duff Goldman and his crew on the Food Network program Ace of Cakes.

Ace of Cakes is a reality television show featuring the goings-on of Charm City Cakes, located in Baltimore, Maryland. Owned and operated by Chef Duff, Charm City Cakes is anything but your typical cake shop. Along with the help of his friends turned coworkers, Chef Duff creates the most unusual and untraditional cakes imaginable.

Ace of Cakes first aired in the fall of 2006 and has been gaining popularity ever since. As one of the Food Networks’ first reality shows, Ace of Cakes gets its stars out of a kitchen set and gives viewers a small look into a real-life business. And with its high ratings- it is one of the networks most popular shows- its no wonder the bakery is getting such country-wide fame.

While Ace of Cakes is a program based on cake designing and decorating, it would not be nearly as entertaining without the crazy antics of its star Chef Duff. In one episode, while making a wedding cake that resembled a Scottish highland cow- yes, a cow-shaped wedding cake- Chef Duff wore a kilt to get into the Scottish mood. And if seeing him walk around in a kilt- even while delivering the cake to the reception- wasn’t funny enough, he insisted upon having a kilt-clad bagpiper present to serenade him while applying the cow’s long hair. His coworkers seemed slightly annoyed, but certainly not shocked.

But Ace of Cakes shows off more than cakes of the barnyard variety. They were also invited by the NFL to design and make a cake for the VIP party of Super Bowl XLI. Duff and his crew worked on the 6-foot-tall cake in their shop in Baltimore before taking everything to Miami for the final preparations. The cake featured the helmets of the participating teams, a larger-than-life replica of the Lombardi Trophy, and even life-like models of the coaches and players.

But more than just making cakes with unusual tools- saws and blowtorches are used weekly- Ace of Cakes shows the ins and outs of a food industry business. Viewers are taken from the cake designing and planning process to the delivery of the cake. But as with most businesses, things don’t always go as planned. The cake designers run out of fondant while on location. The fourth tier of a cake just doesn’t want to stay in place. And sometimes they simply out-design themselves. The Super Bowl cake was designed to be so large that, upon arriving at the venue, it had to be cut into two parts so as it fit in the elevator. And the Scottish cow’s hair, after sliding off over night, had to be applied a second time minutes before being delivered to the reception.

But more than just a cake show, Ace of Cakes is a unique look into a shop filled with artists and quirky people. Viewers can marvel as the art-students turned cake-decorators shape a small piece of fondant into a beautiful flower in just seconds or how they stack layer upon layer of cake without gravity reeking havoc. Even their daily interactions with one another are entertaining, especially when deadlines are close and cakes are far from completed.

So the next time you are looking for something sweet, don’t go to the cupboard. Tune in to an episode of Ace of Cakes. It’s sure to satisfy.

2 comments:

Casey Kirk said...

I never thought I would have a desire to watch a reality show about cake but after reading your article I do :)

Michael J. Fitzgerald said...

Great headline and a very interesting column.

Perhaps particulary more so because I am going my granddaughter's birthday party this evening after class - and, of course, there will be a cake.

Good column.

My only suggestion would be to say exactly when the program airs so people don't have to try to track it down.