MickeyLuv'r
Well-Known Member
I had a cake delivered to AKL in April. It was delivered to bell services. I asked for 5pm, and that was no problem. I think they had some flexibility in when they brought it, but preferred afternoon. Bell services can hold it in the fridge as long as needed. I ordered from the GF bakery. They were not able to deliver it to a hotel room.
The cake was pretty, and the bakery made it as they said they would. In my case, I needed a gluten free cake. so it was great they were able to do that! I requested fondant, and a chocolate character on top. The inner frosting was lemon flavor and the cake had some strawberries in with the middle layer of frosting.
In talking it over, there were significant limits on what the bakery could/would design. The current offerings seemed more limited than what they were able to make before the pandemic. (judging from images posted online.) The woman I worked with was very nice. She offered to make a cake with a 2D photo image of the characters as the cake topper ('printed' on a small square of edible white sugar) (as in post 1161), but that didn't appeal to us. I initially hoped to have a cake with a Jungle Cruise theme, but she said they were not able to craft animals or any other figures. They could not do a Lady and Tramp theme except as the 2D printed image. They do have a limited selection of chocolate figures, so I picked one of those.
I ordered a small round cake. It was a good height/tall and the chocolate figure was decent size. The cake was about 7inches, I think. It cost $230 with tax. The cake looked nice, but it was not the greatest tasting cake. Gluten-free cakes are a real challenge, and they often don't taste all that great. I am appreciative WDW was able to make a gluten-free cake at all, but we have had better tasting gluten-free cakes.
I'm glad I did it once, but next time we'll try an offsite FL bakery, maybe Erin Mc Kenna's for gluten-free cupcakes, or maybe we'll just go with some of the very tasty chocolates from the Ganachery in Disney Springs or the Toothsome Chocolate Emporium at Citywalk instead of cake.
The cake was pretty, and the bakery made it as they said they would. In my case, I needed a gluten free cake. so it was great they were able to do that! I requested fondant, and a chocolate character on top. The inner frosting was lemon flavor and the cake had some strawberries in with the middle layer of frosting.
In talking it over, there were significant limits on what the bakery could/would design. The current offerings seemed more limited than what they were able to make before the pandemic. (judging from images posted online.) The woman I worked with was very nice. She offered to make a cake with a 2D photo image of the characters as the cake topper ('printed' on a small square of edible white sugar) (as in post 1161), but that didn't appeal to us. I initially hoped to have a cake with a Jungle Cruise theme, but she said they were not able to craft animals or any other figures. They could not do a Lady and Tramp theme except as the 2D printed image. They do have a limited selection of chocolate figures, so I picked one of those.
I ordered a small round cake. It was a good height/tall and the chocolate figure was decent size. The cake was about 7inches, I think. It cost $230 with tax. The cake looked nice, but it was not the greatest tasting cake. Gluten-free cakes are a real challenge, and they often don't taste all that great. I am appreciative WDW was able to make a gluten-free cake at all, but we have had better tasting gluten-free cakes.
I'm glad I did it once, but next time we'll try an offsite FL bakery, maybe Erin Mc Kenna's for gluten-free cupcakes, or maybe we'll just go with some of the very tasty chocolates from the Ganachery in Disney Springs or the Toothsome Chocolate Emporium at Citywalk instead of cake.