We ended up with a cake from Sweet Thang that was really satisfying chocolate sponge, raspberry jam, butter cream frosting. Tasting the cakes was a lot of fun - my wife and I must've hit a dozen places. Mindy Segal from Hot Chocolate had some delicious ideas, but was out of the budget, and Bombon was spectacular but also out of the budget. Here are some of my notes from that experience (which eventually ended up in an article in TimeOut.
Bombon
1508 W. 18th St.
(312) 733-7788
Taste: *****
Appearance:*****
$7-12 per slice
Fake cake with white icing decorated with fresh flowers and green dots of varying sizes with three half sheets to eat, one strawberry tres leches, one margarita, one Tia Martita. Bar none, the best cake we tried.
Sweet Thang
1921 W. North Ave.
(773) 772 4166
Taste: *****
Appearance: ****
$4-6 per slice
Three tiers, square tiers with piped frosting decorations. White sponge with choc tiramisu filling, chocolate sponge with cassis mousse, chocolate sponge with raspberry mousse
Mindy Segal of Hot Chocolate
1747 N. Damen Ave.
(773) 489-1747
Taste: *****
Appearance: ****
$8-12 per slice
Mindy came up with two absolutely delicious cake ideas based very closely on the concepts we discussed, summer, citrus, fruit, - one ziggurat-shaped ginger almond cake, and one lemon moussey raspberry cake with fresh berries from Michigan set on three separate trays.
Swedish Bakery
5348 N. Clark St.
(773) 561-8919
Taste: ****
Appearance: ****
$3.50 – 7 per slice
They offered three different designs, from classis white frosting, swiss dots and ribbons to chocolate ganache on 3 multi-shaped tiers. Fudge sponge cake was the best, with chocolate mousse, raspberry mousse and cream cheese butter cream filling each tier respectively. Some mousses had a strange jello pudding consistency.
Letizia’s Natural Bakery
2144 W. Division St.
(773) 342-1011
Taste: ****
Appearance: **
$4-6 per slice
“Mimoza” cake made with organic flour and pastry cream, coated with cake crumbs. Can be stacked or spread out. Fresh flowers only. Letizia delivers the cakes frozen to avoid spoilage – recommends three hours of defrosting before serving. If it’s not totally defrosted, “don’t worry; we Italians call that ‘semifreddo’”
Bittersweet Pastry Shop & Café
1114 W. Belmont Ave.
(773) 929-1100
Taste: ****
Appearance: Who can tell?
$4.75 per slice
3 tiered cake for 121 servings, with Chocolate brulee, strawberries, almond cake with lemon and chocolate mousses coated in vanilla buttercream. We nearly went with them, but heard a horror story from a friend about a wedding cake fiasco – the cake delivered bore no resemblance to the cake ordered, so we nixed it.
Lutz Continental Café & Pastry Shop
2458 W. Montrose Ave.
(773) 478-7785
Taste: *** ½
Appearance: ****
$3-5.00 per slice
125 servings in 3 tiers, each tier a different flavor: hazelnut cake with hazelnut mousse, yellow cake filled with fresh strawberries and chocolate mousse. Marzipan roses at $2 a piece.
Café Selmarie
4729 N. Lincoln Ave.
(773) 989-5595
Taste: **
Appearance: ****
$4.50 - $5.50 per serving
A four tiered caked for 121; lemon custard torte, Bavarian cream with fresh raspberries was the best. Raspberry marzipan was stale; chocolate cake was dry and crumbly.
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Cake Girls
2207 W. Belmont Ave.
(773) 404-3147
We’d have loved to meet with them, but they don’t schedule appointments outside of regular working hours, 10 AM – 6 PM Tues thru Thursday, no exceptions for poor workaday hacks that make a reverse commute to and from the suburbs.
Fox & Obel Food Market Bakery
401 E. Illinois St.
312.410.7301
Makes small cakes (60 servings or less), but we never made it in for a meeting. After a couple of emails back and forth with the Executive Baker, we didn’t succeed in finding a time we could all make. She offered to leave us a cupcake to taste in the store, but by then, we had cake fatigue and were ready to make a choice