The wedding cake is the cake eaten and presented at the ceremony / reception after the wedding has taken place. It is symbolically cut by the newly wed bride and groom, and then eaten. Tradtionally, the wedding cake is large (enough to feed all the guests at the wedding), and white or off-white in color. A groom's cake can be 2 things. It can be a smaller, more "fun" or "exciting" cake that is also eaten during the reception. Or, it can be a cake that is used at a party for the groom, like a bachelor party or something of the sort.
Fruit cake
The word is Hebrew; it's used untranslated in Yiddish, as are many other words. It literally means the canopy under which the wedding ceremony is conducted. In Yiddish, it's often used to connote the wedding ceremony itself. The Hebrew pronunciation is "khoo-PAH".
wedding ceremony, wayang show, and traditional ceremony
A pavilion on the hill was used for the wedding ceremony.
A huppah is a canopy used in the traditional Jewish wedding ceremony. It can be as simple as a cloth on 4 corner poles held over the bride and groom by 4 members of the wedding party.
Ingredients without sugar.
The words 'Dearly Beloved' are frequently used during a wedding ceremony. For example: Dearly Beloved, we are gathered here together to witness the marriage of John Doe and Sally Mae.
That depends on the ingredients used to bake the cake and the type of freezer you have.
A ring hop ceremony is when both husband and wife wear wedding rings. It is also used for a traditional use at military graduation when two cadets dance at the ceremony.
The wedding vase is used by many Native American tribes, and has been for centuries. Traditionally, water would be drunk from the vase by both the bride and groom during the wedding ceremony. Now, the vase is predominantly a ceremonial gift in the Native American tradition and it's used often in ceremony.
A ring hop ceremony is when both husband and wife wear wedding rings. It is also used for a traditional use at military graduation when two cadets dance at the ceremony.