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Let Them Eat (Wacky, Whimsical) Cake

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Adorned with dried Queen Anne’s lace, red clover flowers, bolted callaloo, dried onion flowers, fresh thyme and a fresh cabbage rose on top, the cake that baker Aimee France made for a recent wedding at the Loeb Boathouse in Central Park looked as if it could have been decorated with flora she found while transporting it to the location.

The olive oil cake, layered with cardamom whipped cream and a jam made of lemon, bergamot leaf and blackberries, was frosted in brown butter prosecco buttercream in Ms. France’s signature style: Loose, lumpy and fantastically imperfect. It was a look, she said, that was inspired by the flowers and color scheme for the wedding. But, like most of her confections, the cake was perhaps more so influenced by her artistic mood.

“Honestly, that week I was on a big ‘Phantom of the Opera’ kick,” she said.

Based in Bushwick, Brooklyn, Ms. France, 22, started her baking business in August 2020, and cites the music and costumes of opera and ballet as frequent inspirations. She often decorates her cakes with halos of dried herbs that she forages from her home state of New Hampshire, and intentionally arranges some askew so that they tilt like a frosted Tower of Pisa.

Madeline Bach, 26, a Manhattan-based baker who is also known as Frosted Hag, instead hoards AmeriColor food dye, which she uses to saturate buttercream in deep lapis lazuli and burnt orange tones. Whether natural or artificially colored, these cakes make the minimalist, so-called naked ones that have proliferated in past years look, well, bare.

Also somewhat nostalgic are the cakes that wiggle. Jell-O, the divisive base of 1950s aspics, has made an unlikely return. “I definitely did not expect jelly cakes to make such a comeback,” said Lexie Park, 32, a baker who specializes in suspending objects within her gelatin-based confections. “People have asked me to put an image of them in the jelly,” she said.

Ms. Park, who is based in Los Angeles, started her company Nünchi in July 2019, and said she is now baking around 300 cakes a month for celebrations including birthdays, baby showers and even bachelorette parties. “I once had an order for a bachelorette in Palm Springs where they asked for the shapes of bridesmaids in the cake,” she said. (She ended up making a palm tree-themed cake instead.) Ms. Park has also made a cake that appeared on the back cover of Olivia Rodrigo’s album “Sour.”

For Jena Derman, 37, Jack Schramm, 30, and Coco Lim Haas, 30, who together run Solid Wiggles, a Brooklyn-based business specializing in jelly-based cakes, the possibilities of gelatin lie in form and flavor. For instance, Solid Wiggles makes a cake called the Boozy Cosmos that, Mr. Schramm said, “has the flavors of a Cosmopolitan, but looks like outer space” because of its swirls of teal, pink, and yellow jelly set against a black base.

Infused with vodka, the cake can also be miniaturized in the form of shots. (Mr. Schramm said he recently delivered 100 Boozy Cosmos cake shots to a wedding at the Metropolitan Club in Manhattan.) Solid Wiggles, which opened in September 2020 and sells nonalcoholic desserts as well as boozy ones, on average makes about 200 six-inch cakes and between 300 and 400 jelly shots a month, he said.

Like Ms. Jun, many of these unconventional bakers, including Ms. Belo and Ms. France, are self-taught. But the autodidactic nature of their businesses does not necessarily mean lower price points. Ms. Belo’s pricing starts at $500 for a cake that serves 30 to 40; Ms. France’s cakes start at between $160 and $200 for 10 to 12.

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