Have Your Cake, and Customize it Too
Christmas
may be the traditional time for cakes but a growing number of Indians are
ordering specialized ones round the year
Shirley Micah is a young homemaker who lives in
Noida on the outskirts of Delhi with her two young children and husband.
Having grown up in a traditional Christian family, this is that time of the
year when she is usually busy baking Christmas cakes to distribute among
family and friends. “We would start preparations more than a month in
advance. We’d buy the dry fruits from Chandni Chowk, cut, clean and then
soak them in rum. Later, we took these along with other ingredients to a
bakery at Paharganj, where the cakes were baked for us, according to our
instructions,” she says.
In the past Micah and her family members had to
spend hours at the bakery to ensure the cakes were baked according to their
orders; for his part, the baker faced a huge rush during the season.
However, for the first time this year, Micah has pre-ordered all her cakes
with a baker over phone, which he will deliver well before Xmas Eve. “My
mother and grandmother have all made baked their own cakes and this is the
first time that I’m ordering cakes from outside,” says Micah who takes comfort
from the fact that “the baker has followed our traditional family recipe”.
All You Need is an Occasion
Christmas and cakes may be synonymous but the trend of ‘outsourcing’
the gateau rather than painstakingly baking it at home extends well beyond the
Yuletide season; in fact, Indian consumers are finding occasions round the
year — from graduation to a promotion — for ordering cakes, which are
customized to boot to suit the occasion.
Pavani Kaur, who graduated with a BBA degree from
Amity Business School in Noida three years back, saw a sweet spot in
customized cakes and set up her own outfit Firefly, instead of joining her
father’s travel agency. Having started with a small investment of just
20,000 to buy a few specialized tools, today in the busy season she is on
an average customizing five cakes a day. “I have tied up with my sister who
runs a catering business and am now fully focused on the specialized
decorations at my studio in Defence Colony,” says Kaur, adding that her
customers range from students and entrepreneurs to doctors and lawyers.
“From colour palettes to the kind of sugar flowers,
people of Delhi are getting creative with their orders. Brides who come to
order wedding cakes, in particular, are so well prepared with colour swatches
and invite patterns that it’s a pleasure sitting with them for cake
tastings and sketching out designs for their big day,” adds Kaur.
And even though Christmas is still the peak season
for her, customized cakes, she feels, have become popular with young
professionals and corporate executives and are no longer restricted to
children’s birthday parties. “With so many people looking for novelty
cakes, bakers are turning from butter cream and fresh cream to fondant and
sugar paste. While customers want their cakes to taste delicious, they also
want something beautiful on their table. Most of my customers are looking
for cakes that not only taste ‘Christmassy’ but look special as well. I’m
being called for cakes with sugar Christmas trees on top, bell-shaped
cookies and candy cane-flavoured frosting,” adds Kaur who charges between
2,200 and 3,500 per kg, depending on the degree of customization.
Corporate Orders
Prachi Dhabal Deb, a financial analyst in Pune, gave up her job to set
up a specialized cake-baking business Cake Decor, when she was expecting a
baby. “My initial investment was small and I have recovered it and much
more in less than a year. The demand for customized cakes is going up with
clients ordering cakes for almost any occasion, from weddings to
bachelorette parties; I have also diversified into organizing workshops for
baking and decorating lessons,” says Deb. Her client list extends from
students to IT executives and, during the festive season, she imports
specialized decorations from Australia and the US.
Corporate orders for gifting cakes to employees and
clients are also keeping the new age bakers busy. For instance, Vinesh
Johny, owner-founder and chef, Lavonne, a specialized baking outfit in
Bangalore, is currently busy meeting orders from his setup in the
Indiranagar area, a residential and commercial hub. “Whilst we have a
special menu for corporates, we also have wedding planners who have tied up
with us to supply wedding cakes,” he says. Johny set up his venture along with
chef Avin Thaliath also from Bangalore and chef Joonie Tan, a specialized
pastry chef from Malaysia. Lavonne also runs a baking academy.
Deliciae Patisserie in Mumbai is also a premium
cake and pastry shop which was set up by Le Cordon Bleu chef Bunty Mahajan
and her son Suchit Mahajan. “While this is the season for plum cakes and
other Christmas offerings, our luxury collection of wedding cakes is the
highlight at this time of the year. This is also the season when NRIs visit
Mumbai, for anniversaries and holidays and there is a great demand for our
customized and creative offerings,”
says Suchit. Deliciae, which has multiple outlets in the Mumbai suburbs,
takes pride in its fondant cakes customized to resemble everything from
designer bags to Angry Birds and champagne bottles.
C o r p o r a t e s have also started ordering
cakes for their CSR activities. “I have corporate clients who order goodie
bags filled with traditional festive season cakes to distribute among
children from economically challenged families,” says Tanu Jain, a PR
executive-turned-home baker, who runs a specialized studio kitchen Bakerwee
in Delhi.
But it’s not just specialized and niche outfits
that are having it good; even the mass market for cakes is on an upswing.
“Cakes are one of the most sought after things when it comes to indulging,
expressing, celebrating and gifting. Changing lifestyles, increasing
exposure to global trends of cake making and changing attitudes to
celebrations are the strong drivers influencing consumption of cakes,” says
Tarun Jain, VP food services at Technopak Advisors. “There is an increasing
trend amongst young families in all parts of the country, especially the
metros and mini metros, to participate in all major festivals irrespective of
their personal religious inclinations,” he adds.
Big Bakers
The emergence of organized bakery chains in all parts of the country
has contributed to the rise in the Christmas cakes market. While earlier,
star hotels and a handful of renowned local bakeries used to steer the
Christmas business, one now sees much larger participation both from
consumers as well as retailers. There is a pick-up also in transactions on
e-tailing platforms, although numbers are difficult to come by.
Cakes are also more than a metro phenomenon. Qusai
Khorakiwala, director of Monginis, a Mumbai-headquartered cakes chain, says
even small towns are “accepting the product”. Monginis runs 16 factories,
has 700 cake shops and over 1,000 distributors across India with plans for 1,200
outlets by end-2014.
Similarly, Elite Foods, a Thrissur-based food major
also sees huge opportunities in the business of cakes. This season, Elite
has added two new speciality cakes — black forest and ginger-n-honey — for
the festive season across India. The company is also carrying out a cake on
wheels promotional activity across Kerala throughout December.
Kolkata’s iconic confectionery outlet Flurys too
sees a big opportunity and has recently opened two new outlets in Navi
Mumbai. Started way back in the 1920s, the chain is now owned by the
Apeejay Surrendra Group. “We plan to have new outlets across the country in
a tie-up with The Park Hotels, which is also owned by the same group,” says
Vikas Kumar, executive chef at Flurys Kolkata. “Our brand has a legacy of
over 90 years and we hope to cash in on our popular products this Xmas
season,” he adds.
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1 comment:
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