You went to the tasting. You picked the lemon raspberry. The cake at the wedding tasted like supermarket vanilla sheet cake. Is that a breach? Usually, yes.
The "as represented" standard
Under the DTPA and general Texas contract law, a vendor who represents a good or service at a specific standard — a tasting, a portfolio, a demo — and then delivers something materially different has breached. "Material" is the key word. A minor variation in sweetness or a swap of raspberries for strawberries is unlikely to qualify. A completely different flavor, structure, or quality tier does.
Why cakes are especially vulnerable
Cake disputes hinge on three facts:
- What did the tasting include (flavors, structure, decoration)?
- What did the signed contract specify?
- What did the delivered product match?
If the tasting featured a triple-layer lemon raspberry with fondant flowers, and the contract says "lemon raspberry three-tier," the baker has committed to that. Delivering "white cake with strawberry filling" is a breach regardless of whether it''s delicious.
Evidence that wins these disputes
- Photos of the tasting, ideally with you visible in frame for identity.
- Photos of the delivered cake, same angle if possible.
- The tasting menu / order sheet from the bakery.
- The signed contract with flavor specification.
- Guest witness statements describing the discrepancy.
Common baker defenses
- "The flavor nuances don''t photograph." True — but taste is demonstrable in depositions. Witnesses matter here.
- "Ingredient substitution due to supply." Should have been communicated. If not, it''s still a breach, though damages may be limited.
- "Your palate changed." Not a legal defense.
Realistic remedy
- Partial refund of 25–75% of the cake cost, depending on severity.
- Rarely full refund — the cake was delivered and consumed.
- Vendor may offer a "future event credit" — useless for most couples. Push for cash.
What to do the day of
If you taste the cake before the reception begins and notice the issue:
- Pull the lead vendor aside. Document the concern in writing immediately (text works).
- Decide whether to serve or not. Most couples choose to serve — the cake cost is sunk, and ruining the guest experience doesn''t help you legally.
- Photograph multiple slices from different sections.
- Preserve a piece in a ziploc to corroborate later if needed.
When this is worth pursuing
Under $200: not worth the time. Send a calm complaint email asking for a partial refund and move on.
$500+: worth 30 minutes of your time to file a BBB complaint and send a demand email. Most bakers refund partially to avoid public complaints.
$1,500+: worth pursuing seriously. Evidence collection matters.
Sources: Texas Law Help — DTPA, general Texas contract-interpretation principles.