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- Wedding Guest's Gluten-Free Cake Disappears — Leading to Tense Exchange with Other Attendees</p>
<p>Kimberlee SpeakmanJuly 3, 2025 at 7:35 PM</p>
<p>Getty Images</p>
<p>A bundt cake (stock image)</p>
<p>A woman, who has a gluten allergy, shared in a viral Reddit post that she was not able to get any of the bundt cakes made for people with food allergies at her boyfriend's dad's wedding</p>
<p>She said she confronted a family, who was not gluten-free, but took at least three plates of the gluten-free bundt cakes</p>
<p>One of the family members then approached her at the wedding and asked her to apologize to her husband for making him feel "uncomfortable"</p>
<p>A woman says she lost her cool at a wedding after a family took a majority of the gluten-free bundt cakes set aside for her and other guests with food allergies.</p>
<p>The woman shared in a post on Reddit's popular "Am I The A------" forum that she attended her boyfriend's dad's wedding and he took into account her "gluten allergy" by including a gluten-free dessert — bundt cakes — for her and other gluten-free guests.</p>
<p>However, when it was time for dessert, the woman was "upset" after finding out that all 10 of the gluten-free bundt cake slices were gone. She had been conversing with another guest when dessert was called, so she was late getting to the table.</p>
<p>"... My boyfriend's uncle (who is the only other GF person) came up to me with a cake and told me that all 10 cakes were gone and he had the last one, offering to share half," she recalled. "I was upset. I know that only 2 people had an allergy there."</p>
<p>The Redditor went to investigate where the missing cakes had gone and found a family — who she said she knew was not gluten-free — eating three bundt cake slices. She said she asked the husband of the family if he was gluten-free and he told her that he preferred "gluten-free" cake because "it tastes better."</p>
<p>She said she told him that she had a gluten allergy and wasn't able to have any cake, prompting an "awkward" moment between the two. This prompted his wife to offer a plate of the "mostly eaten" bundt cake they still had left. The woman said she declined and told them, "No, it's fine just next time don't eat allergen friendly food if you don't have an allergy."</p>
<p>The woman said sometime later while she was chatting with other guests, the wife came up to her and told her that it "wasn't very nice" what she said back at their table and said she made them feel "very uncomfortable." She also said that her husband felt "bad and uncomfortable" with her actions and asked her to "apologize to him."</p>
<p>"I bit my tongue and went to talk to my boyfriend In private," the woman shared. "I told him I was in fact not sorry and had no regret for calling out them eating MY allergy friendly food. He agreed with me and told me not to apologize and ignore the incident."</p>
<p>She then asked if she should have apologized to the family for making them uncomfortable. In response, several people noted that they felt she took it too far with how she handled the situation.</p>
<p>One person said, "Your handling [of] the situation puts this one on you. It isn't your place to attempt to shame someone's buffet choice… Your quarrel isn't with the unfortunate guest to whom you vented your frustrations, it's with the servers/caterers/whoever was in charge of passing out the cake."</p>
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<p>"He didn't do anything wrong. Two guests who are gluten sensitive, 10 cakes. More than enough to go around. He picked the cake he preferred. Sometimes, when I'm at a dinner or buffet, there's a vegetarian option. I'm not a vegetarian, but I'll take it if it looks/sounds good," they added.</p>
<p>Another agreed, saying, "It's just cake and from the sounds of it there was plenty of food there for you to eat. Sometimes things run out. It's not their fault that it was set out for everyone to grab."</p>
<p>One commenter chimed in that next time she should be "quicker" about trying to get the "gluten-free dessert" as "nobody else is responsible for your allergy."</p>
<p>on People</p>
Source: AOL Lifestyle
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