No, Lazerlike, you are wrong. Episcopalians are not of one mind about the Real Presence, though we all believe in it in some sense (OK–it’s hard to say that all Episcopalians believe in anything, but in my experience people who hold a purely symbolic view are extremely rare and their opinions are certainly not supported by our liturgy). Many Episcopalians do believe that Christ remains present after the end of the liturgy. Even those who are not sure about it tend to be rather agnostic rather than saying that it is “just bread.” That, again, is pretty rare in my opinion.
Most Episcopal churches do have tabernacles. However, I know that some do not. Consuming the elements after the liturgy is surely a legitimate alternative.
In my former church in NC, our belief was different from that of Catholics only in being a little vaguer, and our practice was no different at all. My current parish is more Protestant, but we do have a tabernacle where consecrated hosts are reserved. The main problem is with the consecrated wine. The normal custom is to finish it off (isn’t this also the custom in the Catholic Church?). At the 8 AM liturgy I attend, the altar server (this service pretty much draws only adults, BTW) drinks about half of what is left, and the priest drinks the rest. However, some days there’s a lot left, and the priest doesn’t like to drink it all. When I’m the server I try to drink off as much as possible before handing it to her, but sometimes she still doesn’t finish it. Then I try to get to it in the sacristy before it gets dumped down the piscina (the same apparatus you have in the Catholic Church with a pipe that goes straight into the earth). The last time this happened I didn’t get to it before one of the members of the altar guild had mixed it with the water from the lavabo bowl. I admit that I was a bit queasy about drinking it (which was probably silly since I’m sure the rector has clean fingers!), so I let her (the altar guild lady) pour it down the piscina.
I tell this story in order to be honest–I know this is not how Catholics would do it. But we certainly do not think that consecrated bread and wine can be treated the same way as unconsecrated.
Edwin