A child’s birthday party is no longer a simple affair.
It’s a cake. THE Cake. Plus a party.
And I love it.
I asked my four-year-old son, “Darling, what sort of cake would you like this year?” and he told me …
A Digger Cake.
I dare you to Google it. Go on, I dare you.
You see, I love making cakes. I love hearing about cakes other mums are making. I love looking at marvelous, impossible to make cakes on the internet. And although I’m not particularly good at cake baking, I love the process and the trying-to-get-better bit.
So it turns out that in 2014, Digger Cakes are no longer simple two-dimensional cut-out copied from the Women’s Weekly cookbook with butter cream icing and licorice.
No, no, no. A Digger Cake created by the (apparently) average mum looks like an actual digger. Like, you know the last digger you saw on the side of a road at a CONSTRUCTION SITE. A genuine, real deal imitation of that gigantic chunk of steel and rubber.
So with my 4-year-old’s request this year? That’s what I was up against.
We’re talking marzipan, special tool things, cake boards and heaps of other secret elements that no one has told me about and don’t appear to be available at Coles.
But if you thought that was a tough enough gauntlet for me to sprint down – wait until you hear this next bit of news. News that’s going to make baking cakes (or buying cakes) for kids’ parties even more difficult than the glorious competitive professional sport it’s already become.
Today, it’s been revealed that copyrighters are messing with bakers.
Yes, copyrighters.
Copyright expert, Leanne Wiseman from Griffith University says bakers “need to be wary” when they take an image and use it to COPY for a cake without approval.