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Let's Panic: The Book!

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How to Endure and Possibly Triumph Over the Adorable Tyrant
who Will Ruin Your Body, Destroy Your Life, Liquefy Your Brain,
and Finally Turn You
into a Worthwhile
Human Being.

Written by Alice Bradley and Eden Kennedy

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Sleep Is
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Let's Panic

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At LET'S PANIC ABOUT BABIES, Eden Kennedy and I share our hard-won wisdom and tell you exactly what to think and feel and do, whether you're about to have a baby or already did and don't know what to do with it.

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« The Cake. | Main | Preschoolers can be fun! »
Tuesday
Oct112005

Oh, and: Happy Birthday, Henry.

I spent most of last week preparing for Henry’s birthday party. I had all sorts of wild ideas, like how it was going to be fun, and I wouldn’t want to die at all.

Note to those around me: if you ever catch me musing, “You know what I think I’ll bake? A three-layer birthday cake. I mean, I don’t really have time, but how hard could it be, am I right?” I give you permission to slap me to the ground, shove me in a closet, lock the door, and then stand on the other side and berate me for my silly and pointless housewifey notions.

Something along the way went wrong. Not with the party—with me. I spent all week cleaning and preparing and thinking, thinking, thinking. Thinking about the cake! The damn cake! Which was going to be blue, and have an R2-D2 on the top (courtesy of my Star Wars-loving artistic husband). And for some reason, it had to be homemade, because to have it any other way would mean my son would hate me for the rest of his days. Also, I would bake cookies for Henry’s class. If I didn’t, his teacher would ship him off to an orphanage, for a mother who brings Entenmann’s is surely a mother who has no love in her heart.

The cookies were not a problem, because when are cookies a problem? How hard can they be, really? Unless you forget the sugar or use motor oil instead of butter, you’re in good shape. But the cake, I think, was possessed. I see no other reason for the events that followed. I think the cake needed a good exorcism.

By the time I was ready to begin the baking of the cake, I was a little out of my mind. I had spent all week buying birthday-party notions and paper plates and streamers and banners and all manner of festive shit. I had wiped down every surface in the house, including the dog, and I had mopped the entire apartment not once but several times because I decided I had to keep mopping until the water was clear. Because we live on the first floor of a building that is alongside a busy thoroughfare, where our windowsills are blackened with soot and god knows what effluence on a weekly if not daily basis, this is a challenge—but not if you’re insane enough.

(It’s not that I’m a clean person. My mother and husband and anyone who’s every lived with me will tell you that I am not. It’s that once I get started I have to do an utterly perfect job. This is why I try to avoid doing housework; I can lose days just cleaning the grout, and I prefer doing things like interacting with my loved ones and eating food and breathing.)

But back to the cake! I baked the layers while Henry was in school, congratulating myself all the while for my excellent planning. The layers would be completely cooled by the evening, at which point the frosting would begin. And the frosting, as we all know, is a piece of cake HA HA HA HA HA HA HAAAAAAAAHHHhhhurrrk.

So. The cake was baked, and it looked good. (I stress “looked.”) I was the perfect mother and my son would be happy and successful and he would never use the F-word at me as he grabbed the keys to our nonexistent car and took off with his slut I mean girlfriend. That night I began preparing the frosting. Only I was so harried by this point that I used twice as much milk as the recipe called for, and somehow it didn’t dawn on me until I was done that frosting was not supposed to have the consistency of applesauce. Whoops! I sent my husband out to buy confectioner’s sugar. And then I sent him out again, because I said two boxes, not one. Only I didn’t say that at all, I just THOUGHT IT and he should know what I am thinking. While he was out at the store, I wondered what to do with an enormous bowl of frosting soup; I concluded the only thing to do was immerse my hand in it, because when else do you get a chance to stick your hand in a bowl of frosting? The decadence of it!

It wasn’t as much fun as I thought it would be. Mostly it was sticky, and then, oddly, it burned. I rinsed and rinsed but the burning continued. I don’t know what to say about that. (The next day I told my husband about putting my hand in the frosting and he looked at me like I told him I put it up my ass. “Why would you do that?” he kept asking. “What were you thinking?”I think he was just jealous. Until I told him it burned.)

Once my second enormous batch of frosting was completed, I added so much blue food coloring to it that one taste dyed my tongue, but it still wasn’t as blue as I wanted. No matter, it was good enough. I arranged my slightly lopsided cake layers and began to construct my masterpiece. Only the layers kept… sliding. And the frosting was looking a little puddley. In fact, it was oozing off the cake. But I was in denial. I kept going, kept slapping the frosting back up on the sides of the cake and watching it make its way back down.

By then I was weeping and cursing and demanding that God explain why this frosting wasn’t working. I have never before experienced an unsuccessful frosting, as I am the Anal Baker who follows every baking rule and instruction to the letter. To the letter! And still the frosting would not obey me! We had the air-conditioning on because the humidity level was rainforest-level, and I was frosting the cake about two feet away from the blasts of arctic air. And yet my cake looked like a bucket of melting blue crap. I had to give up. I threw the whole thing in the refrigerator, and went to bed.

Because Scott and I had tasted numerous generous spoonfuls of frosting, we were far too wired to sleep, so we laid in bed bitching about the sorry state of our lives while millions of tiny bugs scurried hither and yon underneath our skin (at least that’s how I felt) and I obsessed about the cake the cake THE CAKE. Finally, as dawn threatened to approach, we managed to sleep, and then a few minutes later somehow we got the kid to school and I presented them with the damn cookies. And then went home to regard the state of the cake.

It was now well-chilled, and looked like it had a terrible disease. Blue frosting was smeared across the top and the primordial ooze was stuck to the sides. I turned the air conditioning back on to Kelvin Cold, scraped every inch of frosting off the cake, whipped it back into spreadable consistency, began the re-frosterizing, and then watched in horror as it melted all over again. I was by now incoherent with rage. There was no reason this frosting should be doing this; obviously it had some sort of personal problem with me. I tossed it back into the refrigerator and then I calmly paced the living room and threw some things at the wall. Then I returned to the cake, scraped the frosting off again, put the bowl of frosting into the freezer, let it set for a while, and then re-frosted, this time even closer to the air conditioner. And lo, the frosting did stay put. And I was happy.

Then I went to pick up Henry from school, and when we returned, I checked on the cake, which was now safe in the fridge, sure to not have incurred any more harm. Except it had.

When I was out, Scott had taken the cake out to draw the R2-D2 on the top, and despite taking every precaution (setting the cake up less than an inch from the air conditioner, etc.) the frosting had melted. AGAIN.

I tried not to scream. I called my mother and sister for frosting advice and moral support. “Why does it keep melting?” my mother asked. Good question, Mom. They both agreed I needed to add more confectioner’s sugar. Now I had a plan. Okay. I scraped the sides of the cake (AGAIN), added cupfuls of sugar, blended the damn frosting (AGAIN), and applied it to the sides. Again. This time it seemed to want to stay. Finally. But I was exhausted, and on edge from the cupfuls of sugar coursing through my veins (I don’t know about you, but I can’t not taste frosting), and there was no joy left in me. The cake had won.

By the time the party rolled around, I knew I had achieved a new level of insanity. I could think of nothing but the cake. The cake should be out of the refrigerator, I kept thinking. A chilled cake is not ideal. Room temperature, that’s what it should be. But if I put it out and it melts! Our friends were arriving and everyone was mingling and laughing and all I could think was that damn cake better taste good or I will punch it.

Then it was cake time, the moment of truth, and the cake came out of the refrigerator, and everyone oohed—I must say, it did end up looking impressive—and I cut into it and immediately knew, as I had to put all my weight into it, that the cake had the consistency of a brick. Fuck it, I thought, and hoisted leaden slabs to everyone around me, and we all attempted to digest forkfuls while I stared at the hateful, hateful dessert. Five minutes later, I pointed at the three-quarters of cake remaining and shouted, “THERE. NOW DO YOU SEE?” Because, yes, the frosting was running down the sides and oozing all over the table. “Do you see that?” I said, as my guests muttered to each other, “And she thinks she’s ready to go off her meds?”

Reader Comments (81)

I'm so sorry about your frosting. I always follow the direction in the Cake Doctor for layer cakes and haven't ever had an issue like that.

Today I forgot (or the bagger forgot to put them in my cart, whatever) 1/3 of my groceries at wally world. I got home, put stuff away, realized I was missing a lot of items and called customer service. THey said, no problem the bags are right here. I said, I'm on my way. I packed up baby Henry who was frightfully close to nap time and we drove 20 minutes back to wally world. He cried the WHOLE way.

So we get to customer service and the girl says, you'll have to go out into the store and pick out all your items again. I said, your kidding me, I called, someone said they would be waiting for me. She said, I guarantee you the items have been put back on the shelf. So I hustled around Wal-Mart retracing my steps to find facial cloths, baby lotions, creamed corn, pasta sauce.... I return to customer service to get my crap bagged or whatever it is they need to do. A different woman is there. She says, can I help you? And I explain myself and she says, you didn't need to do that! Your groceries are right here waiting for you.

what a guarantee. Then Henry slept in the car and wouldn't go down for a real afternoon nap once we got home. urg.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterRayne of Terror
At least you can rest assured that your son will be devoted to you until your dying days because you baked a CAKE FROM SCRATCH. Nothing else shows a mother's love, right?

When does emotional eating start, exactly? LOL
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered Commentercagey
I am that same freakin' way about housework. If I start any cleaning project I end up on my hands and knees scrubbing away at whatever it is with a toothbrush and a magnifying glass. OK, not really, but almost. When I attempt to make just a quick swipe of the shower tiles it always, always turns into an hour-long grout-scrubbing ordeal. And then I get mad when Husband cleans the litterbox and doesn't also sweep/vacuum/mop/scrub the bathroom floor while he's at it. I mean, while you're there, right? So the result is we live in an apartment that has some very clean parts and some very dirty parts. (...kinda like your mama. Ho!)
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterS-Way
Good gravy, woman, will you just go to the bakery next time?
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterOrange
I agree with Orange, buy the damn cake next time. I've always bought my cakes and usually have an ounce or two of sanity left for the party. Unless I have been cleaning because, like you, I am a bit obsessive with the making sure that things are completely shiny and new looking. I feel like we can be so 50's housewife-ish and it just makes me sick. Also, I saw on Martha that you can use the long wooden skewers to hold the cake together while you frost...
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterJuJuBee
man, i am so sorry about the cake! what an asshole of a cake! you are not crazy. defiant food is evil. i have totally been there.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered Commenterdinka
What? No picture of the cake is posted! I was looking forward to it all the way thru your post!
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterRobin
My mom wouldn't know "made from scratch" if it bit her in the ass, and I still love her.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterNat W.
After reading that story, I'm exhausted (and a little bit twitchy from all the sugar). Sorry about the cake from hell.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered Commentersandee
OK. When I was little my dad and I decided to bake a cake. Mom was out of town. Yeah, terror situation already right? Well, we did really well, we just used boxed mix and canned icing, no big deal. We baked the layers and then...and then, OHHHH THE HORRORRRR. I think it was one of my fondest childhood memories. See, get a dad who adores his little girl together with said little girl begging for white cake and chocolate icing and WHY Daddy? WHY can't we put the cake together NOW? So he thought, smart, We'll put the layers in the freezer for a few minutes then ice it up and eat it. Except the heat from the inside of the layers seeped back out while we were icing the cake. So the top started sliding. And we thought, well, it's just too heavy. We'll cut it into quarters and they'll stay. Except, they didn't. So eventually Dad and I each had two sides in each hand, keep in mind they were iced already, so we were covered, and we were cracking up. We each ate a quarter of the cake and propped the remaining sides against each other and threw them in the fridge. It was one of the best nights of my childhood. And THAT is why my dad and I are best friends.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterSarah
You win Best Mom Award. I had never eaten a cake from scratch (let alone ICING from scratch!) til I baked my goddamn own cake at the age of 20.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterNada
Two words: visual stimulation.

Please tell me you have a picture of this cake. Please.

I love that you tried to mop until the water was clean. It makes me want to hug you for a long time and whisper, Shhh, shhh, shhh in your ear.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterJenn
Frosting is from the devil anyway. I've baked a few cakes, but frosting eludes me. I bet the CAKE was fabulous. Just buy that canned stuff next time. Which, by the way, tastes better than homemade anyway.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterCandy
That made me tired just reading it. I could have given up, I have so little sanity left.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterNicole
Oh, how I hate Satan's Pastries. Get thee behind me, confectionary.The nice thing is, where I live, they don't let you bring homemade stuff to school. Otherwise, *of course* I would be making cookies from scratch. Of COURSE. But you know, I'll give it up for the sake of the children.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterPsycho Kitty
Australian Womens Weekly Childrens Cake book is the best fun ever...We spend weeks picking the cake that Mum would make for our birthday. I never had a non home made birthday cake until I started work in a cake shop at 15!!

I still love making trains and rabbit cakes for my friends kids now...a little lopsided sometimes shows a lot of love and if it is covered with lollies kids don't care.

Deorating tip - freeze the cakes before you ice them. Then put the cake in the fridge once iced. About an hour or so before you serve it take the cake out of the fridge, it will be perfect with its own little cooling system chugging along.

Great story by the way...thanks made me smile.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterNicole
oh that was just the best story ever. thanks.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered Commenterkatie
First I was crying because of Melissa's touching post, and now I am crying because it's true, you are the funniest woman alive. Oh God. I have to read it again.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterMonoCerdo
Oh I have to STOP reading your blog at night after everyone goes to sleep - whoooo. (Snorts still escaping, and much wiping of the eyes.)

Happy Birthday, Henry! Your Mama is funny.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterJess in Nova Scotia
Blame it all on the withdrawals. ALL of it. The mopping until the water is clear, the damn cake, the worrying about the damn cake. I'm still blaming my own Effexor withdrawals, while sobbing and obsessively picking at carpet stains. It's the drugs.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterSonia
Oh, God you make me so glad that I'm lax. Sometimes I feel guilty, Alice, or regret that I am a slacker and I would sooner be burned by blue acid frosting than bake a single thing...but when I feel this way, I will go back and read this post. Or make my husband do it.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterMiel
Maybe next time start small, like with cupcakes. At least then if things go horrible wrong, they're already in nice palm-sized, throwable chunks.
October 11, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterEulallia
That was hilarious! I'm so sorry it's at your expense.

My secret for 'homemade cakes' -Buy plain sponge from store.Add jam and cream and stick togetherTop with frosting from a can.Then decorate.Done.
October 12, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterSassy
I just need to know why I can't be an obsessive cleaner? I can obsess about anything and everything else but not cleaning. Dang it.

Alice, you amaze me. I was laughing and crying when reading this. I thought I was the only one who thought that inanimate objects were out to thwart us. Almost had a heart attack from trying to keep laughing out loud (every one else is asleep).
October 12, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterDM
henry, happy birthday.

alice, you are beautiful inside and out.
October 12, 2005 | Unregistered Commenteranne

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