Category Archives: birthdays

Birthdays and Friendship

When you’re not turning 16, 21, or 40, no one pays much attention anymore.

Which is precisely why it is so very sweet when they do.

Last week I had one of those birthdays. I wasn’t turning an age of any significance, just 39, again.

The day before my birthday my girlfriend Lisa called and said, “Hey, Birthday Girl! I want to take you out for your big day. And you better call me back, or I’ll keep hounding you!” Honestly, can you ask for a nicer friend?

So I’m thinking it will be Lisa, and me, and maybe one other friend. I am shocked when I show up to 4 friends waiting to celebrate. (And, because we are mothers, one inevitably got the sick-kid-at-school phone call & had to run. But still, she came.)

So we sat there and talked. And laughed. And solved the world’s problems. And laughed some more. Well, at least we solved the problems in our school district. We kept laughing. You never saw three hours fly by so fast.

A few nights later I headed over to a different friend’s house for dinner. You may recall that a group of us get together every few months for dinner and fun. This was that group. I walked in, hugged everyone, secured my drink and began chatting about whatever it was I had to say. My friend Janet made dessert for the evening and while we were chatting I glanced over at it several times. It’s hard not to when Janet bakes. If you think you like carrot cake, I am telling you right now that you have absolutely NO IDEA how good it can taste. She is the master! And sitting on top of that pretty little cake was a “39” candle. I thought perhaps it was our host’s birthday, and she added the number as a joke. Eventually I asked, “Who’s birthday is it?” and she laughed, just as you probably are now, and said, “It’s yours!”

photo credit: bloggyboulga

I’ve written here before about friendship but I don’t think I’m quite eloquent enough to say how much these little gestures mean.

These are the things that count. These are the things I’ll remember. These are the things that keep me here, in the land-locked middle, in a suburb, in a place that once had no connection for me, but now pulls me in by the pure strength of these friendships.

The rest really doesn’t matter. The shoes are fun. The jeans are fantastic. But neither one really matters. The houses, the cars, the schools, the rest, it’s all fluff.

Girls that take you to lunch and bake you cakes?

Keepers.

How Not to Bake Cupcakes in Waffle Cone Bowls

Ah, the baking craft, and oh, the guilt-ridden job of mother.  How I love thee both.

As can happen among mothers, I am the least crafty of the species.  I see projects like SusieJ’s ghost feet and I think they are fabulous, and I feel I should be good at these things, and I know I’m staring at failure.  Although my heart tells me I should make them, that these are the precious memories I should be making with my children, I know that their memory would be different.  They would be laughing their heads off when the dough wouldn’t harden or when it spontaneously combusted, both of which would be real possibilities. This is simply the way it is with me and crafts.  It’s a complicated relationship.

Speaking of relationships, during the first year we were married, I decided to bake my new husband a birthday cake.  I was going to make it from a box, like all good wives do, but I didn’t know which type was his favorite.  When I asked, he said, “Italian Cream Cake,” and I had the sinking feeling that kind didn’t come in a box.  I secured the recipe from his mom, purchased the ingredients, and got busy.  I measured and poured and folded.  When I was done, the batter still seemed awfully runny, but I slid it into the oven and crossed my fingers.  A few seconds later my husband came into the kitchen and I mentioned this peculiarity to him.  He peeked into the oven.  Kindly, ever so gently, he asked, “Um, did you add the flour?”  Ah ha!  And this was the first of many.

And so, it is with some wonder that I have become a birthday cakes for my children.  After that first attempt, most sensible women would have thrown in the towel, sold their beaters on Craig’s List, and called 1-800-Costco.  But no.  If nothing else, I am stubborn.  Determined.  I will not be beaten by flour and eggs.

But the cupcakes in the waffle cone bowls?  They almost beat me.  They could smell victory, as close as it ever was.

So here’s how it went down:  Several years ago I met a crafty mom who trades sleep for making party favors and the like.  One year, she made cupcakes for her child’s birthday. Now cupcakes, I can do.  But no.  She didn’t make cupcakes in paper like the rest of us.  She made them in edible waffle cone bowls, which I thought was brilliant.  Instantly, I knew I was inferior.  But it was easy, she said, and she told me how she did it.  I tried it.  Lo and behold, it was easy and just like that I was back in the motherhood game.

Flash forward.  I remember the waffle cone bowls.  So do my kids.  My son asks me to bake them for his class.  And the other class that’s a part of his team.  That’s 50 cupcakes in waffle cone bowls.  “Okay,” I thought, “this was easy.”

I use a box mix and open the waffle cone bowls.  Several are cracked.  Hmmm…won’t the batter just run out?  Those bowls are out.  What about the chipped ones?  Probably okay.  I bought 5 boxes of bowls and at 10 per box I don’t really have any to spare.  The chipped ones are in.  I pour the batter into the bowls and put them in the oven.  Only a few batches to go, right?

Except.  Except when I open the oven to check on them, batter is oozing out of several of them.  The others are strangely misshapen, flattened out in a quite unattractive matter.  Panic starts to settle in.  I salvage the ones I can and  get the next batch ready.  I’m very careful not to put too much batter in each bowl.  I wait, I peek, and…same deal.  Oozing and strangely flat.  I plead with my husband to run out and buy more waffle bowls, at once calculating my insanity and the rising cost of these stupid cupcakes.  He arrives with the extra waffle cone bowls.  Now I’m almost done.  I just need one more cupcake but the only waffle cone bowl left has a small hole in the bottom.  “Hmmm,” I think.  “I’ll just bake this one in the muffin tin and pop it into the waffle cone bowl afterwards.  No one will be any wiser.  And that’s when it hit me.  I’m the one who should be wiser.

You’re not supposed to bake them in the darn bowls.  You’re supposed to bake them in the muffin tins, let them cool, and THEN pop them into the waffle bowls.  If you do, they look like this, all pretty and perky.

Otherwise, you get the misshapen, random effect.

But I am here to testify that icing and quantity trump perfection.  Because not one kid cared that they didn’t have a pretty cone.  They just wanted to get their hands on one of these.

And all is right in the world.