When it comes to books about cake, there
are the ones you use and the ones you don't. There are the
ones whose recipes you can, with a little attention, manage to
produce yourself. And then there are the ones where you just
look through the pictures, slack-jawed. I'm thinking of a
book called Cakes to
Dream On, with cakes that look like mattresses, like Fabergé
eggs, like teapots. I'm talking about Toba Garrett's Wedding Cake Art
and Design, with its scrupulous and subtle trailing vines and
flowers. These cakes are beyond my wildest imaginings and, in
some cases, you get the feeling, on the very edges of their
authors'.
The perfectionism of bakers can be inspiring, when it's not
intimidating. Julia Usher's adorable Cookie Swap
drove me to make little cookie hats and butterflies last year for
my 4-year-old's birthday. And how many people were charmed by Hello,
Cupcake! into baking little Scottie dog cupcakes and
spaghetti-and-meatball cupcakes?
I have the feeling that the gorgeous and soigné Miette
Bakery Cookbook, from the eponymous San Francisco bakery, is
going to inspire another just-barely-within-reason cake fit.
It may be summer, when the icing drips and the butter melts,
but some charming, perfect little baked good can still steal your
heart.
What's your most aspirational baking book?