5 Smash Cake Tips for success…

The most important part of a child’s first birthday party… when they truly get their first shot at the sweet stuff and get to eat, throw, and play in as much frosting and cake as they would like! We do allow you to pick the colors that you would like on your Smash Cake… but remember….

  1. Avoid brown icings ….I’ve actually seen some pictures of chocolate cake smashes …and it always looks like poop.
  2.  When you choose colored icing, avoid red. (Red icing mixed with baby drool can end up looking like blood which is not the look you are after!)
  3. Avoid fondant decorations (this can pose as a choking hazard).
  4. Don’t bring the cake straight from the fridge and set it in front of baby, the icing and cold cake may make it too hard for baby to grab and they may lose interest. A room-temperature cake smashes best.
  5. Two and three year old toddlers love to smash a cake as much as your one year old. A happy child equals happy parents and in the end — a happy memory. We are all about memories and sharing life with those we love!

Post-Birthday Cake Meltdowns

Most pediatricians recommend not adding sugar or salt to your child’s food in her first year of life. It’s difficult to say how much sugar is too much, but most sugars are essentially unnecessary for the body as they provide few vitamins, minerals or other nutrients. On a day to day basis, a high sugar intake may make your child cranky and irritated when the sugar level in her body drops after a few hours of eating them.
In my personal experience, refined sugar intake can have dramatic effects on infants. Seeing my own and other children, I have regularly observed hyperactivity and sometimes very difficult behavior after taking in lots of sugar (in birthday parties etc.), followed by intense fatigue or hysteric breakdown after an hour or two. So what we try to do with our Smash Cakes is reduce their sugar intake towards the socially acceptable minimum (without being neurotic)

Baby’s First Cake…No Honey!

After some intense research into how to make a Healthy Smash Cake…I found that a majority of recipes included honey!
Although honey seems like a wholesome and natural food to give your baby, it is advised to not give your baby honey until after she’s at least 12 months old. To be on safer side (and advised by most pediatricians), make sure that you don’t give your baby honey until he or she is at least 18 months of age.
Honey can contain spores of a bacterium called Clostridium botulinum, which can germinate in a baby’s immature digestive system and cause infant botulism, a rare but potentially fatal illness.These spores are usually harmless to adults and children over 1 year old, because the microorganisms normally found in the intestine keep the bacteria from growing.
The condition can be frightening because it can cause muscle weakness and breathing problems. Although this is very rare: fewer than 100 cases of infant botulism happen each year in the United States the risk is there!
As a precaution…We do not use honey in our cakes or icings.