Amazing mum makes giant Moana cake for her preschoolers (and we mean GIANT!)
An amazing mum has raised the bar when it comes to birthday cakes, combining the ‘bigger is better’ adage with baking brilliance … and a whole lot of Moana.
(Actually) nailed it!
British mum Lara Mason says her three-year-old twin daughters Lily and Lyla love Disney character Moana, thus it seemed the perfect choice for their upcoming birthday cake.
“My girls are absolutely obsessed with Moana so I thought I would give this a go,” she said, Chronicle Live reports.
“I can’t wait to see their reaction when they see it. I’ve also bought Moana costumes for them.”
“We have quite a lot of extended family so chances are there won’t be any spare,” she noted, so don’t worry about this going to waste.
Clearly by bigger we truly do mean bigger, because this cake is a whopping 4 feet tall! Lily and Lyla were lucky enough to tuck into this cake which was made from vanilla sponge, vanilla buttercream and lots and lots and lots of chocolate.
Posted by Lara Mason Cake Art on Monday, 17 February 2020
Whole lotta lovin’
The cake is large enough to feed 100 cake-loving guests and was made from 60 eggs, 4kg of flour and 4kg of sugar. Theres’s also a delicious 2kg of butter cream on board.
On Lara’s Facebook page she shared the process of putting this cake together and it’s incredible, architectural and a testament to how much this adorable mum loves her girls and wants to make their birthdays super special.
Lara’s Facebook followers loved this cake as much as we do.
“I cant believe how huge it is,” one wrote. “It looks ABSOLUTELY fantastic!”
“Wow amazing Lara! Can’t wait to see girls’ reactions and can’t believe they are going to be 3 years old,” another friend wrote.
“The cake is as big as they are,” someone else posted and they are delightfully incorrect because the cake is actually … BIGGER!
Ok… I think they liked their cake
Posted by Lara Mason Cake Art on Friday, 21 February 2020
The twins seeing their cake for the first time
Posted by Lara Mason Cake Art on Friday, 21 February 2020