In order to make the World Cake for this children’s party,
you’re going to need to start well ahead of time and have all your wits about
you to avoid World War III.
First, you need to buy two round baking dishes. Sorry: first
you need to source two round baking dishes and then figure out how to buy them.
Good luck with that.
Next, you have to arrange the initiations. This involves
creating circular invites with
plenty of precise instructions. You must “ask each child to dress in the
costume of a special country or be ready to tell about one.” Realizing
immediately that this proposition is likely to result in the faux pas of two or
more children arriving dressed or prepared to tell about the same country, the
good folks at Betty Crocker then advise: “it is a good idea to assign countries
to the children to avoid duplication.” At this point you must get down on your
knees and thank your lucky stars that Betty Crocker does not have a say in
International Relations. They don’t even use the phrase “good idea” ironically.
At this point, before you’ve written out those invites, you
must sit down and think about which child will represent which country. How ethnographically
or politically correct are you going to be? And if you assign the ancestral
home of one child, but an utterly alien one to another, what message will that
send? What if some kid doesn’t want to be Zimbabwe? And if you avoid this
problem by assigning each child random countries, how are they going to know
what to wear?
This is when you break open that bottle of Scotch, because
you’ve belatedly realized that costumes can’t be assigned to countries, as if
countries were singular culturally heterogeneous and sported a “costume.” Come
to think of it, how will the whole “tell about it” option go down? Will those
party-goers dressed normally be forced to recite facts and figures about their
assigned country before they’re allowed in? What if they haven’t done their
homework? Pour yourself another glass: you’ve just realized you assigned
homework as a condition of attending your kid’s party. You have utterly failed
at parenting.
However, you’ve bought the two round baking dishes and cut
out 12 globe-shaped invites, so you’re committed. There’s no way out. You
consider the games suggestion: “hold a mini-Olympics” and remembered that one
of the guests has a broken leg and another has asthma. The “shoe-kicking
contest” they also suggest is out then, whatever that entailed.
You decide, three drinks in, to forego the whole United
Nations parade, and just focus on the cake, and send out the invites and go to
bed.
On the day of the party, you make the cake (not that hard,
as it turns out), but discover, to your horror, that you have no idea how to
draw an outline of the continents in chocolate icing piped from an envelope
onto a spherical cake. You have a hard enough time doing this with a pencil on
paper. There is no room for error. Can you pipe and consult a map at the same
time? Can you stop the icing from oozing out of the envelope while you do so?
You decide to make the best of a bad situation by disguising
the truth of your incompetence by decorating the entire cake in squiggles
instead.
You console yourself with the thought that no-one will care.
Children’s Parties Card #6 Far Away Places, Betty Crocker Recipe Card Library, 1971
See Also: A SNAFU In The Jungle, Raggedy Ann Revisited, Horrorscope
See Also: A SNAFU In The Jungle, Raggedy Ann Revisited, Horrorscope