No surprise, then, that we jumped on the rainbow cake bandwagon.
I've seen rainbow cake mentioned in several blogs, most recently at Craft Magazine (my Matt has an unsavory name, of sexual connotation, for one blog posting an item, which is then picked up by another blog and posted, which is then picked up by another blog...), but our version, of course, changes some basic and crucial rules and thus doesn't end up looking like the other pictures on the other blogs. It's pretty much another shark cupcake incident.
So for instructions for a perfect-looking cake, try elsewhere.
The basic concept behind a rainbow cake is to divide a cake batter, independently color each scoop or so a different color--
--and then dump each scoop of cake batter into the cake pan smack on top of the scoop that came before it without stirring or mixing it up AT ALL:
And then you end up with rainbow-y goodness ready to bake:
My mistake, in rummaging through my family's kitchen, was that I used a white angel food cake mix, which I was able to find in a cupboard, but not an angel food cake pan, because I wasn't able to find one, although I'm sure of its existence somewhere in this house...somewhere.Mind you, I've never made nor seen made angel food cake before, so I'm reading the back of the box and I'm all, "Hmm, no eggs? I accept that. But balance the cake upside down on a glass bottle? That's weird, and I can't do that with these cake pans, anyway," and therefore my rainbow cake layers, instead of being all light and fluffy and wide and all, are instead dense and narrow and small:
But is the cake still delicious?
Why yes, yes it is. P.S. Interested in more messy cooking with kids? Check out my Craft Knife Facebook page!
As we walked into storytime at the
--and Breastfeeding:

This doesn't follow the book's instructions step-by-step, but back when I read it I studied it until I figured out how the most striking construction elements worked, and so I imagine that my own marker roll has some very close similarities.
--and the up-and-down, back-and-forth quilting:
I like this, in particular, a LOT better than the other ways I've seen discussed of constructing 
The 
We are apparently not the good kind of neighbors...ahem. Mental note: teach the girls to use a trowel, and then we could make 

--and worked--
--and worked. I had a plan to make some buttons around the alphabet for my 






For those of you not CRAZY like I am,
See how, at the left edge of the picture there, you can line up the clear ruler on the gridded mat at the appropriate lines so that the fabric to the right of the ruler is cut accurately?