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mountain-moma 10-20-2012 01:31 PM

Oh Tanyal,Boy do i remember going to those i was so thrilled when i so your post"Cake Walk" i love going and baking cakes for them as well Thanks for a walk down memory lane haven't done or been to one in eons Thanks Sweetie(:)

mountain-moma 10-20-2012 01:34 PM

Lisa-Wanna-b- Quilter,Your cake is just beautiful i sure would like to win that one and have a cold glass of milk with it a slice OH Boy

bakermom 10-22-2012 02:33 PM

They used to do this at my kids' school carnival.
I remember one year we were really "lucky"-3 of the kids each won a cake.

Caroline Aaron 10-22-2012 08:27 PM

I heard that the chocolate cake is very interesting and superb therefore it is needful here somebody mention for its recipe how we prepare the chocolate cake with good ingredients because children like such flavor very much.It is nutritious for the children's body.

rufree4t 10-24-2012 02:22 PM

There is a restraurant in St Paul MN that makes a fantastic chocolate cake. It is rich but not hard to do. The frosting is poured on so it is not hard. You can find the recipe here.

http://www.cafelatte.com/turtle_cake.pdf

ptquilts 10-26-2012 12:18 PM

This is the most impressive one I have ever seen. Of course, I am easily impressed by......CHOCOLATE!!

http://artofdessert.blogspot.com/201...sted-cake.html

Damsel in DisDress 10-26-2012 01:18 PM

1 Attachment(s)
I have a Harvest festival at church tonight for all the kids. I made this simple cake for the cake walk using 2 bundt cakes and 2 cupcakes and 4 cups of buttercream icing!

NikkiLu 10-27-2012 06:57 PM

Our school fall carnival had a cake walk and a pie walk every year. They put the cakes and pies on big tables in the library and then in a classroom nearby, they would take masking tape and mark off squares on the floor and number them with tape - in a big square around the room - desks pushed to the sides. Maybe 20 or 25 squares. They would sell tickets outside of the room and to get to participate in the "walk" you had to give the supervisor a ticket. They would start some music and you would walk from square to square and then the music would stop and you would have to be on one square only. They would pull a number from a basket and that corresponding number on the floor would win a cake. You would then go across the hall to the library and pick out you cake (or pie). If there was nobody standing in the square that was called, then they would call another number. The cakes and pies are made by the parents/grandparents, etc. of children in the school - points were given and the class that made the most points won something big. The cakes were made and put on big squares of cardboard covered with aluminum foil and then covered with plastic wrap - so nothing had to be brought back to the owner. At the end of the evening, close to the coronation of the king and queen, if there were quite a few cakes/pies left, they would start calling several numbers per "walk". They had lots of games in the different classrooms, each game costing a ticket. They had a country store (baked goods for sale), craft store (homemade crafts for sale) and all kinds of things for sale, all donated by the parents, community. They also raffled off a gift card to WalMart - $500 I think - and the kids took home raffle tickets to sell to their parents, neighbors, friends, etc. They usually made about $10,000 per carnival - sponsored by the PTA. HTH

icon17 10-27-2012 07:19 PM

I did a 'Cake walk' as a Kid (7yr old ) only they used Chairs like for Musical Chairs game, I remember winning a 'Coconut Cake' I was polite I hated Coconut! Lol


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