As Taylor Swift might say, these cakes are as pretty as a “picture to burn.”
There’s always a new food trend cooking on TikTok, and the latest to take over the feeds is the burn-away celebration cake.
The desserts initially appear ordinary with edible photos printed over the frosted top — until a match is put to the top layer, burning it off and revealing another image underneath.
Burn-away cakes have lit up TikTok since the beginning of January, and the tag #burnawaycake has already raked up 154 million views.
The enflamed confections have captivated viewers live and online for all sorts of occasions: birthdays, engagements, New Year’s and, of course, gender reveals.
Ontario-based baker Namaya Navaratnarajah, who posts her creations as @cakesbynams on both TikTok and Instagram, was the one who ignited the trend.
While her very first cake didn’t go viral, she still found the concept to be amazing and decided to do it again — this time for a “RIP 20s, Hello 30s” theme, Navaratnarajah told The Post — which is when she coined the term “burn-away cake.”
“I thought it sounded cooler and more apt than burning cake did for my audience of about 1,000 or so,” she explained. “I didn’t think it would go viral or have such a large reach, but it garnered over 100k likes on TikTok.”
“That was when someone commented I should do a ‘Reputation’-themed cake, and that’s what really took off and got me here”
Navaratnarajah’s Swift-inspired burn-away cake quickly went viral. The cake teases the soon-to-be-announced re-recorded album “Reputation (Taylor’s Version)” — and the post garnered 20.4 million views and 2.5 million likes.
Another cake of hers that went viral, with 24.8 million views and 4.7 million likes, is “Hunger Games”-themed and reveals a meme of Josh Hutcherson, who plays Peeta Mellark in the movie trilogy.
The baker receives hundreds of requests per day, and while she unfortunately can’t respond to and make every one, she has made around 20 cakes just for content alone.
But Navaratnarajah said she first saw the idea from cake artist Denise Steward, and Paper2Eat said in a blog post that they are “99.9% sure she started this cake trend.”
Though the concept has allegedly been around for at least a couple of years, seeing as there’s a TikTok of a burn-away cake posted in August 2022.
Navaratnarajah told The Post that the first time she ever made a burn-away cake was on Jan. 29, 2023, which was the recreation of Denise’s cake — but it wasn’t until the cake she made on made on Jan. 11, 2024, that they started to go viral.
At first glance, it seems like the burn-away cake is some sort of magic or witchcraft — but there’s a science to it.
“Figuring out how to make it was the most difficult, as it was such a new concept at the time,” Navaratnarajah shared. “I think it took me over three tries to get it right the first time. I tried a bunch of different edible papers and layering techniques, but once I got it right, it was smooth sailing from there.”
According to the blog post from Paper2Eat, the anatomy of a burn-away cake includes the cake itself, a frosting sheet and wafer paper.
“Essentially the idea consists of stacking a couple of printed edible sheets on top of each other and lighting the paper on top of the cake on fire to reveal what is shown on the sheet below it,” the blog post explained in simple terms.
The materials that Steward used for her burning cake included 0.30mm wafer paper (which comes in plain and vanilla), frosting sheets, and edible ink cartridges in an edible ink printer.
The wafer paper is used for the top layer of the cake — the image that will be burned. It’s made primarily of potato starch and olive oil, allowing for an easy burn.
Frosting sheets are used for the image that will be revealed under the burning image. These sheets have a thicker consistency, consisting of white icing mostly made of sugar, which helps it stay virtually intact.
The edible ink cartridges and printer were used to print the images onto the frosting sheet and wafer paper.
There are tutorials all over social media showing how to make a burn-away cake on your own, ensuring your next party will be fire — literally.
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