The Australian Women's Weekly

BAKING FOR A CAUSE: Sylvia Jeffreys teams up with The Weekly for a cake-tastic charity event

Today Extra co-host Sylvia Jeffreys turns to The Weekly’s fabled children’s birthday cake book to raise money for Youngcare.

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“Mum says she made the phone cake because I love a chat!”

Like many Australian­s, some of Sylvia Jeffreys’ favourite childhood memories are punctuated by the scent of freshly baked goods. They reside fondly alongside the sensation of licking a wooden spoon and the joy of running a nger greedily around the bowl of leftover cake batter. And in each of them, sitting on a oury bench, is a well-thumbed copy of The Australian Women’s Weekly Children’s Birthday Cake Book.

Her mother Janine may not have been the most accomplish­ed baker, laughs Sylvia today, but she was certainly enthusiast­ic when it came to nailing the perfect birthday cake for each of her three children.

“I had the telephone cake, plus I had the swimming pool cake when I was a teenager,” she recalls with a smile. “Mum says she made the pool because I was a good swimmer and the phone because I loved a chat, and neither of those things has changed! My sister Claire had the telephone cake and she also had the sweet shop. My brother Aaron had the cricket pitch and I think the racetrack. It was a well-used book in my household.”

Claire has continued the Jeffreys family tradition with her own kids: the famous elephant cake was a triumphant accomplish­ment for her son Louis on his recent second birthday. And Sylvia is determined to do the same when her own six-month-old son Oscar turns one.

“The beauty of these cakes is that you don’t have to be a master baker, you just have to have a bit of patience and creativity,” she says. “If you follow the instructio­ns, you can create something very special.”

Having bought herself a Mixmaster (“a lot of people tell me that when they brought out the Mixmaster, their kids knew something

special was coming,” she says),

rst on her agenda is the racetrack cake she’s creating for our Test Kitchen today.

“Oscar is a very fast baby, so I assume racetracks are going to suit him,” Sylvia reveals of her choice, which she adds is also suitably straightfo­rward. Plus she’ll need the practice: not only does she have to be ready for her son’s birthday in February, but as the proud national ambassador for Youngcare, Sylvia’s doing a test run ahead of their

15th birthday fundraiser – a bake-off (head to yourcakech­allenge.com.au for the details).

The charity aims to provide choice, care, housing and support for young people with disabiliti­es – an effort that has proved especially crucial during the COVID-19 pandemic, when many of those affected have been more isolated than ever.

“And they’ve been living not only in isolation, but in fear,” Sylvia says. “So many have underlying health issues that make them so vulnerable to this virus. We might have relaxed and be able to go out, but they can’t afford to take that risk.”

With our Children’s Birthday

Cake Cookbook also celebratin­g a signi cant birthday this year – 40 years of cakes – The Weekly is joining forces with Youngcare to help drum up awareness and support for the cause. For every copy sold on awwcookboo­ks.com.au while this issue is on sale, we will be donating $1 to Youngcare.

We’ll also be adding in a prize for all enthusiast­ic cake bakers across Australia! See the opposite page for details on how you can enter your own cakes while supporting a good cause at the same time. AWW

“The beauty of these cakes is you don’t have to be a master baker.”

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 ??  ?? Top and clockwise from left: Special birthday cakes were part of the joy of Sylvia’s childhood, and now she’s creating them.
Top and clockwise from left: Special birthday cakes were part of the joy of Sylvia’s childhood, and now she’s creating them.
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 ??  ?? Sylvia is following in her mum’s baking footsteps. Top left: Cakes made by and for Women’s Weekly contributo­rs. Bottom left: TV presenter Alison Ariotti with a house of cake at six years old.
Sylvia is following in her mum’s baking footsteps. Top left: Cakes made by and for Women’s Weekly contributo­rs. Bottom left: TV presenter Alison Ariotti with a house of cake at six years old.
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