USA TODAY US Edition

The week’s hottest reads

- JOHN WILSON

Top 50 on our Best-Selling Books list.

BOOKS

Colorful Amirah Kassem, founder of Flour Shop in New York City, has baked up a book all about cake, “The Power of Sprinkles.”

Her first book (Abrams, 224 pp.), in stores now, is filled with confection­s including the shop’s famous rainbow explosion cake – a six-layer vibrant confection, which, when cut into, unleashes candy and sprinkles like a busted-open pinata. It also includes recipes for impostor cakes decorated to look like pies, doughnuts, cereal, a bucket of popcorn and more.

Kassem, a graduate of the Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandis­ing, left the fashion industry in 2012 to bake full time.

In “The Power of Sprinkles,” she acknowledg­es the move was “a huge risk,” adding she didn’t attend culinary school.

“I was never trained by a pastry chef,” she writes. “I’d never even worked in a kitchen! I had no idea what I was doing, but I had my mother’s recipes in one hand and sprinkles in the other, and I was ready to make my empire from scratch.”

Kassem viewed her formal training deficiency as an advantage, allowing her to “bake outside the box.” As she observes, in a museum “no one’s coloring inside the lines.

“The person going the craziest on the canvas is the most fun and memorable!” she writes. “There’s obviously a method to the madness.”

And her method has led to making sweets for Katy Perry, Snoop Dogg and the Kardashian­s.

 ??  ?? Amirah Kassem enjoys cake that looks like a pizza.
Amirah Kassem enjoys cake that looks like a pizza.
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