Just the right cake

Christina Tosi

Book - 2023

After Phil's parents divorce, he aims to make a cake that fits his new life, incorporating some of his parents' favorite ingredients along with his own. Includes recipe for Phil's chocolate brownie PB s'mores layer cake.

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jE/Tosi
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Location Call Number   Status
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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York : Rocky Pond Books 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Christina Tosi (author)
Other Authors
Emily Balsley (illustrator)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 27 cm
Audience
004-008.
Grades K-1
AD530L
ISBN
9780593110713
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Offering a new recipe for moving forward, Milk Bar creator Tosi centers a child navigating his parents' divorce in this picture book about finding one's own bake. For Phil, who's portrayed with tan skin, "every day was a perfect day to bake a cake." Used to baking with both of his parents, he finds that something is missing when he makes his favorite double chocolate cake with just his mom, depicted with brown skin. He tries again at his white-presenting dad's new apartment, and still, "the cake wasn't the same." When he tells a friend what happened, she theorizes, "Every cake has a story. And sometimes stories change." In searching for a "new story to tell," one that's focused on his family's favorite flavors, and his own, Phil takes a mature, positive step forward that helps ready him "to see where his story would take him next." Via bake-shop-bright colors and round shapes, Balsley's crisp gouache and ink illustrations amplify the book's optimistic theme. Phil's cake recipe concludes. Ages 4--8. (Feb.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

It's all about the yum in this tale from Tosi, founder of Milk Bar, a chain of bakeries. Now that his mom and dad are living apart, young Phil finds that his delectable double chocolate cake isn't the same when he prepares it with just one parent at a time. Nor does making brownies with one and s'mores with the other quite butter the biscuit. His peanut butter cookie--making partner, Sammi, tells him that "every cake has a story. And sometimes stories change." That sends him to the grocery store for inspiration and leads to a mouthwatering epiphany: "A Chocolate Brownie PB S'mores layer cake!" "New could be exciting and special," enthuses the author before closing with a challenging but feasible recipe (with the suggestion to torch the top properly left for grown-up sous-chefs). Reinforcing the upbeat tone and positive outlook in this tale of family changes, Balsley's cartoon illustrations depict a young patissier presenting the very picture of culinary self-confidence as he bustles about two kitchens while his parents look on affectionately and lend an occasional willing ear or hand. This one is best when dished up with sweets and a napkin, like all the better pastry-centered picture books. Phil and his father are tan-skinned, Mom is brown-skinned, and Sammi is light-skinned. (This book was reviewed digitally.) A foodie's delight, with a sweet message between the layers. (Picture book. 7-9) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.