This is probably not your average ‘Pied Piper’ read, so brace yourself! As a cake designer and professional flute player, I found over the years that the two are quite in sync (minus the calories, of course). All jokes aside, the common cake ingredients are equivalent to the common tools needed in music. Flour, sugar, butter, and milk equate to a musical clef, notes, dynamics, tempo, and so on.
My passion for cake derived from my mother, my maternal grandmother, and my paternal great-grandmother Willy Ruth Gales, who lived in the segregated South where food was highly celebrated. Willy Ruth was known for her sweets, specifically her coconut cake! I remember watching her make the cake at around seven years old, filled with admiration. I remember her saying, “This is Love, grandson. This is how we stayed alive all of those years: through food, culture, and our community.”
When I realized I had a niche for baking, I found myself doing a few things that, in retrospect, have taken my flute-playing to a new level. I’m officially a Pie’d Piper, and I want more people to join me in the kitchen as well as in the performance space.
I will guide you through the Pie’d Piper experience (I feel like a shirt logo could be on the horizon) through cake and music! But to make this a teaspoon more interesting, I’m going to treat this article like we’re on “Shark Tank” to convince you that the Pie’d Piper experience works. Imagine the low brass shark tank tune that happens in the beginning, followed by the large doors opening automatically, and there I come with my Pie’d Piper pitch:
This is probably not your average ‘Pied Piper’ read, so brace yourself! As a cake designer and professional flute player, I found over the years that the two are quite in sync (minus the calories, of course). All jokes aside, the common cake ingredients are equivalent to the common tools needed in music. Flour, sugar, butter, and milk equate to a musical clef, notes, dynamics, tempo, and so on.
My passion for cake derived from my mother, my maternal grandmother, and my paternal great-grandmother Willy Ruth Gales, who lived in the segregated South where food was highly celebrated. Willy Ruth was known for her sweets, specifically her coconut cake! I remember watching her make the cake at around seven years old, filled with admiration. I remember her saying, “This is Love, grandson. This is how we stayed alive all of those years: through food, culture, and our community.”
When I realized I had a niche for baking, I found myself doing a few things that, in retrospect, have taken my flute-playing to a new level. I’m officially a Pie’d Piper, and I want more people to join me in the kitchen as well as in the performance space.
I will guide you through the Pie’d Piper experience (I feel like a shirt logo could be on the horizon) through cake and music! But to make this a teaspoon more interesting, I’m going to treat this article like we’re on “Shark Tank” to convince you that the Pie’d Piper experience works. Imagine the low brass shark tank tune that happens in the beginning, followed by the large doors opening automatically, and there I come with my Pie’d Piper pitch: