The Madness Starts with a Nap
I woke up last Tuesday absolutely steamed. Not from heat, but from a dream. The kind of dumb, low-stakes panic dream that sticks to you all morning. I was trying to build a stack of old, mismatched books, but every time I placed a new one, the one below it slid out and dropped into a slow-moving, oily ditch. It was pointless, endlessly frustrating effort. I decided right there at 7 AM that I needed to bake that feeling. Not just a cake, but a physical representation of structural failure and pointless effort. That’s where the “Dream Interpretation Cake” idea came from. I wanted to interpret the facts of my mind.
I flew into the kitchen. My usual plan is to stick to a tried-and-true recipe, but for this? I threw the cookbook across the room. The dream didn’t follow rules, so why should the cake? I grabbed cocoa powder for the dark, oily ditch, and I dug out three different sized pans. I was going to try and stack them, tapering wildly, the way those books kept trying to balance.
I started on the base layer. I pulled out the biggest bowl. I dumped flour, sugar, and too much cocoa powder—I wanted it dark, muddy, and dense. I cracked six eggs with one hand because I felt like a pro that morning. I added the wet stuff and hit the mixer to high. The batter splattered right up the wall. I ignored it. A messy start is part of the process, just like finding bugs in the first build. The batter smelled great, though. I divided it unevenly into the three pans—the “foundation” layer got most of it—and then I slammed them all into the oven. I set the timer and went to make coffee, thinking I had this whole psychological baking thing dialed in.

The Furnace Betrays Me
Thirty minutes later, I knew something was seriously wrong. My kitchen smelled like burnt dust, not baked chocolate. I sprinted back to the oven. I snatched open the door and saw the disaster. The smallest layer, the one that was supposed to be the “capstone,” was perfectly browned and domed. The middle layer was sinking horribly in the center, and the big base layer? It was burned black around the edges and still wobbly in the middle. The oven temperature had spiked, a known issue I had refused to fix for months. I always said, “It’s good enough, I’ll deal with it later.” Guess what? Later arrived, and it came with burnt cake.
This is exactly what happens when you ignore the foundation. You can’t build the fancy stuff if the core system is lying to you about the heat. I kicked the cabinet. I dragged the layers out. I let them sit there steaming, a complete structural mess. The dream cake was turning into an anxiety attack.
Scrambling for the Fix: The Franken-Cake
I wasn’t going to scrap it. No way. I decided to be resourceful, or maybe just stubbornly lazy. I got out my longest serrated knife. I scraped the charred edges off the big base layer until it looked almost round again. I lopped off the sunken, wobbly top of the middle layer to make it flat, turning it into a dense, chewy disc. The smallest layer went on top, perfect but now awkwardly small.
The “oily ditch” frosting needed to save this. I whipped up a heavy batch of peanut butter buttercream. I added black food dye. Not brown—black. It looked like crude oil. I slathered it thick between the layers. The layers didn’t match up in size, so I tried to smear the black frosting up the sides to hide the difference. It just emphasized how lopsided the whole thing was. It looked like three different cakes from three different bakeries had been jammed together under duress.
Step 1 Failure: Cake base burned due to lying oven.
Action: Trimmed it aggressively.
Step 2 Failure: Middle layer caved.
Action: Sliced the top off, made it dense.
Step 3 Failure: Frosting emphasized the uneven stack.
Action: Piled more on, maybe that hides the sins.
For the final touch, the “slippery book” aesthetic, I mixed some white frosting with gelatin to make a gooey, slightly translucent glaze. I poured it over the top, hoping it would drip nicely. Instead, the whole batch ran right down the sides, over the black frosting, and pooled under the cake plate, creating a kind of gross, grey-black puddle. It was truly disgusting. A mess. A total hodgepodge of salvaged parts.
The ‘Facts’ Are Just a Soggy Mess
I stepped back and looked at the monster. It was uneven, it was too dark, the glaze was pooling, and it looked exactly like what it was: a structure built on a foundation of lies and held together with emergency repairs. The literal interpretation of my anxious, impossible dream. It looked heavy, and structurally compromised, and the taste? The taste was surprisingly okay—the rich, dark chocolate flavor overpowered the burnt bits I missed cutting out. The density made it chewy.
That’s the practice record. I started with an idea of elegance and a clear, conceptual representation. I ended with a three-tiered structural failure, a technical problem (the oven) I ignored, and a desperate, inelegant fix (the scraping and the massive amount of black frosting) that barely held the thing together. The facts are: the system failed, I pushed through with brute force, and the resulting mess was the honest record. I ate a huge slice and didn’t regret a thing. Learned my lesson about trusting that oven, though. Maybe. Probably not.
