National Cake Day ~ Friday Humor
National Cake Day is celebrated on November 26th to mark the countless cake recipes. Cakes are used to mark many occasions such as birthday and wedding anniversary, graduation and naming ceremonies, baby showers, retirements, etc.
Today, cakes are made in different designs, art, frosting, flavors, and texture. Generally, most cakes are made with flour, butter, and sugar, milk with ingredients like dried fruits, nuts, and extracts.
How to Observe National Cake Day
Bring out your pans and get baking, whether alone or with family and friends. Make it exciting by trying out a new recipe. Enjoy these hilarious jokes and puns on cakes.
1. I asked the baker if it was hard cutting the cake into equal slices
He said, “It’s a piece of cake!”
2. I firmly disagree with putting fruit on a cake
There’s just no good raisin for it
3. Losing weight is a piece of cake
Just don’t eat the cake
4. I was at an emotional wedding. The cake was in tiers.
Forgive me… but I needed a bad cake joke… I mean, I needed a cake joke bad.
5. Have you heard of Schrodinger’s cake?
You can have it and eat it.
As long as no one looks.
6. Cake Day special: Hear about the new restaurant called Karma?
There’s no menu… you get what you deserve.
7. No matter how much I love cake…
Never gonna run around and dessert you
8. What does a cake pirate do with his treasure?
He berries it on a dessert island.
9. I absolutely HATE when people make a post subtly implying that it’s their cake day just so people can wish them a happy birthday.
You won’t catch me doing that today.
10. A wealthy but stingy father was trying to put a birthday party together for his 18 y/o daughter.
He wanted the party to be extravagant but wanted to spend as little money as possible. He had finished all of the other decorations, and he was left to work on the cake.
“Why not order from an upscale bakery?” his wife said.
So the father visited many different bakeries and did research but found the prices to be too high.
My daughter is inviting all of her friends, and I’ll look bad if I don’t put together a good cake, he thought. Then, he stumbled upon a shop that opened once a year to provide free cakes to its customers.
How quaint, the father thought, but desperate, he walked inside to see if they could provide a cake for his daughter’s birthday.
He was met by a Buddhist monk chanting and lighting incense.
“Hello,” the father asked, “I would like to buy a cake.”
“Of course,” the monk replied, “just draw a picture of the cake you would like on the notepad on the desk.”
The father thought this to be weird, but wanting to save as much money as possible, he gave him the address and told him to come in the backdoor, just in case the cake was bad.
The day of the party arrived, and the monk visited the house with the most extravagant cake the family had ever seen. The guests were in awe and whispered to each other about how much the cake could have cost.
The monk became the guest of honor, and at the end of the party, the father approached the monk and asked,
“Why do you do this for free? You should take money for your services!”
The monk smiled and said, “I do this for free because a cake day is the best way to earn karma.”
Could the kitchen be another place for family bonding? Baking gives us the opportunity to work together. When families spend quality time working together toward a specific result, for example, baking cookies the result is so much sweeter than the cookie’s taste.