Today is my birthday. I made a cake to celebrate. It’s a very special cake you see. Not because of some secret ingredient or a particular filling, not because of a gourmet chocolate icing or pretty swirls. Today is not only my birthday, it’s my 45th birthday. That’s an important milestone for me as my own mother died when she was 45. I miss her so much. It’s almost 22 years and I still can’t think about her without sobbing. This is a special year for me making it to her age and still being here. Here with all 4 kids I bore that she never had the chance to meet. Here, cigarette free for the last 20 years because I vowed I wouldn’t let it kill me too.
So I baked this cake for her, in her memory. To remind me of her, how special she was to me, and how I longed for her every time I had a parenting question or wanted to know about things I had done as a child.
So if you’re willing to endure my blubbering through this blog post I’d be honored if you read along. If not, I completely understand, the recipe can be found at the end.
First, let me make it clear that I lost my mother to heart disease, not cancer. But I still lost her. People lose loved ones all the time to illness and it doesn’t matter what took them away, the only thing that remains is that hole in your heart. It hurts my heart knowing that people are leaving this earth before their time.
We came here from England in 1969, I was a mere tot at only 2 years of age. This photo was taken on Christmas Day in 1969. I’m the little girl in the white coat, my older brother is wearing the dark coat with the hood, and my mother is holding my younger brother. The other two children were our first friends in America.
My father was back in England gathering our life together, so we took this picture to send to him and wish him a Merry Christmas.
My mom was a beautiful person. Not only on the outside, but on the inside too. She was tiny, 5’4″, a full 5 inches shorter than me. I miss her smile and her glow, she was so full of love and happiness.
When she was 39, she suffered a heart attack in a convenience store parking lot. I’ll never forget walking into the Intensive Care Unit and seeing her lying there, tubes everywhere. I was 17 then, a senior in high school. I was so scared, I couldn’t imagine life going on without her. It wasn’t until she was transferred to a recovery room that I found out she was also 5 months pregnant. A triple bypass was performed and the baby was fine. Baby “Johnathon” was a “surprise” that she and her boyfriend had not expected. With her illness she feared she wouldn’t be around very long, so she made the difficult decision to give him up for adoption. I looked into his big, blue saucer eyes through the nursery window one last time. I never saw him again. I only have a few snapshots of him to remember him by.
As time went on there was a minor heart attack, and another, and an angioplasty to widen her blood vessels and prevent the blockage. Over the next few years I began working in the corporate world and didn’t have as much time for my mom. She would call and ask when we could get together and I would often have a reason why I couldn’t. We lived over an hour from each other and I worked full time. I didn’t see my mom as often as I should have and I wish I could do that all over again.
It was my 21st birthday, so we got together to celebrate. My brothers, my sister in law, my boyfriend (now husband) and my mom. We had a lot of fun and it was great to get together and celebrate! By now my mom was a grandma already as my older brother had a daughter from his first marriage in Germany while he was in the service. Unfortunately though that little girl, Jennifer, was across the ocean and my mom was unable to embrace her grandchild.
It wasn’t long after that I became pregnant for the first time. I was elated and the first person I told was my mom. A few weeks later I miscarried and lost that baby. I was devastated but she was there to comfort me and assure me that there must have been a reason. A few months later I was pregnant again, so happy to soon be a parent. But alas, it wasn’t meant to be as I miscarried a second time. Again, my mother was there for me, to comfort me and tell me everything was going to be alright.
September 7, 1990. It was a beautiful, clear day. Not a cloud in the sky. The sun was beaming, traffic was surprisingly light, and I made it home from work in record time. I stepped inside to a ringing telephone. It was my brother, telling me that mom was gone. I dropped to my knees and began to sob uncontrollably. I have never experienced such sorrow and heartache in my entire life. How could this be? I had just talked to her on the phone the day before, how could she be gone?
She had experienced two major surgeries and 6 heart attacks in the last 6 years. She was invincible I thought. I truly believed in all my 23 year old naivety that she would never die. But she did. And she was gone. Stripped from my life. I would never hear her beautiful English accent again or see her lovely smile. Touch her soft face or hug her petite frame. That was it. It was over. Her life was over and she was no longer of this earth.
She was 45 years old when she was welcomed into Heaven’s gates.
September 8, 1990. Through puffy, tear drenched eyes I looked out the window as my husband drove us to her apartment. It was time to go through her possessions and meet with my brothers. Time to decide what to do with her things, who would take what. My mother didn’t have worldy possessions, she had a few trinkets, clothes I would never fit into, and your average apartment full of furniture.
As I looked through her room, sobbing at everything I touched or turned up, I found a letter in her lingerie drawer. Through tears and a torturous ache I’d never felt in my heart before, I opened the envelope addressed to me and my two brothers.
This letter tormented me for a very long time. It wasn’t until I’d been a mother myself for many years that I realized that it doesn’t matter how good of a mom you really are, you will always find fault in yourself.
“I hope you will forgive me for not being the best mom in the world.”
Oh mom, don’t you see? You WERE the best mom in the world. You loved me, you comforted me, you provided for me. Being a good mom is not measured by the material possessions you give to your children, it’s measured by the love and guidance that you provide. The knowledge that you instill in your children to help them become kind, responsible adults.
One day, out of the clear blue sky you were torn from the pages of my life, just like that. I didn’t get to say goodbye. I couldn’t kiss you one last time or hug you ever again. There were no more chances. I missed out on that and ignored the warning signs. So naive. That day will be forever ingrained in my mind.
I cried for a long time. I mourned and grieved and blamed myself for not seeing her more often. In my head I would hear the pleading in her voice over the phone asking when I would be coming to visit, I can still hear it all these years later. I was so angry with myself for selfishly choosing not to make the time. And then one day it was just too late. I missed the opportunity train and I’m not sure I’ll ever forgive myself for that. I’ve tried, but I still haven’t been able to.
When I was a little girl, every birthday my mom would make me a yellow cake. It’s my favorite. I’d rather have classic yellow cake with chocolate frosting over any other cake. Ever. She would frost it with chocolate, pipe on white stars and write a happy birthday message. I started looking for pictures I could share. I remember one in particular, my 6th birthday, because of the photograph that I’d seen that had captured that happy day in time. Sadly, I couldn’t find it. Even sadder, I discovered that I have very few pictures of my mom in my possession.
So instead I’m sharing pictures of the cake I made for me and my mom. I baked this cake in honor of my life and of hers. I am celebrating today that while my kids have never met her, I have been able to keep her memory alive with stories and the few photos I have. I have been able to build a picture in my kids’ minds of their grandmother and how much she would have adored them had she be given the chance.
I also hope to spread the message that it’s important to relish the time that we do have together and not to take that time for granted.
Make time in your busy schedule to visit with your family before that opportunity is gone forever. Pencil them in if you must. Just make sure to do it. Don’t carry a guilt with you like I do.
Death is an inevitable part of life. But heart disease, cancer and other fatal illnesses take too many people far too soon. I loved my mother while she was here, and I will love her forever.
Her passing has left a hole in my heart that can never be filled. I can only hope that I have honored her life, created a vision of her for my children, and become the woman that she hoped I would be.
I love you mom. Rest in peace. I will see again someday.
Classic Yellow Cake with Chocolate Frosting
IMPORTANT - There are often Frequently Asked Questions within the blog post that you may find helpful. Simply scroll back up to read them!
Print It Rate ItIngredients
Cake
- 2 ¼ cups cake flour
- 2 ½ teaspoons baking powder
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 ½ cups sugar
- ¾ cup unsalted butter
- 3 large eggs
- 1 large egg yolk
- ¾ cup milk
- 1 tablespoon pure vanilla extract
- ½ teaspoon almond extract
Chocolate Frosting
- 6 ounces good-quality semisweet chocolate chopped
- 6 tablespoons unsalted butter
- 2 ½ cups powdered sugar
- 1 tablespoon light corn syrup
- ½ cup sour cream
- 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350 F. Grease 2 9-inch round cake pans then line with parchment paper circles. The grease will help hold the parchment in place as well as help you remove the cake when done.
- In a medium bowl, stir or whisk together the cake flour, baking powder and salt. Set aside.
- Add extracts to the milk in measuring cup or bowl. Set aside.
- With mixer on medium speed, beat butter until creamy. Gradually add in sugar until incorporated. Add eggs and yolk one at a time until incorporated. Turn off mixer and scrape sides of bowl.
- With mixer on low speed, gradually add half of the dry ingredients, then half of the milk mixture. Mix in remaining dry and wet ingredients and mix until it all comes together. Scrape down sides if needed. Beat on medium speed for 2 minutes to aerate the batter.
- Pour batter into prepared cake pans and bake for 22-32 minutes, or until cake tester comes out clean and top springs back to your touch.
- Cool in pan on wire rack for 10 minutes then remove from pans and cool completely.
For the frosting:
- Melt the chopped chocolate and butter in a good-sized bowl either in the microwave or suspended over a pan of simmering water. Cool.
- Place powdered sugar into the food processor and blitz to remove lumps. Add remaining frosting ingredients and process until smooth.
- Spoon about 1/3 of the frosting onto the center of the cake-half and spread with a knife or spatula until you cover the top of it evenly, leaving about 1/2" from the edges. Set the other cake on top, right side up, pressing gently to sandwich the 2 together.
- Spoon another 1/3 of the frosting onto the top of the cake. Spread the sides of the cake smooth then spread the frosting on top in a swirly, textured way.
- Hint: For my swirled top, I hold the icing spatula over the top outside edge and turn the plate as I go, working my way into the center.
Nutrition
Amanda Davis
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Cathy Doyle says
Happy Birthday to you…this was a beautiful post. I am 45 this year, also. And my mom smoked….she has emphysema – very bad. I do not know how much longer I have with her. I am just trying to enjoy every minute with her. She is in the hospital – a lot. God Bless you and your mom. I undertand how you feel.
MaryBeth says
I love seeing your family photos and hearing your stories of your mom, thank you for sharing. The cake is fantastic draped in that chocolate frosting, my all time favorite.
Jen says
Wow, weeping as I’m smiling and reading. Thanks so much for sharing this. A beautiful tribute to your mom.
Ana says
It’s a lovely and tender tribute to your mon. Mine also passed away 6 months ago and I love her and miss her very much.
Pamela Whited says
Amanda, what a glorious remembrance to your blessed Mommy. My own dear Mother passed at 49 yrs and I am now 57. How bewildering it feels when one realizes she is older than her Mother. (like me) Nonetheless, I am so very proud that you and I were blessed with “the world’s best Mother”, having a blueprint of how to mother our own children. I am blessed for all she taught me and the determination, along with my Daddy to raise seven children. We’re all in our late fortys and early sixties now, but because of the love shared with us, we try very hard to still get together for special occasions and such. Thank God for LOVE. Going now to look at the pink Pampered Chef and pick something out. Thanks for the reminder of the blessings I’ve had and have a wonderful and full Birthday.
Sincerely,…….Pam Whited
Trae C says
Thank you for sharing the letter your mother wrote to you and your brothers. That was such a wonderful gift she gave you, to be able to tell you how much she cared for all of you even after she was gone. My mom passed away less than a year ago, and my heart hurts every day, even as it heals. I’m so sorry for your loss.
Susan says
What a special tribute to your mom.
junecutie says
Amanda, I am so sorry about your Mother. I lost my husband, the love of my life, last December 16 from a sudden massive heart attack. He just woke up, gasped “help”, and died before I could even get to him. He was so strong and healthy, and we didn’t even know he was sick. I guess nobody can say they know how you feel until it happens to them. I know how special your Mom was, because she lives through you. You are her best work! Be well and kiss the ones you love. We are only given today to make sure they know how much we love them.
Cheryl G says
Very touching tribute to your mom. I look forward to trying this recipe
Pam Buckley says
Thank you for sharing your story and recipe. I lost my father at a very early age and also my sister was tragically killed at only 40. I miss both of them so much and understand your grief for your dear Mum. There are also special days/times and memories that back it all so real and birthdays are one of them. Hope you enjoyed your birthday and what a honour to make that cake and remember your Mum in that special way. You will see your Mum again just as I will see my Dad and sister again. Prayers and blessing to you xx
Ila Jeanne Foerch says
Happy Birthday! Amanda. I too have lost my Mother and my Dad and a brother — still miss each one every day!! Life goes on, just a day at a time. It is great that you have some wonderful memories of your mother.
Thanks for all the wonderful recipes you give to us on the blog. I change them to Gluten-Free and enjoy each one just the same. Thanks!
Pat R says
When you lose your mom, you’ve lost your best friend………..my best friend has been gone 22 years also. I think of her and miss her every day.
Renee - Kudos Kitchen says
I do believe I forgot to say Happy Birthday to YOU Amanda!!! Wishing you many blessings for the coming year, and years, to come.
Renee - Kudos Kitchen says
It is through blurry eyes and a large lump in my throat that I read your post Amanda. I can’t imagine how difficult losing your mom at such a young age must have been for you. The letter you shared had me weeping for you, your siblings and of course, your mom. I’m sure she is extremely proud of the woman and mother you’ve become and the wonderful things you do enrich with world with your kindness, creativity and deliciousness. Your cake is a beautiful tribute to your mom. It is the prettiest cake I believe I’ve ever seen! Sending you hugs and warm regards.
Julie Scriver says
It’s tough to write anything on this computer with tears streaming down my face, but here goes. Hugs to you for reaching your personal milestone and what a lovely idea of baking a cake to remember your Mom. I lost my Mom 8 years ago from lung cancer and she hadn’t smoked in 35 years. When I found out she was in 4th stage and had 6 weeks to live. She slipped into a coma at 4 weeks and I never got to say goodbye. God bless you Mom.
Cathy (lov2bake) says
Happy Birthday – no matter the age (I am 74) you will never stop missing someone so close to you. Thank you for the recipe. It was a wonderful way to honor your mother.
Bonnie says
My Mom is 83 yrs old. She lives in a nursing home about 10 minutes from us. She is confined to a wheelchair and is totally deaf. Yet she still sparkles like a rare star. I am going to see her more often after reading your story. My Dad, aunts and uncles, grandparents and the apple of my eye, my 19 yr old son who died 14 yrs ago, all of the above are in heaven. I miss my son so much, you just can’t imagine. He was such a joyful soul. He had cerebral palsy and COPD. He wasn’t expected to live to be 1 or 2 yrs old. But he fooled them all! He came to us as a foster child when he was 4 months old. We adopted him when he was 5 yrs old. That was surely a leap of faith and I am so glad we were able to give him a name and a stable, loving home life. Rest in peace, Billy. I am so sorry for the loss of your Mother. My Dad suffered 3 heart attacks and the last one took him when he was 57. Like you, my 57th birthday was a mile stone for me. I am now 61. Health is shot but I live each day as it comes and thank the good Lord for the life I have.
Jean says
What beautiful memories.
I did not get to tell my mother good by.
If only we could turn back time.
Diane S. says
That is a beautiful post, Amanda. No one can imagine losing a daughter, husband, or mom or dad. But, thank you for being brave and writing about it. Your courage gives us courage. Our time will come.
Because of Him,
Diane
Christine Sim says
such a beautiful piece about your loving mom, Amanda! i was crying and remembering how i didn’t get to say goodbye or hug or say “I love you” to my father when he died 3 months ago. i’m making time always for my mom now…
i love your cake! it’s lovely and looks so yummy! will bake it one of these days. happy birthday and may God continue to shower you and your family with all kinds of blessings!