Let them eat 1,600 cakes: inside Australia’s first Cake Picnic

A picture


Baker Alice Bennett, also known as Miss Trixie Drinks Tea, is the self-proclaimed queen of cakes in Melbourne.She assumes her cheeky email signature is why she was tapped as an assistant judge at Australia’s inaugural Cake Picnic.When the global phenomenon descended on Kings Domain in Melbourne last Saturday, 1,600 cakes were artfully presented and then summarily devoured as part of the Melbourne Food and Wine Festival (MFWF).Created in San Francisco in 2024 by amateur baking enthusiast Elisa Sunga, the first Cake Picnic was conceived as a way for the Californian to eat more cake than she could be bothered to bake.Her event has now toured nine cities, and will be visiting Sydney on Saturday 28 March.

In the years since Cake Picnic began, unrelated mass cake swapping events have also been held in Australia.In the spirit of a pot luck, the idea is simple: bring an offering and share the spoils.There’s a winner – technically, but Cake Picnic is not a competition, or even a showcase, it’s cakenomic redistribution on a grand scale.Bake one, then sample until your sugary little heart is content.Unpretentious and egalitarian, it is governed by one rule above all – no cake, no entry.

Bennett had her game face and party dress on for the occasion,As the sublime autumn sun shone down, she had high hopes,“I’m aiming for 1,000, but I’ll be sad if I don’t get to taste at least 50,”As the proceedings commenced at 11am, a sea of gingham skirts and boldly patterned frocks billowed across the grass towards a marquee, shepherded by an army of pink-shirted MFWF staff, doing their best to maintain order,The giddy crowds were marshalled through to their designated drop-off zones, where they abandoned their creations along hundreds of metres of trestle tables, draped in starched white cloth.

Once the tables were set the masses, including the two judges, had their chance to peruse the offerings and formulate their attack.“Longtime baker and longtime cake eater” Polly Stokes travelled more than 600km, from Canberra, with her 10-year-old daughter, Milly, for the event.She’d whipped up a tried and true chocolate raspberry number, while Milly embarked on an ambitious chocolate rainbow marshmallow creation.But showcasing their efforts wasn’t a priority: “We’re here for the fun of it, this is such a beautiful, relaxed environment and everyone has put in such effort!”From towering tiers to intricately decorated masterpieces, she wasn’t wrong.A literal tonne of cake (at least) was served at the event.

“Just think of how many ovens in Melbourne were being used.Of how much sugar, butter, flour was being used up in all these kitchens all around the city,” Sunga said.“Imagine all of the love and energy that’s been poured into the cakes that we are sharing here together today!”A staunch advocate for cake for cake’s sake, she laments our tendency to reserve it for special occasions.Birthday cakes and wedding cakes are great, she says, but “why not cake on a random Saturday in March too?”Friends of three decades Sarah Grinzi and Hannah Millicer know what she means.Baking cakes, Millicer says, is always a labour of love.

But when you’re putting them together for birthdays or other celebrations, they’re still a form of labour.Baking for the Cake Picnic felt less like obligation and more like a radical act of self-care.“We could do whatever we wanted!”What she wanted, as it turns out, was to splurge.Millicer’s chocolate fudge cake with blueberry jam and swiss meringue buttercream, infused with freeze dried blueberries, cost her nearly $150 to make – “$28 on butter alone!”With refreshingly little fanfare, a best in show, decorated like a tin of anchovies, and two runners-up were announced, then the crowds, armed with family-sized pizza boxes were unleashed and the bacchanalia of buttercream began in earnest.No slice limits were enforced and the novel concept of queuing was dispensed with.

But cake, it seems, brings out the best in people.No chantilly skirmishes in sight.By the end of the day Sunga was on “a sugar dream cake high”, declaring the event “absolutely spectacular on all levels and degrees”.With the Melbourne event tipping the all-time number of Cake Picnic cakes over 10,000, Sunga has long since given up counting those she samples.Chocolate cakes, she says, are usually her favourite, but in an effort to embrace the local customs she couldn’t go past the potato chip bill of the Australian Women’s Weekly’s notorious duck cake.

The unsettling creation took her aback at first, “but then I heard the story and I was like, ‘awww, that is so precious’.”
trendingSee all
A picture

Estate of Mike Lynch ordered to pay £920m to Hewlett-Packard

The estate of late British tech tycoon Mike Lynch has been ordered to pay £920m to the technology company Hewlett-Packard (HP) two years after he died in a superyacht disaster.The ruling by London’s high court said the estate was liable to pay the sum as compensation, costs and interest for HP’s acquisition of Lynch’s firm Autonomy, after a UK legal ruling in 2022 that he duped the US firm into paying £8.2bn for his software firm Autonomy.The deceased entrepreneur’s estate has been estimated to be worth about £500m, so the damages could leave it bankrupt.Lynch and six others, including his 18-year-old daughter Hannah, died in August 2024 on a trip with friends and family celebrating his acquittal on US fraud charges relating to HP’s $11bn takeover of Autonomy in 2011

A picture

Energy price shock and interest rate rises could cause ‘pronounced’ UK recession, economist warns – as it happened

Britain’s economy could be dragged into recession by the end of this year by high energy prices and interest rate hikes, economists at Morgan Stanley have warned.Following this morning’s data showing a slowdown in private sector growth this month and a surge in input costs (see 9.41am), Morgan Stanley economist Bruna Skarica has warned that the energy price shock is likely to prompt the Bank of England to raise interest rates, which would hurt growth.Skarica points out that oil prices have risen by around 40% since January, with natural gas contracts up by around 80%, prompted the financial markets to predict the BoE will raise rates this year.Skarica told clients:double quotation markShould these financial conditions and commodity prices be sustained in the coming months, we would be calling for a pronounced UK recession at the turn of the year

A picture

Divide between Silicon Valley and ordinary people grows ever larger

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery. This week in tech, we discuss a moment of divergence between Silicon Valley and everyday people; deep cuts at Meta to maximize spending on AI; writers caught using AI; and the frightening, fiery crashes of the Tesla Cybertruck.Nvidia hosted a conference last week where it emphasized AI agents – semi-autonomous chatbots that can perform digital tasks for you – as the next frontier in tech. The company announced a toolkit for agents, including NemoClaw, an AI agent software suite for businesses

A picture

Amount of AI-generated child sexual abuse material found online surged in 2025

The amount of AI-generated child sexual abuse material found online rose by 14% last year, with the majority of videos showing the most extreme type of content, according to a safety watchdog.The Internet Watch Foundation said it identified 8,029 AI-made images and videos of realistic child sexual abuse material (CSAM) in 2025. It added that there had been a more than 260-fold increase in videos.The IWF said 65% of the 3,443 videos were classified as category A, the term for the most severe material under UK law. The corresponding figure for non-AI videos was 43%, said the watchdog, showing that the technology was being used to create more violent content

A picture

World Snooker Championship to remain at Crucible until at least 2045 with revamp

Barry Hearn concedes he has let his heart rule his head for the first time in his career after striking a remarkable new long-term deal to keep snooker’s world championship at the Crucible Theatre – before hinting that his son Eddie was among those who were against the decision.The tournament has been played at the 980-seat venue in Sheffield since 1977, and it will remain there until at least 2045 with an option to extend to 2050 after World Snooker Tour and Sheffield city council agreed a contract to ensure snooker’s most prestigious event will stay at its ­spiritual home.As part of the agreement, the ­Crucible will undergo a renovation after the 2028 tournament, with the venue securing £45m of government investment that Hearn admitted was decisive in keeping snooker in ­Sheffield. An extra 500 seats will be installed at the theatre, taking ­capacity to 1500.It is a striking and notable agreement for the sport, not least because Hearn himself had made loud noises in recent years about the need for a completely rebuilt Crucible with at least 3,000 seats if the world championship was to remain in Sheffield amid interest from places such as Saudi Arabia and China

A picture

West Ham stadium stance could block London’s World Athletics Championships bid, warns Coe

Sebastian Coe has warned that London’s bid for the 2029 World Athletics Championships could be scuppered by West Ham’s refusal to allow their stadium to be used in September.World Athletics has made it clear to bidding cities, which the Guardian understands also includes Rome, Munich and Nairobi as well as a mooted Indian city, that the world championships should be the grand finale to the athletics season.However West Ham are so far refusing to vacate their stadium for around three weeks in September, despite the London bid having the strong backing of the government and the mayor’s office.“It’s really difficult for me because I have a view, but I have to be scrupulously neutral, because London is clearly not the only bid out there,” said Lord Coe. “All I would say is that I would hope that there is a recognition that outside the Olympic Games and the World Cup, this is the third-largest sporting gathering in a four-year cycle