Aita for not making or bringing a ‘child appropriate’ cake to SILs birthday?

Who gets to decide the flavor rules at an adult’s birthday party? One thoughtful relative stepped up to bake a luxurious white chocolate raspberry cake for her sister-in-law’s 35th celebration, drawing on the honoree’s own baking expertise for inspiration. The result sparked unexpected family friction.

Another sister-in-law fired off complaints the next day, claiming the dessert failed as “kid-friendly” because her 11-year-old nephew skipped it in favor of plain vanilla. Passive-aggressive posts and mediator texts followed. Social media exploded with opinions on etiquette, picky eaters, and whose preferences actually matter when candles are lit.

‘Aita for not making or bringing a ‘child appropriate’ cake to SILs birthday?’

The celebration planned around a talented baker’s special day.

It's my SILs 35th birthday. She is a lovely Baker, she makes cakes for everyone else's occasions. I've noticed this is never reciprocated.

She gets a shop bought cake, apparently because of her 'impossibily high standards' although from what I have seen she is very polite so even if she felt she could...

I made a white chocolate raspberry cake with white chocolate ganache, no alcohol or anything just white chocolate raspberries and a S__T tonne of calories.

Other SIL made a snarky comment about what's wrong with vanilla but she's like that so I just ignored her.. Next day I got a text which read:

In future if your going to make a cake that is not kid friendly would you please bring a second cake or at least let us know as [nephew] was...

Clarifications emerged about expectations and attendance.

I mean is this a thing? I would kind of get it if I had soaked the sponges in Amaretto or something (which is why I didn't make my hazelnut...

but even then is it my responsibility? I honestly don't see how I can possibly be the AH because an 11yo only likes a plain cake. So just checking AITA?.

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Edit to add. A couple of things being brought up. I didn't notice if nephew did or did not eat the cake. I only have SIL word for it which...

He might of eaten it and not liked it or he might not have had any. I didn't know nephew would be there. Birthday SIL and our kids (all under...

He said 7 so I assumed Birthday SIL + Partner, SIL + Partner, StepFIL and us. She is not with nephew's dad so it's not unreasonable to think he wouldn't...

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Family drama escalated through messages and posts.

The Facebook posts are heavily suggesting she wants an apology (lol) and we are taking bets between my husband and I as how long before his dad messages us to...

I suspect she tried to have the restaurant changed to a more kid friendly one and was declined as shes done that before. So as not to be a witch...

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The recipe if anyone is interested is on BBC Good Food website if you Google white Chocolate Raspberry cake + BBC it should come up..

edit. Because it has come up a few times I have no reason to think nephew wasn't invited. I never asked who would be there just how many and assumed...

Update:. FIL text this afternoon and it read:. Sort things out with your sister please.. Husband:. Sort what exactly?. FIL:. Whatever it is that is going on?. Husband:. Nephew didn't...

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FIL:. long pause. Can you just sort it please?.  Husband: You want us to go back in time and bring a different cake? Or do you have a better suggestion?.

FIL:. I'll try to talk to her. You're no help So no apology likely to come from us. Its very sad that her family panders to a 40yo toddler but...

The disagreement boils down to mismatched assumptions at an adult birthday. The baker chose a sophisticated flavor profile suited to the honoree, while another relative expected accommodations for a child’s palate. Tension rose from poor communication about guests and preferences, amplifying feelings of entitlement versus consideration.

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The complaining sister-in-law likely projected frustration over control. The cake maker felt blindsided after volunteering a homemade gift. Both sides lacked upfront details about attendance, turning a simple dessert into a symbol of family hierarchy and perceived slights.

Etiquette expert Lizzie Post advises, “The host or birthday person sets the menu tone; guests adapt or bring alternatives quietly” (Emily Post’s Etiquette, 19th Edition, 2017). This principle aligns directly. Expecting the contributor to anticipate every taste ignores the event’s focus.

Politely state future contributions match the celebrant only. Suggest picky eaters pack personal snacks. Decline mediation requests with neutral responses like the husband’s. Document boundaries in group chats early to prevent repeats.

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Here’s what Redditors had to say:

Social media lit up with disbelief and laughter over the cake controversy. Commenters overwhelmingly backed the baker while mocking demands for dual desserts. The thread became a rally against centering children at adult events.

Strong agreement flooded in that the cake suited any age without hazards.

hburgacct − NTA — other SIL is cuckoo bananas, there’s nothing about that cake that’s inherently un-kid friendly. It sounds delicious!

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GlassMotor9670 − I'm trying to find a polite response you could send her, oooh, I know: Go f__k yourself with a cactus, you demented trollop NTA

Spiritual-Natural-11 − I'm a cake artist, I thought by "kid-friendly" you meant you'd made a penis-shaped cake, or something. I don't understand why nephew couldn't eat the cake as it...

thecrawlingrot − NTA Nothing seems ‘not kid friendly’ about the cake you described. I LOVED white chocolate when I was a kid lol. Did you see any other kids at...

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Existing_Winter5679 − NTA. The cake was for SILs birthday, not specifically for the picky 11 year old of some other family member.

Tell the other SIL to pack a Twinkie or a Hostess cupcake for her kid when they go to other people's events and get the F over them and their...

PB_n_Jamaharon − Sounds like the inlaws have been buying s__tty store-bought cake for her party because it's what the kid wanted, not the birthday girl. NTA, your cake sounds lovely!

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surfhippy1 − NTA. It's not the other SIL's birthday or the kids birthday so as a guest and a kid the "you get what you get and you don't get...

JanetInSpain − It was not a cake a child could not eat. He just didn't want to. You said it had no alcohol. The fact that he chose to be...

Zestyclose_Guest8075 − To be clear, the SIL that is complaining isn’t even the birthday girl? Regardless NTA

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Practical solutions emphasized personal responsibility for fussy eaters.

[Reddit User] − NTA but what the hell? How is the cake you made not “kid friendly”? Ohh, never mind, it wasn’t just an ordinary flavour like vanilla or chocolate...

FirstFroglet − NTA Am I missing something? Should children not be eating white chocolate or raspberries? I don't understand what was inherently not child friendly about the cake.

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Also if other sister in law thinks their child will be upset if there isn't a bland cake for them, then other SIL can bring the cake.

Head_Razzmatazz7174 − What did she mean it wasn't kid friendly? It's not going to hurt a child to have a piece of a fancy cake on occasion. Your SIL is...

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If she wanted her boy to have a plain cake, she should have brought a small cake just for him. NTA, by the way. Glad to hear you don't have...

Good_Ad6336 − NTA. You sound polite. I’m so petty I would have responded “Wow? Really? Thank you SO much for bringing this up to my attention.

I had no idea that the birthday cake had to be catered to someone who was not the birthday person. You have forever changed me with your wisdom! I’m so...

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ragdoll1022 − I'd respond Cake is chosen for birthday person, if YOUR child is picky, pack a twinkie. But I have a zero tolerance policy for fuckery and am happy...

One outlier poked fun at the complaining relative’s logic.

ManufacturerNo6126 − Let guess SIL only bakes nutcakes because shes a n__case

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Birthday traditions thrive on honoring the person blowing out candles, not accommodating every guest’s quirks. This incident highlights how small oversights in planning can snowball into entitlement battles. The real lesson centers on clear communication upfront and bringing your own backups for special diets.

Should adult celebrations always include kid options, or does the honoree call the shots? When family volunteers a gift like cake, where do reasonable expectations end?

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