Get your bake on: Make and decorate a cake for an underserved youth

Cakes are baked based on requested themes. For example, Osvaldo wanted a soccer-themed cake for his birthday.
Cakes are baked based on requested themes. For example, Osvaldo wanted a soccer-themed cake for his birthday.

Does the thought of a child without a birthday cake make you sad? Do you enjoy baking and decorating cakes? Are you looking for an easy way to make a child feel special and loved on his or her birthday?

Consider becoming a volunteer baker for Cake4Kids.

Cake4Kids is an 11-year-old nonprofit currently active in 13 states plus the District of Columbia that provides free birthday cakes, cupcakes, cookies, brownies and other baked goods to underserved youth and foster children, ages 1-24.

As the organization's website says: "On the surface, a birthday cake may seem like a trivial gesture in supporting the at-risk children in our local communities, but every cake is a way to let the children know they are valued. For children who are victims of human trafficking, domestic abuse or neglect, receiving a personal birthday sweet helps to bolster their confidence and self-esteem and encourages them to keep on."

Elias requested a "Lion King"-themed cake for his birthday, which Ray Biller baked for him.
Elias requested a "Lion King"-themed cake for his birthday, which Ray Biller baked for him.

Southern California native Ray Biller recently started a Coachella Valley chapter of Cake4Kids and is looking for volunteers. The organization, which began this month, has already partnered with agencies such as the Barbara Sinatra Children's Center, Olive Crest, the East Valley LGBT Center and the Boys & Girls Club.

"This organization started up in the Bay area," Biller says. "In September 2010, a woman named Libby Gruender came up with the idea that every kid should have a cake for a special event. Sadly, she died three years after starting the program but her legacy carries on."

There are currently more than 800 Cake4Kids volunteers in the Bay Area.

While living in San Diego, Biller learned about the organization from his sister. "I love to cook and bake, and she said I would be perfect for this. Every time I dropped off one of my cakes, it felt good."

Volunteering is easy. All you need to do is sign up to make a specific dessert based on a request or theme, then bake and decorate on your schedule in the comfort of your own kitchen. When the sweets are complete, you deliver them to the local social services agency that requested them, Monday-Friday during business hours.

Volunteers do not have contact with the children they bake for.

Ray Biller baked Yaijaira a Barbie cake for her birthday.
Ray Biller baked Yaijaira a Barbie cake for her birthday.

There is no time commitment. Volunteers can bake one cake per year or 10.

Biller is passionate about the organization and its mission. "I grew up with birthday cakes every year on my birthday," he says, "and I always appreciated them, so I thought 'I need to be doing this for these kids as well.'"

Interesting in volunteering your baking skills? Cake4Kids will be hosting a local in-person volunteer orientation, which will last an hour to 90 minutes, on July 23. Learn more at cake4kids.org/volunteer Questions? Email volcor@cake4kids.org.

For more information about Cake4Kids or to make a donation, visit cake4kids.org. To see a gallery of volunteer-baked sweets, check out facebook.com/cake4kids. Happy baking!

As the philanthropy and special sections editor at The Desert Sun, Winston Gieseke writes about nonprofits, fundraising and locals who give back. Reach him at winston.gieseke@desertsun.com.

This article originally appeared on Palm Springs Desert Sun: Get your bake on: Make and decorate a cake for an underserved youth