<p>Careful there, you could mistake a cake for a book. Don’t be surprised if you come across a video of someone cutting into a book which is actually a cake. Illusion cakes (cakes that look like anything but a cake) have taken the internet by storm. </p>.<p>Netizens have expressed their disbelief and admiration for this new trend of decorating cakes that look like everyday objects.</p>.<p>Videos of people cutting into ‘books’, ‘vegetables’ and even ‘crocs’ are going viral on the internet. </p>.<p>These cakes need a lot of structuring and ‘engineering’, Paul Hollywood is <a href="https://www.goodtoknow.co.uk/food/food-news/illusion-cakes-2901" target="_blank">quoted </a>as saying <em>Goodtoknow, </em>a British cooking magazine. As the British chef puts it, one needs a fairly dense sponge cake that will not topple under the weight of the icing, buttercream fondant and other decorations. </p>.<p>One speciality of illusion cakes is that it tends to be as realistic and intricate in its detailing as the actual object, he added. </p>.<p>Some netizens shared that their were having a hard time believing in these illusion cakes. “At this point, I don’t know if my friends and family are cake too, everything in my life has been an illusion,” says a resident from London whose twitter handle is @AFC_Haitham.</p>.<p>Another Twitter user, Emma Lou Faris says, “Every time I see one of those cake cutting videos my brain becomes an optical illusion and I lose feeling in my body and this dimension as a whole.”</p>.<p>Be it a cake decorated as a book or a glass of water, this new trend has managed to keep netizens entertained for sure.</p>
<p>Careful there, you could mistake a cake for a book. Don’t be surprised if you come across a video of someone cutting into a book which is actually a cake. Illusion cakes (cakes that look like anything but a cake) have taken the internet by storm. </p>.<p>Netizens have expressed their disbelief and admiration for this new trend of decorating cakes that look like everyday objects.</p>.<p>Videos of people cutting into ‘books’, ‘vegetables’ and even ‘crocs’ are going viral on the internet. </p>.<p>These cakes need a lot of structuring and ‘engineering’, Paul Hollywood is <a href="https://www.goodtoknow.co.uk/food/food-news/illusion-cakes-2901" target="_blank">quoted </a>as saying <em>Goodtoknow, </em>a British cooking magazine. As the British chef puts it, one needs a fairly dense sponge cake that will not topple under the weight of the icing, buttercream fondant and other decorations. </p>.<p>One speciality of illusion cakes is that it tends to be as realistic and intricate in its detailing as the actual object, he added. </p>.<p>Some netizens shared that their were having a hard time believing in these illusion cakes. “At this point, I don’t know if my friends and family are cake too, everything in my life has been an illusion,” says a resident from London whose twitter handle is @AFC_Haitham.</p>.<p>Another Twitter user, Emma Lou Faris says, “Every time I see one of those cake cutting videos my brain becomes an optical illusion and I lose feeling in my body and this dimension as a whole.”</p>.<p>Be it a cake decorated as a book or a glass of water, this new trend has managed to keep netizens entertained for sure.</p>