Growing up, it’s easy to take your birthday cake for granted. Sure, I expected one every year because it was a tradition in my family, but the dessert is more than that. It’s special, and defines the day you were born. It embraces the flavors you love, and whether it’s homemade or store-bought, it’s inherently yours in a way no other dessert can be.
As an identical twin, the birthday cake choice carried even more weight. Sharing a birthday was inevitable, but my mom knew that my sister and I needed our individuality. Her solution was simple, but essential: We each got our own cake. My sister always chose an ice cream cake, and I had my own pick, which evolved through the years. At first, I settled on a humble yellow cake with chocolate icing, the kind you whip up from a boxed cake mix. Over time, though, I discovered another cake: Italian Love Cake, a dessert that felt deeply personal and strangely inevitable.
My mom considers this cake an “adult dessert,” so I didn’t have my first slice of it until my college years. After one bite, I quickly understood why my dad would beg for this cake to be made. The three layers felt like a revelation: chocolate cake, sweetened ricotta and a chocolate pudding top. It was so simple, but still so complex in its flavor and texture, as the soft ricotta broke up the tender chocolaty cake and rich, smooth pudding.
After that first time, this layered, chilled dessert has become the centerpiece of my birthday, even in the middle of January. Interestingly, I didn’t even know the official name of this cake until quite recently. When I saw Italian Love Cake trending online, I thought, “How could this cake be so Italian if I’ve never even heard of it?” But turns out, I had been eating it for years.
To call this cake a slice of heaven isn’t an exaggeration—if anything, it might be an understatement (which is a little ironic considering the base is made from devil’s food cake). It’s airy, sweet and … cheesy, but hear me out. To explain this cake to someone who isn’t Italian American is tricky, and I get it: the idea of a ricotta layer in a cake may sound a little strange. But for those of us who grew up eating ricotta on a regular basis, there’s nothing unusual about it. From ricotta cookies to this cake, ricotta is an underrated icon in Italian cuisine, and it deserves the same amount of respect as cream cheese and cottage cheese (but don’t get me started on that). The ricotta layer isn’t savory. Instead, it’s sweetened, which results in a cheesecake-like middle layer.
It took some time to fully understand how to make this cake. My mom has a habit of keeping recipes in her head, or working from notes scribbled decades ago, adjusting them on the fly without bothering to update the paper. Her recipe box is like a time capsule, full of versions that don’t quite match what she bakes today. In fact, when I asked her for the recipe to re-create this cake, the measurements were off, the frosting not quite right until she remembered she had adjusted it in years past.
What I love most about the Italian Love Cake is its simplicity. It doesn’t demand elaborate steps or fancy techniques. It comes together with familiar ingredients, and each slice holds up beautifully. Sometimes, we serve it with fresh strawberries or blueberries, but honestly, it doesn’t need anything else. When it’s time to serve, I’ll hand out a square—not a wedge, but a perfectly layered square that tells a story of true Italian love.
For me, this cake has become more than just a birthday dessert. It has layers in more ways than one; ogres have onions, Italians have this cake. Even though I had to share everything else on my birthday, this is the dessert I could count on every single year that was all mine. Mom’s Italian Love Cake will always be the best birthday gift that I receive.
Photos: Jason Donnelly, Food: Sammy Mila, Props: Breanna Ghazali.
Dining and Cooking