In a revelation that has sent shivers down the collective spine of the nation's patisserie establishment, it has emerged that the humble cake shed is now a £1,000-a-week goldmine. Yes, you read that correctly. While the rest of us are clinging to our Nectar points like drowning rats to flotsam, these entrepreneurial wizards are churning out Victoria sponges with the reckless abandon of a man who has just discovered his thermos is full of gin.
According to sources both reliable and prone to exaggeration, the average cake shed owner is now pulling in four figures weekly. Four. Figures. That is more than a junior minister's monthly stipend for shuffling paperclips. More than a hedge fund manager's bonus for betting against the economy. But here's the twist: the government is now threatening to regulate these cottage industries into oblivion. Because of course they are. Nothing says 'small business boom' like a bureaucrat in a polyester suit demanding to see your hygiene rating.
The typical cake shed, for the uninitiated, is a garden temple of flour and buttercream. It is a place where dreams are baked, where the smell of sugar and hope wafts over the fence. But the Treasury, in its infinite wisdom, has decided that this pastoral idyll must be crushed under the weight of red tape. VAT thresholds, food safety inspections, planning permission for structures that look suspiciously like Wendy houses. The horror.
I interviewed a woman named Brenda, who runs 'Brenda's Bakes' from a converted tool shed in Surrey. She told me, through a mouthful of fondant, that she makes more money selling cupcakes to the local yoga studio than her husband does as a mid-level accountant. 'It's all about the margins,' she cackled, gesturing with a spatula. 'Flour is cheap. Butter is cheaper. And people will pay anything for a bit of nostalgia.'
But the spectre of regulation looms. A source at the Department for Business and Trade, who shall remain nameless because I'm fairly sure he was drunk, told me that 'these unlicensed sugar pushers need to be brought to heel.' He then produced a document titled 'Cake Shed Taskforce: Phase One' which was, bafflingly, written entirely in icing. I suspect this is a metaphor for something, but I've had three G&Ts and can no longer care.
The irony, of course, is that the government claims to support small businesses. They will say anything for a vote. But when it comes to actual support, they'd rather send a man with a clipboard to measure your sponge density. It's the same with the gig economy, the same with artisan cheese sellers, the same with every single person who dares to make a living outside the approved corporate structure.
So what is to be done? I propose a national strike of cake shed owners. Let the streets of London be lined with unsold lemon drizzle. Let the civil servants face a national shortage of flapjacks. Only then will they understand the true cost of their meddling. Or, alternatively, we could all invest in cake sheds and watch as the entire British economy is reorientated around the humble Victoria sponge. I know which future I prefer.
In the meantime, I'm off to buy a shed. And a whisk. And a lifetime supply of gin. Because if you can't beat the system, you might as well bake it into submission.







