Amongst juggling her studies as a fourth year honours accounting student, her duties as a StFX residence student leader, and running ‘Sammy’s Sweets,’ Gerald Schwartz School of Business student Sammy Johnson took on a new challenge this past year—competing to be Canada’s best cake baker. Ms. Johnson of Hammonds Plains, NS was a featured competitor on the new CTV series Cross Country Cake Off, nationally broadcast in December 2022. “It’s an experience I will cherish,” says Ms. Johnson, one of eight talented bakers to emerge from a large pool of applicants as the best of the best of the Atlantic region, and one of 24 cake makers from across Canada invited to compete for the national title and a $50,000 cash prize on Cross Country Cake Off, the four-episode holiday series hosted by chef and cookbook author Mary Berg and pastry chef Andrew Han. Ms. Johnson, who’s been running Sammy’s Sweets out of her mom’s Hammonds Plains kitchen for the past five years, says her mom’s cousin tipped her off to news of the new show last April. She applied and went through several initial rounds. In July, she was invited to compete in the first qualifying round held at the Halifax Citadel National Historic Site. To earn a place in the show’s national holiday finals, bakers had to bring a cake that told something about themselves. Her cake (using a recipe from her grandmother) was a bit of a play on a peanut butter and jelly sandwich “because I am a university student, so we don’t live on a high income”) and had nods to her family, down to the Nova Scotia raspberries that reminded her of berry picking with her grandmother.
Ms. Johnson was one of four from that event to receive their bronze cake stand and advance to the Cross Canada Cake Off Kitchen in Toronto where two silver cake stands and a place in the finals were up for grabs. THE GREATEST GIFT Here, bakers were tasked with telling a heartfelt story, in cake form, of ‘The Greatest Gift’ they’ve given or received. A self-proclaimed teddy bear fanatic, Ms. Johnson baked a two-and-a-half-foot, bear-shaped cake, representing the 10-foot teddy bear she received the Christmas she turned 16. In its lap was a smaller, fondant bear, a nod to her first-ever Christmas bear, ‘Mr. Bear.’ Although she didn’t advance to the final, Ms. Johnson, the youngest competition, just 20 years old at the time, says the experience was amazing. She’s always enjoyed watching cooking shows, but never imagined she would be on one. “It was kind of surreal,” she says. “The set alone was just phenomenal. I could have just sat in the back and watched everyone bake.”
Ms. Johnson says she was initially nervous to watch herself on TV, but opted to host a watch party (“obviously, we had cake”) “and we had a blast.” Her 2023 resolution is to work on marketing her business more. At some point, she may like to open a bakery. For now, she looks back warmly on her time on Cross Country Cake Off. “It’s one of those lifetime experiences I’ll never forget.”