In the context we're given here, which is actually serving the homemade cakes for the person to eat, I'd go for the perfect tense in BE: I've made some cakes for you.
Today, we're going to do a quick and easy recipe with a big old root system behind it. The cake we're going to use is just a boxed mix because it's not the cake that is important here, it's the icing: ...
There is something very special about making a homemade cake yourself, complete with robust layers of sponge and hand-shaped fondant decorations. However, it's the fluffy and creamy frosting that ...
This mountain of rummy persimmon cake drizzled with rummy orange icing was inspired by James Beard’s persimmon bread. Meanwhile, butter a 12-cup bundt pan with 2 tablespoons of the melted butter, then ...
homemade or home made or home-made Hello, I've found each of the spellings in the headline and I'm not sure if all of them are correct or there is one use more frequently than the others? I guess it would be 'homemade'. Thanks for your replies.
Well, "homemade" means "made at home" while "handmade" means made by hand, not by a machine. Many "homemade" items are also "handmade," because people who make things at home aren't factory owners and can't afford expensive machinery. Likewise, many "handmade" items are also "homemade." However, items that are best made, or that can only be made, by hand (without the use of machinery) can be ...
I've never seen "believe on" except in the KJV (Acts 16:31). I also have seen it on homemade billboards in rural Indiana and on bumper stickers like the one in #6, which refer to the same passage in the New Testament. I associate it with evangelical Christianity and particularly the US Midwest, because that's where I first saw it about 40 years ago.