written by: Drew Sidener / Denver 9News July 24, 2008
DENVER - Marjorie Silva came to America eight years ago from Peru with a dream – a multi-layered dream covered in frosting.
She
began baking years ago in her native land, but always had dreamed of
coming to America to open her own bakery. Silva has a flair for wedding
cakes, birthday cakes and especially Peruvian desserts like flan. Her
passion for baking is as fierce now as ever.
"Even though it's the land of opportunities," Silva said. "You have to work really, really hard."
Silva's
entrepreneurial spirit rose like the cakes in her kitchen. Eventually,
she enrolled in business classes to make her dreams come true.
"I
took that class and I wrote my business plan, I knew that I wasn't
ready. So it took me two more years to get this store going on."
After
her small business loan was approved, she traded one bun in the oven
for another: she was pregnant. Rather than putting the business on
hold, she decided to run both the bakery and the nursery and become a
"mom-preneur."
"It was kind of hard, you know, with a big belly
last summer doing wedding cakes, but it was great. It was great, and
business is going good," Silva explained.
As her business has grown, Silva's dedication to her craft has grown to match.
"You
really have to like what you are doing, that's for sure, because there
is a lot of hard work involved in having your own business. The first
five years, they say that they are the hardest years, but then after
that, you know everything starts going smooth," Silva said.
After all is said and done, for Silva, motherhood and business are a piece of cake.
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