Woman Makes Dairy-Free Cake With Eggs, Friend’s Daughter Gets Upset Over Ingredients

Sometimes, the smallest details can create the biggest misunderstandings, especially when it comes to food. The original poster (OP) was invited to dinner and asked to bring a dairy-free dessert, something they felt confident handling. With a recipe they trusted and no obvious dairy ingredients involved, OP arrived expecting everything to go smoothly.

Instead, a simple conversation about what went into the cake sparked confusion and tension at the table. What seemed like a clear request suddenly became a debate about definitions, leaving OP unsure where things went wrong. Was this a harmless mix-up, or something that should have been clarified beforehand? Keep reading to explore both sides.

Guest brings egg-based ‘dairy-free’ cake, sparking confusion and tension at dinner

Woman Makes Dairy-Free Cake With Eggs, Friend’s Daughter Gets Upset Over Ingredients
not the actual photo

'AITAH for making a dairy free cake with eggs?'

My friend invited me over for dinner. Our tradition is to bring food when invited to dinner. I asked if I should bring a dessert.

She said that would be great but it needs to be dairy free because her daughter stopped eating dairy.

I know a great cake recipe with no dairy. I brought it to the dinner and it was a big hit. My friend asked for the recipe and I told...

When I got to the eggs her daughter became upset and ran upstairs.

My friend asked why I put eggs in the cake. I said the eggs were responsible for the spongy texture. She said the cake wasn't dairy free.

I said it was. There is no milk or milk products in the cake, no cheese, no butter, etc...

My friend said eggs are dairy. I was confused. Dairy is milk and milk products to my understanding.

She said dairy is anything that comes from an animal. I asked if honey is dairy then. She said no, because bees are insects.

I apologized, but I could tell she was still upset. Am I the a__hole? I've never heard of eggs being dairy before.

Sometimes conflict isn’t about intention at all. It comes from two people using the same word in different ways and only realizing it after the fact.

In this situation, the OP followed what most people understand “dairy-free” to mean: no milk, butter, cheese, or cream. Eggs were included because, in standard nutrition and cooking definitions, they are not considered dairy.

The misunderstanding happened because the friend and her daughter were using a broader definition, closer to “no animal products,” even though that wasn’t clearly stated. The emotional reaction suggests this wasn’t just about ingredients. It may reflect a new dietary rule or belief the daughter is still adjusting to.

A more nuanced perspective is that food labels are often used loosely in everyday life. Terms like “dairy-free,” “vegan,” and “animal-free” get mixed up, even though they mean different things. That gap matters.

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The OP asked ahead of time and tried to respect the request. The issue wasn’t carelessness. It was unclear communication. When expectations are not fully explained, even well-intended efforts can miss the mark.

Authoritative sources confirm the standard definition. U.S. Department of Agriculture explains that dairy refers specifically to milk and foods made from milk, such as cheese and yogurt, while eggs are categorized separately as a protein food.

Similarly, Cleveland Clinic clarifies that dairy products come from milk, and eggs are not included in that category because they come from poultry, not milk-producing animals.

These sources make it clear that the OP’s understanding aligns with widely accepted nutritional definitions. Eggs are not dairy in medical, dietary, or food classification systems.

What stands out is that the reaction was emotional rather than factual. The daughter may be navigating a new identity around food, where boundaries feel strict and important. The mother’s response likely came from wanting to protect that boundary, even if it wasn’t communicated precisely.

So, food-related requests benefit from clarity, especially when they involve restrictions. Saying “dairy-free” may not always be enough. In situations like this, the issue is rarely about being right or wrong. It’s about whether expectations were shared clearly enough for someone else to meet them.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

These commenters clarified definitions, saying eggs aren’t dairy and the issue was confusion between dairy-free and vegan

TarzanKitty − Eggs are not dairy. If she wanted vegan. She needed to say vegan because that is not the same as dairy free.

Johnniegirl1970 − NTA. While eggs are considered an animal product as far as vegetarians and vegans are concerned,

they are not considered a dairy product which are made from the milk of mammals, such as cheese, yogurt, sour cream and those kinds of things.

Your friend needs to understand that, and she needs to explain that to her daughter.

2cents0fucks − She's not dairy free then (which are milk products), she's vegan (animal product free).

Eggs are poultry products that are neither considered dairy nor meat. And most vegans consider honey off-limits too.

Sounds like she and her daughter need to do some more research. NTA, her s__ew up, and your intentions were good.

This group bluntly stated the friend is wrong, emphasizing eggs are not dairy

Connect-Contest-2212 − Eggs are not dairy, she’s wrong

SignificantCicada156 − NTA - Eggs are not dairy - your friend is ignorant

Gloomy-Increase-8726 − NTA. Your friend has no idea what she’s talking about. Eggs are most definitely not dairy.

These commenters explained why people get confused, often due to grocery store placement, while reinforcing the basic distinction

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AlabamAlum − Eggs are not dairy. People confuse it because the grocery stores put eggs in the dairy section.

Defiant_Ingenuity_55 − When people can show you a cow laying an egg… Edit: Or see a cow excrete an egg from their udders.

That’s for the people who think this is supposed to be logical and not a joke. I’m lactose intolerant. Eggs are not included.

birdtummy717 − eggs are not dairy. eggs are from a chicken. dairy is from a cow. chickens are not cows.

This group criticized the friend’s misunderstanding more harshly, saying she lacks basic knowledge and overreacted

blueyedwineaux − NTA. Strict long time vegetarian here. Eggs are NOT dairy. No offense to your friend, but this goes beyond dumb.

Dairy products are made from the milk of mammals, as in cows, goats, camels, buffalo, or sheep. Things like milk, cheese, butter, yogurt.

Eggs are reproductive cells of a bird.

No-Function223 − Nta she’s just dumb, tell her to google what dairy free means.

wholesomebutter − This is something I can't ever imagine happening to someone, let alone myself.

The daughter didn't have to react the way she did, like what are they preaching over there in that household to believe eggs are dairy products?

You listened to their requests and you respected them. Just sounds like someone wanted to be picky that day and throw a fit.

These commenters suggested the real issue is mixing up vegan rules with dairy-free, noting OP followed instructions correctly

Catinthefirelight − Your friend is confused. Her kid became vegan, and she conflated dairy with all animal products. NTA.

notouchpepe − Nope. You are not. Vegans/vegetarians could be upset. That’s not your problem.

Most readers agreed that the guest followed the request as it’s commonly understood, while others pointed out that dietary labels can mean different things to different people. In the end, what could have been a simple clarification turned into an uncomfortable moment for everyone involved.

So what do you think? Was this just an innocent mix-up, or should more care have been taken to double-check? And how do you usually handle situations where expectations aren’t clearly spelled out?

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