Any kid, whatever age, would appreciate a spicy, crunchy house on the
sideboard, just waiting for post-Christmas munchies. The best place on
the 'Net to learn about this art is Ultimate Gingerbread,
a website that will help build your own place, from getting out the
ginger to frosting that final brick.It also helps you submit your
creation for any number of contests!
Here's a basic recipe to get you started. (Thanks, Ultimate Gingerbread.)
Add to the flour mixture and blend till the dough is easy to handle, I do it in my Kitchenaid mixer. It's a firm dough and gets harder as it cools. I like to roll it out while it's still warm!
remove from heat. Add and stir till dissolved:
Return to heat. When boiling cover about 3 minutes so the steam can wash down crystals. Uncover and cook at high heat without stirring to 300. Take off heat and let the bubbles subside.
Very carefully spoon or pour mixture into window holes. BE CAREFUL THIS IS VERY HOT AND STICKY. ONLY GROWNUPS DO THIS PART. Have ice water handy in a bowl for emergency first aid. Can be colored but is naturally a nice light amber color.
Here's a basic recipe to get you started. (Thanks, Ultimate Gingerbread.)
Debbie's Gingerbread House Dough Recipe
Comments from Debbie: I
have made a gingerbread house every Christmas since I graduated from
college in the late 70s. At first I used to make them and take them home
for my cousins to decorate and eat. Then they became great masterpieces
that looked like the house I was living in and they had stained glass
(lollipop) windows and lights inside (an old Christmas tree bulb rigged
up on a cord with a plug). Now I make a house every November with my
kids, before the seasonal preparations get too crazy. We put all our
leftover Halloween candy on the houses (a great way to use it up!). We
have a tradition of having a house eating party on New Years
Day, when we invite the neighbor children to sit in the backyard with
our kids and break apart the house and eat whatever part they want. Its
pretty gross and dusty at that point but it doesnt seem to matter. They
never eat that much of it anyway but it is fun to break it apart! This
recipe makes a good crisp cookie that smells delicious baking and gets
very hard for good strong walls. It hardly puffs at all so you will keep
good definition in window holes and doors.
Mix together:
Mix together:
- 6 3/4 cup flour
- 1 Tbsp cinnamon
- 1 1/2 tsp ginger
- 1/2 tsp salt
Stir together over medium heat till margarine is melted:
- 1 1/2 cups Karo Syrup
- 1 1/4 cup brown sugar
- 1 cup margarine
Add to the flour mixture and blend till the dough is easy to handle, I do it in my Kitchenaid mixer. It's a firm dough and gets harder as it cools. I like to roll it out while it's still warm!
Cut
out a front/back wall and a side wall shape from paper. Use the top
edge of each of those 2 pieces to make a roof piece, it should be a
little bigger so it hangs over the walls. Now line your cookie sheet
with heavy duty foil (moisten it to keep it from sliding), spray very
lightly with Pam spray, roll 2 1/3-3 cups dough 1/4" thick, use paring
knife to cut around shapes and peel scraps off sheet. Cut windows and doors.
Leave 1/2" minimum between pieces. Bakes at 350 12-15 minutes, cool on
foil. If it puffs at all, you can trim around the windows or edges to
make the lines square while it is still hot out of the oven. Once it
cools, it is very hard.
Windows (lollipop mixture)
Windows (lollipop mixture)
bring to a boil:
- 1 cup water
remove from heat. Add and stir till dissolved:
- 2 cups sugar
- 3/4 cup light Karo corn syrup
- 1 Tbsp butter
Return to heat. When boiling cover about 3 minutes so the steam can wash down crystals. Uncover and cook at high heat without stirring to 300. Take off heat and let the bubbles subside.
Very carefully spoon or pour mixture into window holes. BE CAREFUL THIS IS VERY HOT AND STICKY. ONLY GROWNUPS DO THIS PART. Have ice water handy in a bowl for emergency first aid. Can be colored but is naturally a nice light amber color.
Royal Icing
- 2 Tbsp meringue powder (available at cake decorating supply store)
- 1/3 cup water
- 1/4 tsp cream of tartar
beat till foamy
add:
- 1 lb. powdered sugar
Beat
till stiff and white on high speed for about 5 minutes. Keep bowl
covered with a damp towel when not in use. Can be thinned slightly and
tinted for spreading to Paint@ a wall. I like to put in a pastry bag and
pipe it onto the joints of the house with a star tip #16. Hold the
walls in place with cans and bottles from the cupboard. Let the walls
dry overnight before you put on the roof.
Let the
roof dry overnight before you start putting on the candy. Walls can be
decorated before they are put together, let them dry overnight. I put a
light on the tray and tape it down before I start construction, then
build the house around the cord. Put anything inside the house..like an
ice cream cone spread with green icing and covered with sprinkles (for a
Christmas tree) or little pieces of lace (on either side of the windows
for curtains) before you put the roof on top. Coconut tinted green
(shake it in a zip lock bag with green food color and 2 tsp water,
spread it out on a cookie sheet to dry) makes great grass, or leftover
white frosting makes good snow piled in drifts against the house, or
dripping from the roof in icicles. Cookies and cereal and sticks of gum
and necco wafers make a great roof. I love this site, what a great place
to share ideas! Good Luck! And have fun!
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