Sunday 6 December 2015

Gingerbread Houses








This year I am planning on making Gingerbread houses & cookies 
Here is a tried and tested recipe that I find makes the best dough




Gingerbread House Recipe
1/3 cup soft shortening
1 cup brown sugar, packed
1-1/2 cups dark molasses
2/3 cup cold water
7 cups flour
2 tsps. Baking soda
1 tsp. salt
1 tsp. allspice
1 tsp. ginger
1 tsp. ground cloves
1 tsp. cinnamon


  1. Cream the shortening and sugar in a large stand mixer.
  2.  Add the eggs one at a time, beating until fluffy. 
  3. Add the molasses, salt, soda, ginger, and cinnamon.
  4.  Mix completely. Add the flour, one cup at a time. 
  5. The dough will become very stiff, and the bowl will be quite full.
  6.  Once the flour is incorporated, turn the mixer off. It is a very stiff dough, and the object is to incorporate the flour, nothing more.
  7. Roll dough to a generous 1/8” thickness directly on a lightly greased cookie sheet.
  8.  Trace around paper stencils (available for publication) to cut out the walls and roof of a gingerbread house.
  9.  Lift away the excess dough on the cookie sheet with a spatula or knife.
  10.  Be sure to leave some space between the pieces—the dough does expand while baking.
  11. Bake at 375 degrees for between 10 and 14 minutes.
  12.  Slightly over-baked (short of burning) is better than slightly under-baked as you need rigidity for constructing gingerbread houses.
  13. Let the cookie pieces cool completely before assembly—even overnight. 
  14. When cooling and storing, do not stack the pieces more than three high. If you do, the pressure will cause warm cookies to cement together.


Operation Gingerbread’s Top 10 Tips:

Tip 1: Buy the cheapest store brand of shortening you can find. Something full of trans-fat goodness. I’m all for getting rid of trans-fats as a general principle. You will get much better performance with the cheap stuff. It’s not like a huge house-shaped cookie is good for you, anyway. Just exercise moderation.




Tip 2: Don’t roll out the dough on the counter and transfer to a cookie sheet to bake. Grease the cookie sheet and roll the dough directly on the pan. Trace around your templates and lift the excess away.











You might have noticed that I didn’t roll directly on the pan. That brings me to…

Tip 3: Especially if you are going to be making multiple houses, roll the dough out on parchment paper. I raid my pastry-chef-mother’s stash of perfectly pre-cut sheets, and each year vow that I should pre-cut a massive stack of my own. They’re really handy.

But the parchment paper slips and slides all over the counter, you say! Fear not...

Tip 4: Simply put a Silpat down on the counter. Put the parchment on top of the Silpat and ta-da, it sticks! Be careful not to get flour under the Silpat, though, or you’ll have to clean everything thoroughly to get it to stick again.


But I don’t have a Silpat, you say! Simply take a clean dishcloth, get it wet, and squeeze the dickens out of it. You want it to be barely damp. Put that down on your counter, and put either your cookie sheet (if you’re not using parchment paper) or your parchment paper on top. The parchment will get a little damp, but it’s not a problem, I promise.





Tip 5: Your dough will spread at least a bit while cooking, especially since this recipe doesn’t require chilling before rolling (and is WAY easier to roll because of that little fact). If you want the pieces to fit together with precision–and that’s pretty important in construction of the real or cookie kind you’ll need to trim the edges. Do this immediately after pulling the cookies out of the oven. Don’t even wait 30 seconds! You need to move very quickly, while the cookies are still very hot! Use your template and a sharp paring knife and trim the excess away.




Tip 6: Let pieces cool completely before daring to stack any up to save space. Once completely cool, you can stack the pieces three or four high to save counter and cooling rack space. Do not stack higher! If you do, you run the risk of the pieces cementing to each other. 

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