gingerbread house

Wednesday 7 December 2011


It's been a while since I made the time to create a gingerbread house. I simply adore them and this year wanted to recreate the stunning version found in December's issue of Good Taste magazine. I just love this look, particularly the adorable use of Freckles for roof tiles, dusting with a blanket of icing sugar snow.

I used my own gingerbread recipe (nothing comes close to it, and yes, I am sharing it at the end of this post). It's cakey and not too sweet and just busting with spice and fragrance. Love it. I made the sheets (omitting the stained glass window at the front of the house) but I also made three extra (large) batches of the gingerbread so I could do up a mass of gingerbread people, too.


It took my half a day to do this - and that was only the baking part.

As a result, I lost my baking rhythm a little, and underbaked the front and back pieces of the house slightly, making them a tad softer than they should be. Not only that, Good Taste recommended using melted white chocolate to put the house together (DO NOT do this - unless you are assembling the cake in a deep freeze or are prepared to stand there for 4 hours until it sets) and coupled with a heavier than normal roof, the front house panel began to bow.


You can just imagine us all screaming and running as the roof slid off and the back panel of the house hit the floor. AMAZINGLY it didn't break, but the Orchard Royal Icing I used (also recommended by Good Taste - never again!!!) shattered off and I had to re-pipe a lot of the design while the panels were standing UP - not easy to do, and lots of wobbly lines as a result.

In the kerfuffle, other parts of the design got knocked off and had to suffer wonky touch-ups, AND the house now looks skewif from the front because of the bulging front panel... oh, it was a challenge this house.


The next day, I re-baked the roof (twice as thin, twice as light, attached it with icing this time, and it was all good). On went the chimney and the freckles and a dusting of icing sugar - et voilĂ  - here she is. A tad battered and with a poor girl gingerbread standing sentry, hurriedly iced with some store bought fudge icing.


I'll post photos of my snowy white lemon icing piping soon - I have a massive of gingerbread people to get through - but stay tuned!

Tania's Eye-Rolling Gingerbread

6 cups plain flour
1 teaspoon bicarb (baking) soda
½ teaspoon baking powder
230g unsalted butter, room temperature
1 cup dark brown sugar, packed
6 heaped teaspoons ground ginger
4 heaped teaspoons ground cinnamon
1½ teaspoons ground cloves
1 teaspoon finely ground black pepper (must be fresh)
1 teaspoon salt (not flakes)
2 large eggs
1 cup golden syrup

Sift together flour, bicarb soda, baking powder and set aside. Cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Mix in spices and salt, then eggs and molasses. 

Add flour mixture; combine on low speed and don’t over-knead. Divide dough in half, set between two sheets of baking paper and roll out to between 0.5 and 1cm thickness. Refrigerate for at least an hour (the dough will darken and firm, and spice flavours will be enhanced).

Heat oven to 180°C (350°F). Cut dough into shapes and transfer to lined baking sheets. Bake until firm but NOT darkened, about 20 minutes. Let cool on wire racks.

Ice the gingerbread with lemon icing - lemon juice and icing sugar. It's a must.

8 comments:

posie blogs Jennie McClelland said...

I love it, eye rolling & all. I can't see anything past the Freckles, mmmm. I did spy some Seed Candy in the background, you sugar tart you!! Looks so great, one day i'll give it a go to make my own, or leave the ingredients & recipe for the children. love Posie

Sheryl Gwyther said...

Wow! I'm so impressed, Tania. IT's a beautiful house and I don't know how you will bear to cut it and eat it!! AT least, you'll have the photos :)
Thanks for the recipe - haven't made gingerbread men since David was six.
What I would really like is to be there, sharing a gingerbread man and coffee with you!!
XX
Sheryl

Anonymous said...

Amazing and gorgeous. Despite the kerfuffle and hiccups, your gingerbread house looks fantastic and scrummy. Enjoy. And top marks for creating from scratch. You are too clever and creative. Merry Christmas.
Chris

Silverdragon said...

Hi Tania - the house looks great!!

I made one last year and had similar issues getting it all to stick together, especially as I only had one pair of hands (a second pair is really a major bonus) to hold it together and ice at the same time.

I ended up 'buttressing' the house on the inside with bamboo skewers, including a 'roof pole' laid across the peaks of the end pieces to give the centre of the roof some support. It worked well in the end, but it was a lot of fiddling.

I think I tiled the roof in those little fizzy lollies (some still leftover in the cupboard!) which was fiddly and time-consuming - next time I will use freckles, as they look great!!

Thanks so much for the recipe - I may well give it a try if I can find time to make gingerbread this year. I won't be doing a house this time (too hard to find the time with bub, plus I want to decorate the Christmas cake) but would like to do some biscuits.

Can't wait to see your Christmas table!

Cate Holst said...

Wow, your house looks amazing!!! I've never had success making one so beautiful!

Anonymous said...

Tan, Your house looks fab. Seems a shame to break it up to eat after all your hard work. shirl x

tiarastantrums said...

oh you poor dear - guess what - so simple here - I just purchase everything pre baked and just assemble! (it's call the lazy American way!!)

A Spoonful Of Sugar said...

Your gingerbread house looks amazing Tania! The freckles make perfect little roof tiles.

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