baking, christmas, decorating, fun, gingerbread house, holiday, kids, mccormick®, tradition,
Start a holiday tradition in your family with this easy-to-assemble Gingerbread House. Your kids will love helping to build and decorate the house.
Recipe courtesy of McCormick®.
Decorating Ideas: Browse through your supermarket’s cereal and candy aisles. You’ll find plenty of inspiration for decorating your gingerbread house, yard and accessories. Here are some ideas to give you a start.
Stepping stones: Vanilla wafers, licorice pieces or candy of your choice for stepping stones.
Shutters for windows: Pretzel sticks or wafer cookies.
Roof shingles: Necco Wafers or mini shredded wheat cereal (use sugar-coated shredded wheat cereal for snow effect). Use royal icing to attach. Start from bottom edge of roof and overlap roofing material, working your way to peak of roof.
Fence: White chocolate or chocolate covered small pretzel twists.
Brick: Red licorice bites.
Porch pillars: Peppermint sticks.
Chimney: Cocoa-flavored corn puff cereal, multi-colored cereal pieces, caramel and/or chocolate covered popcorn pieces, chocolate covered raisins, held in place by royal icing ‘mortar.’
Snowman: Marshmallows or royal icing balls.
Sled/toboggan: Small strip of fruit roll-up for wooden slats attached with royal icing to pretzel sticks used for sled runners.
Evergreens trees: Use ice cream cones as the base for evergreen trees. Using a decorating bag filled with green-tinted royal icing and a star tip, pipe elongated stars one layer at a time beginning at the bottom of the tree. Continue piping star layers until you reach the top of the tree. – For easy evergreen trees, use a small spatula to cover ice cream cones with green-tinted icing, using the spatula to gently pull icing out slightly to form tree branches. For Christmas tree lights, use a decorating bag filled with tinted royal icing and a round tip to pipe dots on the tree, or sprinkle with fruit-flavored sweetened rice cereal. – For a larger tree, stack 2 cones together, attaching them with royal icing. Decorate as described above. – For small tree, trim bottom of cone. Decorate as described above. – Dab a small amount of white royal icing on tree branches for a snow effect.
Shrubs or bushes: Green spearmint leaves jelly-type candy.
Porch steps: Wafer or any rectangular cookies.
Icicles: With a decorating bag filled with untinted royal icing and small round tip, pipe small icicles from house and porch roof.
Decorations: Gumdrops, starlight mints, mini marshmallows, red hots candy, and various colors of licorice pieces all make decorative additions.
Royal Icing: Make sure all bowls and utensils are completely free of grease. Icing will break down with even a drop of grease in the mixture. Keep icing covered with a damp cloth to prevent drying while assembling and decorating gingerbread house. Prepare additional batches of Royal Icing for tinting. Divide icing among small bowls. Tint with McCormick® Food Color of your choice for decorations. For ease in decorating, use disposable decorating bags and decorating tips Use round tip for piping light strings and/or garland Use round tip and desired McCormick® Food Color to pipe holiday lights Use a star tip or leaf tip to make wreaths. Pipe wreaths on waxed paper and let harden completely before attaching to house. Use leaf tip, round tip, or basketweave tip to create bows or ribbons. Place gingerbread house on a sturdy base, such as a board or baking sheet, to support the finished house. Place base and gingerbread house on a lazy Susan for ease in turning the house when decorating.
Windows: – For precise placement of windows, cut out window templates and place on unbaked gingerbread. Lightly score around template with a small knife, outlining window. Baked gingerbread will retain faint score marks.
– Thin yellow-tinted royal icing with small amount of water and paint windows. Let dry, then paint on curtains with thinned royal icing tinted with your choice of food color.
- Pipe window pane divisions with untinted icing in decorating bag using a small round decorating tip.
Foodie Byte
Ingredients
For Gingerbread (Prepare recipe 3 times):
3 1/2 cups flour
1 tablespoon McCormick® Ginger, Ground
2 teaspoons McCormick® Cinnamon, Ground
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon McCormick® Allspice, Ground
1/4 teaspoon McCormick® Nutmeg, Ground
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup shortening
1/2 cup sugar
3/4 cup molasses
1 egg
For Royal Icing (Prepare recipe 2 times for assembling):
3 tablespoons powdered egg whites or meringue powder
1 pound confectioners' sugar, sifted (about 4 cups)
6 tablespoons water
For Decorations:
Assorted candies, cereals and cookies (see Decorating Ideas)
Additional Royal Icing (3 to 4 times recipe)
For Equipment: 4 baking sheets
Hand or stand mixer
Printed pattern (see template links on www.mccormick.com)
Pattern templates cut from foam board, heavy card stock or file folders
Parchment paper
Pizza wheel
Rolling pin
Sturdy base for gingerbread house, such as large baking pan or plywood
Preparation
Print and cut out pattern templates.
Trace templates on foam board, heavy card stock or file folders.
Cut out and label pattern pieces.
If desired, cover pattern pieces with plastic wrap to keep them grease-free. (It is recommended that you ‘build’ the gingerbread house first with pattern pieces to become familiar with how the house is constructed.)
Prepare Gingerbread recipe 3 times. (If using hand mixer, prepare 3 single batch recipes. If using stand mixer, prepare double batch recipes.)
Mix flour, ginger, cinnamon, baking soda, allspice, nutmeg and salt in large bowl; set aside.
Beat shortening and sugar in large bowl with electric mixer on medium speed until light and fluffy.
Add molasses and egg; beat well.
Beat in as much of the flour mixture as possible with mixer.
Stir in any remaining mixture with spoon.
Dough will be stiff. Wrap in plastic wrap. Refrigerate at least 2 hours or overnight.
Dust rolling pin lightly with flour.
Trim parchment paper to size of baking sheet.
Roll out 1/4 of the chilled dough to about 3/8-inch thickness on parchment paper.
Occasionally wipe rolling pin clean and dust with additional flour if dough begins to stick to rolling pin.
Keep remaining dough refrigerated.
Arrange pattern templates on dough, leaving 1-inch between templates.
Cut around templates with pizza wheel. (Using a pizza wheel instead of a knife is faster and causes less drag on the dough.)
Use small sharp knife to cut out smaller areas of templates.
Repeat rolling and cutting process until all of the templates have been cut out. (Dough scraps can be refrigerated and added to next batch of dough for rolling and cutting.)
Gently slide parchment paper with dough onto baking sheets. To minimize distortion during baking, let cut-out dough stand at room temperature for 2 to 4 hours.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
Bake each batch 25 to 30 minutes or until gingerbread pieces are hard to the touch.
Cool baking sheets on wire racks until gingerbread pieces are cool enough to handle.
Place gingerbread pieces on cutting board.
Place pattern templates on gingerbread.
Trim with pizza wheel or small knife to template size. (Sandpaper may be used if house is not going to be eaten.) Cool gingerbread completely before assembling gingerbread house with royal icing.
Prepare Royal Icing recipe 2 times. (If using hand mixer, prepare 2 single batch recipes. If using stand mixer, prepare 1 double batch recipe.)
Beat all ingredients in large bowl with electric mixer until stiff peaks form. F
or stand mixer, beat on low speed 7 to 10 minutes. For hand mixer, beat on high speed 10 to 12 minutes. (If using stand mixer or for stiffer icing, use 1 tablespoon less water per recipe.) Each single recipe yields 3 cups icing. (To keep prepared royal icing moist, cover bowl with damp towel.)
Assembling Gingerbread House:
Windows: Use royal icing to pipe windows onto side walls and peaked walls; set aside. (See Tips on adding and decorating windows.)
Room: Pipe icing along bottom of side wall and bottom and side of peaked wall. Join the pieces so that the side wall is positioned on the inside edge of the peaked wall. Press sides together and hold in place several minutes until icing begins to set. If necessary, prop with cans, mugs, etc., to hold walls up until icing dries. Attach other peaked wall and side wall with icing. Let stand at least 1 hour before continuing.
Roof: Remove any props before adding roof. Pipe icing along top edges of 4 walls. Top with the 2 roof pieces, adjusting until roof pieces meet at the top. Pipe a line of icing where the 2 roof pieces meet. Press and hold in place for several minutes to allow icing to set. Let stand at least 3 hours before decorating.
If necessary, reinforce joints with additional icing.
Gently move house to the board or baking sheet base.
Secure to base with icing, then ice entire base to simulate snow.
Decorate as desired. If you're handy with a decorating bag, finish roof and wall edges with icing scrolls or shells.
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