Monday, December 8, 2008

ModernGear Food: Gingerbread Cookies

Another wonderful recipe from Kathryn at Kiki's Kitchen! She apologizes that the quality of the photos isn't the best - she's using a Blackberry as her camera didn't work out. Anyone who is looking for a Christmas gift idea for her - there you go! A new camera...

GINGERBREAD COOKIES



After many, many years of making gingerbread people for Christmas – they are the place cards at our Christmas dinner table – I have finally perfected the recipe: a little bit from my grandmother Boxer, a dash from a vintage 1940’s McCall’s special holiday cookie insert and just a hint of Martha. Oh, and I added the use of fresh ginger instead of ground as it was all I had on hand last year and WOW! what a difference!

These take a while so I find it’s best to make the dough the night (or several nights) before you plan to bake and then give yourself an entire afternoon to roll, cut, bake and decorate – these really are just too good to be rushed.

Enjoy – and if you do make them, why not send it photos of your finished product?

SIFT TOGETHER:

3 cups all purpose flour

1 tsp salt

¼ tsp baking powder

½ tsp baking soda

3 tsp ground cinnamon

1 tsp ground cloves

1 teaspoon finely ground black pepper (this is the “hint of Martha” – hope she doesn’t mind … Hi Martha!)

CREAM TOGETHER: ½ cup brown sugar

½ cup unsalted butter

THEN ADD

1 large egg

½ cup molasses (unsulfured is best)

3 teaspoons freshly grated ginger (here’s a hint: keep your fresh gingerroot in the freezer – it is then super-easy to grate!)

Beat until fully incorporated and then slowly add the dry to the wet until combined, but be careful not to over-mix or you’ll risk tough cookies.

Bring in to a ball, wrap in wax paper and chill in the fridge at least an hour or overnight
Preheat your oven to 350 degrees.

Let's roll.

Roll out the dough on a lightly floured surface to about ¼ inch thick (honestly, I am just typing that measurement knowing full well that I haven’t got a clue what a ¼ inch thick really is, so use your judgment – not too thin - they will BURN!- and not too thick - they won’t cook in the middle, YUCK!) and cut out your shapes – girls, boys, stars, bells, angels, whatever.

Here are some great collections of cutters, which is a more cost-effective way to go than buying individually.
Harold's Kitchen 12-Piece Holiday Cookie Cutter Set$4.39
Roshco 100-Piece Plastic Cookie Cutter Set$9.91
Wilton Animal Pals 50-Piece Cutter Set$8.99
Dog Bone Cookie Cutters Set of 7 $6.95

Carefully lift to parchment lined baking sheets (this step is KEY – if you have a Silpat Nonstick Silicone Baking Mat, use it but parchment works great)

Heavenly angels...

Refrigerate before baking 10 to 15 minutes (again, this is KEY – I once didn’t do the refrigeration step and well, that was the last time I skipped it).

Bake for 10 to 12 minutes – when your kitchen starts to smell delicious, that’s a good indication that they are done – but be careful, these critters can burn quite easily and that’s just wrong..

Carefully remove the cookies from the baking sheets and place on cooling racks - if you're doing as big a batch as we did you might find something like this Wilton Excelle Elite 3-Tier Cooling Rack ($9.99) will come in handy.

Big cookies

Mini cookies

The sous chefs. The blur on the left is Nub-Nub, then Maggie, Guacamole, Decker (the snuggle-puggle), and Scout.

Cool until you are ready to decorate – I use royal icing (recipe to follow) and add sparkle with dragĂ©es, (which you can get usually at a grocery store, or here for $5.95 for: regular sized silver Dragees, 4 oz., 4 oz., Gold, cute Silver Mini Dragees and Gold Mini Dragees).

Yum yum.

The army of cookies awaits.

I also tie fun ribbons through some to hang on the tree, well I did before pup Scout came to live with me, or to add a personal touch as a gift tag. The important thing is to have FUN with them!

ROYAL ICING:

2 egg whites beaten until stiff

Add 4 cups of icing or confectioners sugar and either the juice from a lemon or other flavouring, like peppermint – beat until you get the right consistency and spoon in to your piping bag – colour as desired.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Oh...I can't wait! I haven't tried the new improved version yet. The old one was soooo great!
xoxo MOI