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Gingerbread Cookies

Recipe courtesy Colette Peters, Colette's Christmas, Little, Brown & Co., 1993

Show: Sara's SecretsEpisode: Holiday Cookies

Rated: 2 stars out of 5Rate itRead users' reviews (54)

  • Cook Time:

    15 min

  • Level:

    Easy

  • Yield:

    48 (3-inch cookies)

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Times:

Prep
10 min
Inactive Prep
--
Cook
15 min
Total:
25 min
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Ingredients

Cookies:

  • 1/2 cup firmly packed brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup vegetable shortening
  • 1 cup corn syrup (light or dark)
  • 4 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 1/2 teaspoons ground ginger
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon grated nutmeg
  • 1/4 teaspoon allspice
  • Royal Icing, recipe follows

Equipment:

  • Gingerbread women and men cookie cutters
  • Green, yellow, red, blue, and black food coloring
  • Small offset spatulas
  • Gold and silver dragees
  • Edible glitter
  • Colored sprinkles
  • Small paint brush
  • Pastry bags with couplers
  • Pastry tip sizes 1, 2, 3, 101, and 46
  • White and yellow nonpareils
  • White, yellow, red, and green sanding sugar
  • Multicolored mini-jawbreakers (about 1/4-inch round)
  • Piping gel

Directions

Make the Cookies: Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

Place the brown sugar, shortening, and corn syrup in a saucepan and heat on medium, stirring constantly until the shortening is melted.

Place all of the dry ingredients in a large bowl; then add the warm sugar mixture, stirring until all of the ingredients are well blended. The dough will appear crumbly but will hold together when rolled out.

Use the dough immediately, while it is still warm. If it starts to crumble, place it in a warm oven for 1 to 2 minutes until it softens a bit.

To make decorated cutout cookies; Roll out the dough to about 1/8-inch thick on a lightly floured surface. Cut out gingerbread women and men with cookie cutters. Place the cookies on foil-lined cookie sheets and bake until golden brown, about 10 to 15 minutes. Cool the cookies on racks before decorating.

To decorate, tint a recipe of royal icing to your desired colors. Keep the icing covered with a damp towel while you are working to prevent it from drying out. To cover a cookie with icing, thin some of the icing with a little water and spread it on the cookie with a knife or metal spatula. Leave some of the icing thick for piping borders or other designs, using the #2 tip. Add dragees, edible glitter, colored sprinkles, or other decorations to the wet icing. To attach candies to un-iced cookies, brush a thin layer of clear piping gel on the cookie with a small paintbrush and add decorations.

Royal icing is very versatile. It is pure white and dries very hard, so it is perfect for making flowers and bows and delicate piped work. It can be kept in an airtight container at room temperature for 2 weeks. You should stir the icing to restore its original consistency after storage, but do not rebeat. Royal icing does not work well in high humidity.

5 tablespoons meringue powder (found in cake decorating stores)

1/2 cup minus 2 tablespoons water

OR

2 egg whites*, at room temperature

1/2 teaspoon cream of tartar

2 teaspoons water

1 pound confectioners' sugar

Place all of the ingredients in the bowl of an electric mixer and beat slowly until they are all blended. Then beat at medium speed until the icing forms stiff peaks, about 5 minutes. Add more sugar if the icing is not stiff enough, or a few drops of water if it is too stiff. Use immediately or cover the bowl with a damp cloth to prevent drying when not in use. Allow at least 24 hours for royal icing decorations to dry, at room temperature.

Yield: 2 1/2 cups

Prep Time: 5 minutes

Ease of Preparation: Easy

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Read more Comments & Reviews (54)

Comments & Reviews

  • recipe Gingerbread Cookies
    Becky Pleasanton, CA 01-04-2010

    Flag

    Memories (and Cookies) that will last a lifetime

    Rated: 1 stars out of 5
    Tossed these cookies together so my children and my neighbors children could decorate them for Christmas. Given a recipe... whose only liquid was corn syrup and whose dough needed to be microwaved to be rollable, a more thoughtful baker than I would recognize these may turn out a bit ... crunchy. Needless to say, they were so hard one could drive a nail with them. Rolled to an 1/8th inch thick and covered in royal frosting ... then drill a hole through the top and hang on Christmas tree. They will last forever. Just don't try to eat them ... now, later ... or ever.Read more
  • recipe Gingerbread Cookies
    Kayla Crockett, TX 12-30-2009

    Flag

    horrible cookise

    Rated: 1 stars out of 5
    i followed every instruction for this recipie i DID read the reviews but i thought i still give it a try but i will never... make that mistake again , this is a horrible recipe . The dough is toooo crumbly and doesnt hold together for crap. and after the cookies are done they have a little bite to them and are hard ( hard enough to break your teeth)Read more
  • recipe Gingerbread Cookies
    Talie Tampa, FL 12-27-2009

    Flag

    Excellent for decorating; hit or miss for eating

    Rated: 3 stars out of 5
    I have made these cookies three winters in a row now. The first year they were excellent--just crunchy enough with a hint of... ginger. The next year they came out pale and rock-hard. Tonight they were somewhere between those two. I keep making them each year because I love to decorate them and I guess I keep hoping one of these times they'll be as good as my first attempt. If you can find a better cookie recipe, use it. But keep the royal icing recipe in mind. It keeps well, covers smoothly and looks terrific when it dries. It also cuts the ginger flavor nicely thanks to its requisite pound of confectioner's sugar. This year I'm making gingerfolk around the globe (plus a few Cookie Monsters because I have the cutter and, well, why not?). They're so cute I don't even want to eat them. Read more
  • recipe Gingerbread Cookies
    SUE JOHNS ISLAND, SC 12-22-2009

    Flag

    Sara's Secret missing ingredient

    Rated: 1 stars out of 5
    Something is missing in the recipe - I made it exactly as the recipe called for and they were inedible- After making them,... and they baked beautifully, smelled great, the dough was just lovely to work with - i realized that something was definitely wrong. They barely rose, and were -super- hard. There was no baking power or baking soda in the recipe. I think if the recipe had been tested by Sara as it was presented here on the site, she would have made the correction. All is good though - they make delightful ornaments and since you can't eat them, decorate them with whatever crafty items are available! They Royal Icing recipe is a dream to work with!!! So the recipe was a "lemon" - Make lemonade!Read more
  • recipe Gingerbread Cookies
    Mark Bismarck, ND 12-20-2009

    Flag

    Downright, worst cookie ever!!

    Rated: 1 stars out of 5
    Okay, I made the mistake of trying this recipe before reading any reviews - that was my mistake! Bypass any positive... comments about these cookies - if there are any, they are lying threw their teeth!! These cookies will go down in history as being the WORST cookies ever. You can't even call the mixture you start with dough because what you end up with is a crumbly mess of CRAP. After adding a little water to the recipe and finally getting a somewhat doughy consistency, I was able to cut out some cookies and get them baking. Took the cookies out of the oven and they were bland as could be. Let the cookies cool and decided it wasn't worth any time or effort to frost these hunks of crap - straight into the garbage they went along with the recipe (okay - we let the dog try one, but he could barely choke it down after he was finally able to get a bite out of the rock hard gingerbread man). As for the one comment I read who was bragging about the contributor of this recipe - make the recipe before posting a comment. Bet you'll think twice about this contributor being such a great pastry chef after you do!! Definitely do NOT waste your time even attempting to make these cookies - there isn't a doubt in my mind that you will regret your decision afterwards!! BTW - they should let you post a review without any stars because this recipe surely doesn't deserve any!!Read more
  • recipe Gingerbread Cookies
    null null, null 12-17-2009

    Flag

    Rock-hard, bland

    Rated: 1 stars out of 5
    I wanted to try my hand at gingerbread cookies for the first time, and this recipe was a true disappointment. I was looking... forward to moist, flavorful cookies, but these are more like crackers in texture and flavor - hard, crunchy, and bland. Read more
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