Gingerbread Houses 2008

Entry

Gingerbread Church.  That’s right, this year we built a church.  In the name of tradition, the Randall’s once again invited us over for round two of gingerbread house building!  We were excited, as we really enjoyed decorating gingerbread last year.  I wanted to do something different, so Rick and I browsed Google images for gingerbread house ideas. We saw some incredible houses, but they were very complicated and I just didn’t feel inspired by any of them.  Rick kept asking, “Well, what kind of house do you want?”  “I dunno, a cool one?”  Uh huh..that sure narrows it down.  Well, I turned to my Christmas decor and wanted to model our gingerbread house after this little red and white church that sits on our bar.  Rick figured out the layout and created a pattern for me, so I could cut it out.  He’s  genius like that.

Church Model

By placing the pattern over the rolled gingerbread, I was able to get the exact shape I needed.  I then transferred the mat and cut outs to the cookie sheet and baked for 9 minutes at 350.  I used the same recipe for the gingerbread and the icing that I used on my Halloween house that you can find here.

Cutting out the Pattern

The roof on the left side slid right off  10 minutes after we had attached it. I thought we were doomed!  The weight of the shingles pulled it right off!

Gingerbread Church

I used the Holiday M&Ms for siding, red hots for the roof rims, nonpareils for shingles, Hershey’s Kisses and Brach’s Spearmint leaves for bushes, Necco Canada Mints for the ground cover, peppermint patties for a low fence and Andes Mints for the pathway and steps.  And LOTS of icing to hold it all together!  ( I actually didn’t adhere any of the peppermint patties or Canada mints to the ground…which will make it easier for Rick and I to start eating off this church in no time…without having to reach for a butter knife to pry off the goods!)

Gingerbread Backside

The consistency of the icing was just right, so I was able to do icicles with ease.

For the Bell Tower, we used a Butterfinger chocolate bell and suspended it underneath the roof.  Glittery sprinkles were easier then cutting M&M’s in half to fit, and it kept the design simple.

Bell Tower II

I love these soft peppermints, and had to incorporate them somehow!

Pathway

An aerial shot of the Gingerbread Church:

Aerial Shot

It was fun building and piecing this church together.  I felt like an architect!  Some of our gingerbread was too soft, and began to collapse.  Be sure to bake it long enough that its not soft, but not too long, that it gets brown on the edges.  When it’s in between, you can still bend it a little or trim it without breaking it.  I love this new tradition!  I’d love to see your Gingerbread houses!

Easter treats for all my “PEEPS”

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Easter is approaching. You know what that means: Yellow Chick PEEPS! Just Born manufactures PEEPS, among other tasty treats. The availability of PEEPS year round is a marshmallow lover’s dream come true! My sister likes to let them sit in their wrappings for a few months until they’re nice and hard. I like them fresh from the package. My bro can down a pack in 45 seconds…probably. At any rate, now you can make your own! They are so easy. Just remember to add the vanilla, as I neglected. I was caught up in the moment of white fluff, that I forget to add it in. Wah. Continue reading

Gingerbread Houses 2007

We love our friends, Chris and Carrie Randall..

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We love our friends more when they invite us over for this:

Family Night with the Randalls, decorating Ginger Bread Houses!  Check my 2008 Halloween gingerbread house HERE and my  2008 Gingerbread Church HERE!

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Gingerbread House Recipe

1 cup butter, softened
1 cup brown sugar
1-1/3 cups molasses
4 eggs
8 cups all-purpose flour, divided
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon ground allspice
1 teaspoon ground cloves
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon ground ginger

Directions

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
2. In a large bowl, cream together the butter and brown sugar until smooth. Stir in the molasses and eggs. Combine 1 1/2 cups of the flour, baking soda, salt, allspice, cloves, cinnamon, and ginger; beat into the molasses mixture. Gradually stir in the remaining flour by hand to form a stiff dough. Divide dough into 2 pieces.
3. On a lightly floured surface, roll out dough to 1/8 inch thickness. Cut into desired shapes. Place pieces 1 inch apart onto parchment-lined cookie sheets. Refrigerate for 15 minutes. Bake for 8 to 10 minutes in the preheated oven. Cool on baking sheet for 5 minutes before removing to a wire rack to cool completely.

ROYAL ICING
(a.k.a super glue for ginger bread houses)

3 egg whites

4-5 cups powdered confectioner’s sugar

Directions: beat until nice foamy stiff peaks form.

This recipe decorated 2 houses, generously. Truly, this stuff is amazing! It could double as nail hole filler. I learned that a little ziploc bag is handy for piping the icing if you don’t have the fancy cake decoration bags, couplers and metal tips.

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