Recipe for Old-Fashioned Gingerbread People (2024)

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Recipe for Old-Fashioned Gingerbread People (1)

Photo Credit

Zerbor/Shutterstock

Jennifer Keating

Yield

Makes 18 or more gingerbread people, depending on the size.

Category

Cookies and Bars

Course

Desserts

Occasions

Christmas

Preparation Method

Bake

Recipe for Old-Fashioned Gingerbread People (2)

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Have you ever wondered how to make gingerbread cookies? Look no further! We have a traditional gingerbread recipe that will knock your socks off and make a delightful addition to your Christmas cookieplatter.

This recipe for “Old-Fashioned Gingerbread People” makes a large batch because, well, frankly, anything this delicious deserves to be made in bulk. Mix up a batch before your next holiday party and decorate the cookies together to get in the holidayspirit.

Gingerbread men and gingerbread women make perfect presents for the youngsters on your holiday gift list. A few well-placed bits of candy or nuts for eyes and a nose will give your creations delightful personalities. Pack each finished person in a clear cellophane bag tied off withribbon.

Enjoy our 10 Best Cookie Recipes.

Ingredients

5 to 5-1/2 cups all-purpose flour

1 teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoon salt

2 teaspoons ground ginger

1 teaspoon cinnamon

1/2 teaspoon nutmeg

1/2 teaspoon ground cloves

1 cup (2 sticks) butter, at room temperature

1 cup packed brown sugar

1 large egg, at room temperature

1 cup molasses

1-1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract

assorted candies, pine nuts, and sliced almonds for decoration

Instructions

  1. Sift 5 cups of flour with baking soda, salt, ginger, cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves into a large bowl. Whisk well, to mix. Setaside.
  2. Using an electric mixer, beat butter until creamy, gradually adding brown sugar. Beat in egg. Add molasses and beat on medium speed for 2 minutes, until fluffy. Blend invanilla.
  3. Using a wooden spoon, stir the dry ingredients into the creamed mixture 1 cup at a time, blending until smooth after each addition. If, after adding all of the flour, the dough still feels a little sticky, stir in another 1/4 to 1/2 cup offlour.
  4. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured work surface. Divide into thirds, then place each portion in the center of a 1-gallon plastic storage bag. Using your palms, flatten the dough into disks about 3/4-inch thick. Seal and refrigerateovernight.
  5. The next day, remove dough from the refrigerator an hour before you plan to start baking. Roll the dough, while in the bag, to about half of its existing thickness. Return the dough to the fridge for anhour.
  6. Preheat the oven to 350°F. Lightly butter several large baking sheets or line them with parchmentpaper.
  7. Remove dough from the bag. Working on a sheet of floured waxed paper or parchment paper, roll the dough, one portion at a time, until it is slightly less than 1/4-inchthick.
  8. Use gingerbread people cutters to cut the dough. (Remove the scraps, press them together into a dough ball, and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes before rollingagain.)
  9. Using a spatula, transfer the gingerbread shapes to the baking sheets, leaving about 1 inch inbetween.
  10. Press candy and pine nuts into the dough to make eyes and a nose. Use the sliced almonds for the mouth andbuttons.
  11. Bake one sheet at a time on the center oven rack for 12 to 13 minutes. Cool on the baking sheet for 2 minutes, then transfer to a rack tocool.

Gingerbread Making Tips

Instructions

  • Plan to work this dough when your kitchen is the coolest: The dough will be easier tohandle.
  • If the dough gets too soft when you’re rolling or handling it, simply slide it, waxed paper and all, onto a baking sheet and refrigerate for 15 to 20 minutes beforeproceeding.
  • Press cinnamon red hots into the still-very-warm shapes to add facial features, buttons, belts, or other accessories. Use a thin ribbon of frosting for scarves orbelts.

About The Author

Jennifer Keating

Jennifer is the Associate Digital Editor at The Old Farmer’s Almanac. She is an active equestrian and spends much of her free time at the barn. When she’s not riding, she loves caring for her collection of house plants, baking, and playing in her gardens. Read More from Jennifer Keating

Recipe for Old-Fashioned Gingerbread People (4)

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Comments

Add a Comment

can you use this recipe for muffins

  • Reply

HiKay-

This recipe would be too dense to use for muffins. Try out our Old-Fashioned Gingerbread instead.

  • Reply

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Recipe for Old-Fashioned Gingerbread People (2024)

FAQs

What are the three types of gingerbread? ›

The three distinct types of gingerbread are brown gingerbread, wafer-based gingerbread and honey gingerbread.
  • BROWN GINGERBREAD.
  • WAFER GINGERBREAD.
  • HONEY GINGERBREAD.

How was gingerbread made originally? ›

Another key difference from modern-day gingerbread is that the medieval variety is made with honey and breadcrumbs. These were mixed with saffron and pepper to form a stiff paste which was formed into a square, sprinkled with cinnamon and decorated with box leaves secured with cloves.

What makes gingerbread hard or soft? ›

Some gingerbread recipes require some time to soften after baking because they are initially firm. Gingerbread is made harder by molasses and honey, but it becomes softer when water is absorbed by the sugar.

What makes gingerbread taste like gingerbread? ›

Molasses is the most associated with gingerbread. Light molasses, a mild molasses, comes from the first boiling of the sugar syrup. Dark molasses, a full-flavored molasses, comes from the second boiling of the sugar syrup, and is the most popular molasses used in gingerbread recipes.

What is the oldest version of the gingerbread man? ›

The American version first appeared in the May 1875 issue of St. Nicholas Magazine. The story tells of a Gingerbread Man who runs away from the old woman who baked him.

What is Victorian gingerbread? ›

In Medieval England gingerbread meant preserved ginger. The hard cookies were a staple at Medieval fairs in England and on the continent. These became known as “gingerbread fairs” and the cookies called “fairings”.

Why was gingerbread illegal? ›

Fear that gingerbread men could be agents of the occult spread to the continent and in 1607 the magistrates of Delft in the Netherlands made it illegal to either bake or eat the biscuits.

What country invented gingerbread? ›

According to Rhonda Massingham Hart's Making Gingerbread Houses, the first known recipe for gingerbread came from Greece in 2400 BC.

Are gingerbread healthy? ›

Research has also shown that it may improve dental hygiene, reduce cholesterol and lower blood pressure. Similarly, nutmeg – another common ingredient in gingerbread – is associated with reduced inflammation and may benefit heart health.

Is molasses the same as golden syrup? ›

Golden syrup, or light treacle, is a thick sugar syrup. With its golden, amber color, it is lighter than molasses, though the two are similar in their thickness. Golden syrup also a liquid sweetener, so 1 cup of golden syrup can replace 1 cup of molasses.

What happens if you don't chill gingerbread dough? ›

Chilling the dough before it goes into a hot oven gives the butter a chance to firm up and reduces how much it spreads when baking. “You should chill the dough both before rolling and cutting and after,” she said.

What can you use instead of molasses? ›

The nine best replacements for molasses are:
  • Honey.
  • Maple syrup.
  • Dark corn syrup.
  • Sorghum syrup.
  • Golden syrup.
  • Brown sugar.
  • Black treacle.
  • Simple syrup.
Nov 27, 2022

What is the main flavor of gingerbread? ›

Gingerbread refers to a broad category of baked goods, typically flavored with ginger, cloves, nutmeg, and cinnamon and sweetened with honey, sugar, or molasses.

What flavor goes best with gingerbread? ›

Needing to be foiled, gingerbread loves whipped cream. But it also takes to tart winter fruits like a shortcake to strawberries. Poached or broiled pineapple sings alongside gingerbread, as do a few spoonfuls of pomelo curd, garnished with candied pomelo peel.

What is another name for gingerbread? ›

'spice bread') or the German and Polish terms Pfefferkuchen and Piernik respectively ( lit. 'pepper cake' because it used to contain pepper) or Lebkuchen (of unclear etymology; either Latin libum, meaning "sacrifice" or "sacrificial bread," or German Laib for loaf or German for life, leben).

What are the flavors in gingerbread? ›

The general term of gingerbread is used to describe the broad category of baked goods which are flavoured with the spice blend of ginger, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, cardamom, anise and molasses/honey.

What are 6 adjectives to describe gingerbread? ›

Synonyms of gingerbread
  • ornate.
  • decorated.
  • baroque.
  • gingerbready.
  • adorned.
  • extravagant.
  • loud.
  • gilded.

What are gingerbread men called now? ›

Some bakeries are now calling gingerbread men by the gender neutral term “gingerbread people.” Do you agree with the change? I couldn't care less if they called them “gingerbread cookies.” Originally Answered: Some Bakeries are now calling Gingerbread men by the gender fluid title Gingerbread people.

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