I finally got around to baking/making this today. Kevin and I were originally going to do some post-Christmas shopping, but then it was snowing and didn't stop. So I baked instead.
Okay. So I tried the recipe from the Scandinavian Baking Book first, but it was way too dry, and then I made the mistake of leaving it in the fridge for way too long and not wrapping it so that it was airtight. So that batch of dough went in the trash (sad). I wasn't feeling like trying that recipe again, and I didn't have the ingredients for the other recipe (I don't keep heavy cream on hand, though maybe I should), and since it was snowing (still) and the snowplows had not come by after they did at about 10:30 am, I used Google and found a recipe by Chris Broberg. This was simple, I had everything I needed, and the cookies tasted great fresh out of the oven. After a few hours, they had hardened up- good for gingerbread house-making, not so good for eating. But still, yummy. Kevin was dipping his gingerbread men in milk (I think it might work better in hot cocoa, since he soaked them for a while to get them soft).
Anyway.
I used a (very rough) hand-drawn template for my house:
Baked gingerbread house pieces:
Next step was the royal icing. I obviously didn't use enough egg whites, because the icing was way too stiff to pipe (at least out of a plastic bag- I'm working on getting some pastry bags and tips- as in, I asked for them for Christmas, but we haven't taken the effort to go out and get them yet. And yes, I realize it's past Christmas at this point). After it started flinging out of the bowl and covered my brother's sweater, I decided we were done. Since it wouldn't pipe, I used my hands. This was definitely a two-person job: I got my fingers sticky with icing as I slathered it all over the joints of the house, and my brother was useful and held the walls together until they could stand up on their own. As far as I know, the thing hasn't fallen apart (but I left it in the kitchen about an hour and a half ago, so who knows what may have happened by now).
Here's a slideshow of (part of) putting the house together. We used Skittles and Starbursts for decorations, mostly because I didn't have the forethought to get any holiday-related candy or food coloring (I keep forgetting we have no food coloring in the house). The Skittles and Starbursts are leftovers from Halloween. Halloween 2008. But Skittles and Starbursts are pretty generic, and it's not like I was planning on eating this house later anyway (I think my brother may have other plans).
What Kevin plans on doing with the gingerbread house when I'm not looking:
And here, for your viewing pleasure, is a rotating view of the house. I tried setting it to music, but it was way to large to upload (since I looped the video 11 times to make it last as long as the song), sadness.
This was a lot of fun. Maybe I'll do it again next year (possibly with icing that pipes properly). :)
I love the circular windows and wow, you still have candy from 2008? :)
ReplyDeleteHehe candy from 2008? Well they still look good!
ReplyDeleteSadly enough, 2008 is relatively "new" for some of the non-perishable food items in our house. My mom tends to stock up on things and then kind of forget about them. Fortunately, processed candy lasts for just about, well, forever. :)
ReplyDeleteSorry to hear you had trouble with the recipe the first time round. The resulting house looks fab though. Hope Kevin didn't eat ALL of the house :)
ReplyDeleteI hear you about the candy! My brother and I always ended up having to throw out candy on Halloween Eve, so that we could get more on Halloween! Your house looks amazing - Wonderful job on this challenge!
ReplyDeleteGreat job on this challenge! Your house looks great---very colourful with the candy!
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