I'm a messy, disorganised person. I was meant to do Christmas in July baking, and before I knew it we were already in August. I planned all sorts of baking for Halloween, and *whoosh*, that passed by in a flash. I was determined, crazy determined to be more organised for Christmas. I kinda love Christmas. I'm not religious, and my family haven't done Christmas presents since we were little, but I love the warm family joy that the holiday season brings, and all the indulgent eating that I associate with it. Back in Malaysia, Mum always cooks a turkey and Dad carves it. Here in Sydney, I've been lucky enough to be included in A's family Christmases, which are different but kind of the same. And once again I seem to be leaving my Christmas shopping until the very last minute. But at least I've gotten off my lazy bum and started my Christmas baking!
So since I'm a messy, disorganised baker, I decided to start with something simple and make it even simpler. I love gingerbread houses, and gingerbread in general. Gingerbread houses always make me think of reading Enid Blyton books when I was young, about the Land of Candy in the Faraway Tree series, with the chocolate lamp poles and peppermint grass. Part of the fun of gingerbread houses is running around the lolly aisle in the supermarket, trying to figure out what you can use to construct/decorate your house.
These little gingerbread houses are perfect to make with the kids. The gingerbread recipe is a simple recipe I use for gingerbread men, it is really easy to roll out and cut. My favourite thing about the recipe is that it uses up all egg-whites and yolks, so you don't have any random egg bits leftover. And since these are very basic, baby-sized houses, you don't have to worry about any complicated templates or construction. I just used a metal ruler and a sharp knife to figure out the shapes I needed for my house (after testing it with some cardboard first). The best thing is you get lots of little houses out of the dough, so you can decorate each of them however you want, and you don't need to be super neat or precise about any of it.
Miniature Gingerbread Houses
(makes approx 4 small houses)
For the gingerbread:
1/2 cup tightly packed brown sugar
125g unsalted butter, softened
2 egg yolks
2 1/2 cups plain flour
3/4 tsp bicarb soda
2 tsp ground ginger
1 tsp cinnamon
3 tbsp golden syrup
For the royal icing:
2 large egg whites
3 cups icing sugar
For the decorations:
Whatever you want! I used mini marshmallows, licorice allsorts, mush sticks, mini candy canes, Chomp bars, malt sticks, mini skittles, peppermints and multi-coloured cachous.
Whisk flour, bicarb, ginger and cinnamon in a separate bowl and stir to combine. Preheat oven to 180 degrees C. Cream butter and sugar in a large mixing bowl until light and fluffy. Continue beating, adding one egg yolk at a time until well combined. Add dry ingredients and golden syrup and stir together until it starts to come together.
Use your hands to combine and knead into a smooth dough. It will be quite a crumbly mixture, but don't worry, it will moisten up when it is rolled out. If the mixture is too sticky for your liking, lightly dust with flour and knead a bit more. Split the dough into 4-5 balls. Take one of the dough balls and place on a sheet of greaseproof paper that has been lightly dusted with flour. Place another sheet of greaseproof paper on top and roll the dough between the sheets of paper using a rolling pin to a thickness of about 4-5 mm.
Cut out the shapes you need to make the houses. Each house needs 3 pairs of shapes, 6 pieces in total. The dough should give you enough for 4 houses if you use the dimensions given, with some extra scraps leftover in case you need to make extra (which you might! if any burn or get dropped, but this dough doesn't seem to have any issues with cracking). Here is what you need to cut out for a single house
- 2 side walls: 5cm x 8cm rectangles
- 2 roof pieces: 5cm x 9cm rectangles
- 2 front walls: 5cm x 5cm squares with an isosceles triangle connected on top with a height of 3cm (see photo below), i.e. 5cm sides with a 8cm point down the middle.
Lay the cutouts on a lined baking sheet. The dough may crack when you pick it up but just gently press it back together, the cracks will not show after it is baked. Bake for 10 mins or until the cookies are browned. Keep an eye on them, they burn quickly after they are ready. They will be soft when you first remove them from the oven, so either leave them on the baking sheet (as long as it is lined with baking paper), or slide them gently on to a wire rack to cool completely.
Prepare the royal icing 'cement'; use half the ingredients, 1 egg white, and beat with an electric mixer until it reaches soft peaks, continue beating while gradually adding 1.5 cups of the icing sugar. The mixture should become stiff and shiny. This icing will be used for the construction of the houses, keep the other half of the ingredients for decorating the exteriors.
Construct the base of the house by sticking the four wall pieces together as shown below. You could be super neat and use a piping bag to place the royal icing along each side edge of the pieces, but I was lazy and just dipped both sides of each biscuit into the icing and stuck them together.
Place on a sheet of foil or baking paper to let the icing harden. When it is set enough that you can gently pick up the whole base without it collapsing, use a spoon or piping bag to spread icing over all the top edges of the base and cement the roof to the top. Use more icing to join the two roof pieces together at the very top. You now have your basic house ready for decorating, set it aside to set for about 20-30 mins, and construct all your other houses.
Now the fun part, the decorating. You can do whatever you want here, but I'll tell you what I did in case you're curious. I first made up more royal icing with the leftover eggwhite and 1.5 cups of icing sugar I had left, and used that to stick windows and doors onto the walls of the houses. I used licorice allsorts for the windows, and the curved tops of candy canes for the doors. Some of the houses I used malt sticks to look like log walls. I was also lucky enough to snag some pretty Christmas sugar decorations that I could stick on.
Once the bottom of the house was finished, I completed the roof. Some of them were just slathered with lots of the royal icing to make them look like snow-topped roofs, and decorated with some cachous. I also sliced a Chomp bar at a diagonal to stick on top of the snow covered roof to look like a chimney. You could use any skinny chocolate bar for this, like a kitkat. Mini marshmallows skewered on a bent piece of a paperclip inserted into the top of the chimney make some very cute puffs of smoke :)
The ones that didn't have plain roofs, I covered with icing sugar and then used flat peppermint lollies as white roof tiles. You could also use your leftover scraps of gingerbread cookie dough to make little gingerbread tiles to stick into the roof. I then placed my houses on a flat board or cake stand, covered with foil and dusted with lots of icing sugar or flour for 'snow' and then cemented the houses to the bottom with more royal icing. A little bit of cocoa powder worked great as a cleared dirth path in the white snow. These gingerbread houses should last at least a week, if you can stop yourself from nibbling on them!
So since I'm a messy, disorganised baker, I decided to start with something simple and make it even simpler. I love gingerbread houses, and gingerbread in general. Gingerbread houses always make me think of reading Enid Blyton books when I was young, about the Land of Candy in the Faraway Tree series, with the chocolate lamp poles and peppermint grass. Part of the fun of gingerbread houses is running around the lolly aisle in the supermarket, trying to figure out what you can use to construct/decorate your house.
These little gingerbread houses are perfect to make with the kids. The gingerbread recipe is a simple recipe I use for gingerbread men, it is really easy to roll out and cut. My favourite thing about the recipe is that it uses up all egg-whites and yolks, so you don't have any random egg bits leftover. And since these are very basic, baby-sized houses, you don't have to worry about any complicated templates or construction. I just used a metal ruler and a sharp knife to figure out the shapes I needed for my house (after testing it with some cardboard first). The best thing is you get lots of little houses out of the dough, so you can decorate each of them however you want, and you don't need to be super neat or precise about any of it.
Peppermint tiled roofs and chocolate biscuit log walls
Unfortunately I picked a sweaty hot day to make these (right before a big bout of cold weather hit Sydney), so I was cranky and in a rush to get them done. By the end of it, I was just slopping royal icing on everything, so they aren't the prettiest looking gingerbread houses I could have come up with. But the fact that I could put these together so easily and with so little effort shows what a great afternoon project they would be for anyone. Any now they are sitting prettily in my living room, making the whole place smell lovely. I don't think I have the heart to eat them!Miniature Gingerbread Houses
(makes approx 4 small houses)
For the gingerbread:
1/2 cup tightly packed brown sugar
125g unsalted butter, softened
2 egg yolks
2 1/2 cups plain flour
3/4 tsp bicarb soda
2 tsp ground ginger
1 tsp cinnamon
3 tbsp golden syrup
For the royal icing:
2 large egg whites
3 cups icing sugar
For the decorations:
Whatever you want! I used mini marshmallows, licorice allsorts, mush sticks, mini candy canes, Chomp bars, malt sticks, mini skittles, peppermints and multi-coloured cachous.
Whisk flour, bicarb, ginger and cinnamon in a separate bowl and stir to combine. Preheat oven to 180 degrees C. Cream butter and sugar in a large mixing bowl until light and fluffy. Continue beating, adding one egg yolk at a time until well combined. Add dry ingredients and golden syrup and stir together until it starts to come together.
Use your hands to combine and knead into a smooth dough. It will be quite a crumbly mixture, but don't worry, it will moisten up when it is rolled out. If the mixture is too sticky for your liking, lightly dust with flour and knead a bit more. Split the dough into 4-5 balls. Take one of the dough balls and place on a sheet of greaseproof paper that has been lightly dusted with flour. Place another sheet of greaseproof paper on top and roll the dough between the sheets of paper using a rolling pin to a thickness of about 4-5 mm.
Cut out the shapes you need to make the houses. Each house needs 3 pairs of shapes, 6 pieces in total. The dough should give you enough for 4 houses if you use the dimensions given, with some extra scraps leftover in case you need to make extra (which you might! if any burn or get dropped, but this dough doesn't seem to have any issues with cracking). Here is what you need to cut out for a single house
- 2 side walls: 5cm x 8cm rectangles
- 2 roof pieces: 5cm x 9cm rectangles
- 2 front walls: 5cm x 5cm squares with an isosceles triangle connected on top with a height of 3cm (see photo below), i.e. 5cm sides with a 8cm point down the middle.
Lay the cutouts on a lined baking sheet. The dough may crack when you pick it up but just gently press it back together, the cracks will not show after it is baked. Bake for 10 mins or until the cookies are browned. Keep an eye on them, they burn quickly after they are ready. They will be soft when you first remove them from the oven, so either leave them on the baking sheet (as long as it is lined with baking paper), or slide them gently on to a wire rack to cool completely.
Prepare the royal icing 'cement'; use half the ingredients, 1 egg white, and beat with an electric mixer until it reaches soft peaks, continue beating while gradually adding 1.5 cups of the icing sugar. The mixture should become stiff and shiny. This icing will be used for the construction of the houses, keep the other half of the ingredients for decorating the exteriors.
Construct the base of the house by sticking the four wall pieces together as shown below. You could be super neat and use a piping bag to place the royal icing along each side edge of the pieces, but I was lazy and just dipped both sides of each biscuit into the icing and stuck them together.
Place on a sheet of foil or baking paper to let the icing harden. When it is set enough that you can gently pick up the whole base without it collapsing, use a spoon or piping bag to spread icing over all the top edges of the base and cement the roof to the top. Use more icing to join the two roof pieces together at the very top. You now have your basic house ready for decorating, set it aside to set for about 20-30 mins, and construct all your other houses.
Now the fun part, the decorating. You can do whatever you want here, but I'll tell you what I did in case you're curious. I first made up more royal icing with the leftover eggwhite and 1.5 cups of icing sugar I had left, and used that to stick windows and doors onto the walls of the houses. I used licorice allsorts for the windows, and the curved tops of candy canes for the doors. Some of the houses I used malt sticks to look like log walls. I was also lucky enough to snag some pretty Christmas sugar decorations that I could stick on.
Once the bottom of the house was finished, I completed the roof. Some of them were just slathered with lots of the royal icing to make them look like snow-topped roofs, and decorated with some cachous. I also sliced a Chomp bar at a diagonal to stick on top of the snow covered roof to look like a chimney. You could use any skinny chocolate bar for this, like a kitkat. Mini marshmallows skewered on a bent piece of a paperclip inserted into the top of the chimney make some very cute puffs of smoke :)
The ones that didn't have plain roofs, I covered with icing sugar and then used flat peppermint lollies as white roof tiles. You could also use your leftover scraps of gingerbread cookie dough to make little gingerbread tiles to stick into the roof. I then placed my houses on a flat board or cake stand, covered with foil and dusted with lots of icing sugar or flour for 'snow' and then cemented the houses to the bottom with more royal icing. A little bit of cocoa powder worked great as a cleared dirth path in the white snow. These gingerbread houses should last at least a week, if you can stop yourself from nibbling on them!
These houses look so good! The marshmallow smoke and candy cane door frame are excellent touches :)
ReplyDeleteOnce built, are the structures sturdy?
You dont know how excited I was when I saw this post! I sent you an email! I love what you've done!!!!
ReplyDeleteSimon - Thank you! The structures are very sturdy, surprisingly so! I was able to pick up the individual houses and carry them around without a problem :)
ReplyDeleteTrissa - Heehee you crack me up Trissa :) Thanks so much!!
Stephh the houses are sooooooooooooo cute. i think i'd nibble on the chomp bar before anything else hehe
ReplyDeleteaw those houses are so cute love your marshmallow smoke!
ReplyDeleteOh this is so cute! Reminds me of the annual gingerbread house making sessions I had with my friend and her German husband when they were still in Sydney. But ours were so amateurish compared to yours!
ReplyDeleteYour houses are so adorable and must have been soooo fun to make! I will have to be more organised next year and give these a go.
ReplyDeleteAww these are absolutely adorable! They look like they've come out of a magazine, so pro! I love the decorations and everything! I don't think I'd have the heart to eat these cute little houses either! Great work Steph!!
ReplyDeleteNow that's the kinda house I want to live in! lol. We made gingerbread houses one year, but the whole construction process required infinite patience, especially when all I wanted to do was decorate! The wreaths are a gorgeous touch and I love the candycane doorframe!
ReplyDeleteawesome steph!! loving the snow on top of the roof, makes me yearn for a wintery christmas.
ReplyDeleteAww how adorable! I love the puffs of marshmallow coming out of the chimney :D
ReplyDeleteI love the chomp chimney and the smoke! Decorating is so much fun, and watching people's reactions when they slowly realise what all the components are is even more fun :) (eating all the leftover decoration pieces just tops off the greatness too!)
ReplyDeleteLove the chocolate bar chimney and the marshmallow smoke puffs! Don't think I'd have the heart to knock such pretty houses down and eat them either =p
ReplyDeleteAww Steph! You are amazing! I love the marshmallow chimney smoke! So did you and A eat it all?
ReplyDeleteOk Steph these are the cutest gingerbread houses I've ever seen!!! I'm so making these for Christmas! The marshmallows as a puff of smoke is an awesome idea :) Nice work!
ReplyDeleteWow it's a little gingerbread village! Those are seriously some of the cutest designed gingerbread houses I have ever seen, LOVE the marshmallows as the smoke plumes coming out of the chimney!
ReplyDeleteGINGER BREAD HOUSES! I've never made one before, but they look like such fun. Yours look so sweet. I would be tempted to put a witch inside of one, hehehehe
ReplyDeleteThis is so cute! I love the smoke - so creative!
ReplyDeleteI love love love all your creations. The memorable pupcakes and now... OMG the cutest chimny I have ever seen. Love the use of candy canes. Audax would be very very proud.
ReplyDeleteOh I love this so much I was lured out of my feed reader to comment! Do the houses get soft in the warm weather? That's always held me back from baking a christmas gingerbread house, being in humid Sydney and all...
ReplyDeleteOoohh you're so talented, Steph!!!!! They're all too cute!
ReplyDeletelove it, they look so adoarable. If I were kid, I definitely feel like demolishing it! Well... it is always the fat kid who is the bad one. :P
ReplyDeleteSo pretty! The marshmallow puffs of smoke are a very nice touch :D
ReplyDeleteSteph, these are sooooo cute! your final touches are so creative. i especially love the marshmallow chimney and candy cane door frame!
ReplyDeleteand by chimney i mean smoke coming out of the chimney, lol
ReplyDeleteOh, how adorable! I've been planning to make a house too, you've definitely given me some inspiration!
ReplyDeleteThese look so cute! Though in the photos they don't look so mini! I love the wreath you made! Great decorations!
ReplyDeleteOh dear, I don't know where I went wrong, but I simply doubled the recipe and was left with a big bowl full of crumbly, useless batter. It won't even gather into a ball. I've gone over the ingredients about 12 times and have left nothing out. Too bad.
ReplyDeleteHey Anonymous - That's a real pity. Probably not the best idea to double the recipe because you need to have a small amount that you are able to work and knead together with your hands. Maybe try splitting the mixture you have into quarters and add some water or more golden syrup to make it bind together
ReplyDeleteI love Enid Blyton. Wouldn't it be nice to try a toffee shock! Your little houses are really cute, especially the chocolate chimneys.
ReplyDeleteYou are such a clever cookie! How adorably cute are these?!? I love them to bits!!!!!
ReplyDeleteHow wonderful are your wee gingerbread houses? Love them! I finished off making my first ever gingerbread house last night and now I wish I'd made wee ones and had a whole village instead.
ReplyDeletei'm the same when it comes to x'mas baking. I make big plans to start early and before I know it it's already the week or two before x'mas and i haven't done anything! tops to these adorable gingerbread houses!
ReplyDeleteBetty - Oh trust me it was tempting to just eat the chomp bar and forget about the chimneys. I'm addicted to them...
ReplyDeletechocolatesuze - I'm a bit in love with the marshmallow smoke, I want to use it on everything!
Forager - Aww that sounds fun! I'm sure yours were awesome :)
Belle - Oh thank you! Yes give them a go sometime, they are super easy!
Betty - Aww Betty you are too kind! I still haven't touched them, I can't bear to!
Helen - Hahaha yes how awesome would it be?? Yeah it's a little frustrating, that's why these little ones are quicker and you get to spend less time constructing and more time decorating!
Linda - Hehe thanks :) It's also an easy way to cover it up and make it look pretty :D
Lorraine - Thank you!
Conor - Hehe I know, we had so much leftover candy, I felt sick!
mademoiselle délicieuse - trust me, mine are still sitting in my living room untouched!
Karen - Still haven't had the heart to eat them yet ;)
Jacq - Heehee thank you!! Yayay make them!
Jenn - Thanks so much! I wish I could have had time to make a whole village, that would have been cool!
Maria - This was my first time making one! Hahaha yes I was tempted to do all sorts of crazy things but I kept it simple in the end
Anita - Thank you so much!
Ellie - Ahaha aww thank you Ellie :D I should have just saved them til the end of the month hey...
SadieandLance - Yay I love it when I lure out non-commenters! :D Well it's been pretty warm in Sydney recently, and after about a week and a half the houses are still as firm as the day I made them! I'm keeping them in the shade in my living room, not sure how they'd fair in the sun though.
Trisha - Thank you! :D
billy - LOL so true! It's tempting but then I think i would be sad once it was demolished :(
Y - Thank you :D Mini marshmallows are the best!
Jen - Hehe thank you :) I knew what you meant!
Chris - Yay can't wait to see yours!
Rilsta - Yeah the photos are quite close, but you can tell from the dimensions that they were teeny! Thank you!
Arwen from Hoglet K - Yay good to find another enid fan :D thank you!
Brenda - Hehe thanks :) I kinda love them too
Chele - hehe thats the best way to describe them, they are wee! Ooh congrats :) I bet yours was great!
panda - I'm still so far behind on my xmas shopping, time just flies by!
These are soo adorable! I was wondering if I might add them to one of my Christmas collections on my blog? Here is an example: http://kitchensimplicity.com/please-fill-my-stocking-with-these/ Sorry, I would have e-mailed but I am visiting for the holidays and could not use your email me button. :)
ReplyDeleteHi Cheri, sure go ahead! :D thanks for asking!
ReplyDeleteSteph, your houses are such so darn cute! I love it. Amazing you didn't have to use a template!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much! :)
ReplyDeleteJulia - Thank you so much! Hehe yeah it was sort of trial and error until I got a size that I liked!
ReplyDeleteCheri - :) You're very welcome!
Very cute! I've got to use your marshmallow smoke puffs on my house next year.
ReplyDeletejust love all the details and adore this cute little perfect looking houses.
ReplyDeleteamazing work with this challenge.
Maggie - Thanks so much! Hehe aren't the smoke puffs the best bit?
ReplyDeleteWic - Haha thanks, but this wasn't my challenge post. You prob clicked through from the DB forum. My actual challenge is here: http://raspberricupcakes.blogspot.com/2009/12/gingerbread-igloo-daring-bakers-dec.html
Your little gingerbread houses are so cute! I love the 'smoke' coming out of the chimneys :)
ReplyDeleteMandyM - Thank you! I think the smoke is my favourite thing, definitely doing it in all my gingerbread houses from now on!
ReplyDelete