My Favorite Gingerbread House Recipes, Tools, & Tricks (2024)

A few simple gingerbread house tips and tricks.My Favorite Gingerbread House Recipes, Tools, & Tricks (1)

In college, my sister and I started a gingerbread house tradition. While home forChristmas breaks, when the novelty of no homework began to wear off,just before the boredom of being home really started to drive everyone crazy, we’d put on a day-long marathon of movies, tear our parents’ kitchen and dining room apart, andmakea gingerbread house.

We made our first housein 2009out ofgraham crackers and have made one every year since,finally graduating toactual homemadegingerbread last year. This past weekend, we made ourseventh house and while we’re not exactly expert gingerbread-house craftsmen, wehave learned a few things through trial and error. These are my favorite recipes, tools, and trickswe’ve discoveredover the years:

Recipes

Structural Gingerbread – I love this dough. It’s easy to make, easy to work with, and dries hard and strong. In the two years we’ve usedit, I’ve never had so much as a crack. Bonus: If you measure wrong (not that I would ever do this), it’s very forgiving of some last-minute trimming (I DID NOT HAVE TO DO THIS ON SATURDAY IAMNOTLYING).

Frosting Cement – The canned stuff works fine when you are just gluing four graham cracker walls together, but if you are putting together anything more complex,this is the frostingyou want. They aren’t kidding when they say cement. This stuff is so strong once it dries that you could probably build a real house withit.

Marshmallow Modeling Clay – Just in case you too feel the need to sculpt a dragon/detective for your house, this edible clayis great. It contains ingredients you probably keep in your pantry and isabout as easyto work with asregular clay. The most difficultpart is working in the coloring, which will take you a few minutes.

*All of these things are technically edible, but we don’t eat our houses, so I can’t comment on the taste.

House Templates

Victorian Gingerbread House– There is a surprising dearth of free gingerbread templates on the web for anything more complicated than your basic four walls and a chimney, so I was absolutely DELIGHTED to find this Victorian template from Kitchen Trials last year. It’s what we used for our 2014house and it was perfect.

Tools

Edgeless Cookie Sheets*affiliate link* –Trust me, you’re going to want edgeless trays if you are baking your own gingerbread. They can fit larger pieces of gingerbread, they won’t stretch your dough when you move it from cutting boardto tray, and most importantly, there aren’t any edges on which to burn your wrists if you have to do some trimming while the tray is still hot.

Piping Bags/Tips *affiliate link* – Even if you aren’t piping designs on your house, a piping bag is invaluable for applying frosting cement exactly where you want it. As someone who for years spread frosting with a knife, I can’t even put into words how much easier a bag will make your construction.

Parchment Paper *affiliate link* – If you roll and cut your dough directly on parchment paper, it makes transferto a baking tray easy and will keep your cut pieces from stretching out of shape. Plus clean up is a breeze!

Other Tips and Tricks (AKA, lessons we learned the hard way)

  • If you cut your dough and then bake, check andtrim itafter it comes out of the oven! A good gingerbread dough shouldn’t spread too much when it cooks, but it probably will a little bit, and a little bit is all it takes to throw your angles off. Check your pieces against their stencils and re-cut while the gingerbread is still warm and pliable.
  • If you get any air bubbles in your dough, very, very gently smooth them out with a light rolling pin as soon as you take it out of the oven.
  • Make your gingerbread housea two or three day project. Copying and cutting and rolling and tracing and baking and cooling takes a while. For these bigger houses, I like to cut the stencils day one, cook thegingerbread on day two andassemble day three. It will make the whole project feel so much less overwhelming.
  • Use cans and mugs to prop up your walls while they are drying.
  • Finally, buy more ingredients than you think you need! If something goes wrong, or you need more dough, there is nothing worse than having to go back out and buy ingredients in the middle of your baking. Believe me. It’s. The. Worst.

A History of Our Houses

If you’d like, take a walk down memory lane with me…

My Favorite Gingerbread House Recipes, Tools, & Tricks (2)2009 – A House for Mr. & Mrs. Claus

My Favorite Gingerbread House Recipes, Tools, & Tricks (3)2010 – A Home for the “Supernatural” Boys + Santa Cas

My Favorite Gingerbread House Recipes, Tools, & Tricks (4)2012 – 221 B Baker Street Got a Gingerbread Upgrade

My Favorite Gingerbread House Recipes, Tools, & Tricks (5)2013 – A“Sherlock”/”Desolation of Smaug” Gingerbread Crossover

My Favorite Gingerbread House Recipes, Tools, & Tricks (6)2014 – “Hannibal”House

My Favorite Gingerbread House Recipes, Tools, & Tricks (7)2015 – “Hannibal”House, Year 2

Did you make a gingerbread house this year? Plan to? Have any tips? Share them in the comments below!

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My Favorite Gingerbread House Recipes, Tools, & Tricks (2024)
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