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I'm going to be attempting to make a gingerbread house this Christmas for
our little family gathering - aiming for my nephews to help me decorate it. It's intended to be eaten, not just for display, and I've found a recipe on a gingerbread house site which is supposed to be a good compromise between stability and tastiness! The recipe calls for molasses, but the only molasses I've ever seen for sale here is blackstrap molasses on sale in health food shops. I had my doubts about whether this would be suitable, as I remember using it in something years ago, and the result wasn't very nice. The blackstrap is rather bitter and strong tasting, IIRC. I did a bit of a Google search and found a number of mentions of blackstrap molasses being used in gingerbread, and an equal number of recipes for gingerbread men etc. specifically stating _not_ to use blackstrap molasses. So, I'm after some advice. 1. I'm still looking around for recipes, in books and on the net.If anyone here has a tried and true recipe for a good tasting gingerbread dough, suitable for making a gingerbread house, I'd love to see it. 2. If I do use a recipe that calls for molasses is blackstrap the right sort to use? If not, what do you think would be an appropriate substitute? Would treacle work? I can buy that at the supermarket. Thanks Rhonda Anderson Cranebrook, NSW, Australia |
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On Sun 20 Nov 2005 05:06:36a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Rhonda
Anderson? I'm going to be attempting to make a gingerbread house this Christmas for our little family gathering - aiming for my nephews to help me decorate it. It's intended to be eaten, not just for display, and I've found a recipe on a gingerbread house site which is supposed to be a good compromise between stability and tastiness! The recipe calls for molasses, but the only molasses I've ever seen for sale here is blackstrap molasses on sale in health food shops. I had my doubts about whether this would be suitable, as I remember using it in something years ago, and the result wasn't very nice. The blackstrap is rather bitter and strong tasting, IIRC. I did a bit of a Google search and found a number of mentions of blackstrap molasses being used in gingerbread, and an equal number of recipes for gingerbread men etc. specifically stating _not_ to use blackstrap molasses. So, I'm after some advice. 1. I'm still looking around for recipes, in books and on the net.If anyone here has a tried and true recipe for a good tasting gingerbread dough, suitable for making a gingerbread house, I'd love to see it. I can't help here, as I only bake gingerbread "cake". 2. If I do use a recipe that calls for molasses is blackstrap the right sort to use? If not, what do you think would be an appropriate substitute? Would treacle work? I can buy that at the supermarket. For my taste, blackstrap molasses is much too strong and bitter. I'd go with the treacle. If you can't find other molasses, this would be the best choice. -- Wayne Boatwright *¿* _____________________________________________ A chicken in every pot is a *LOT* of chicken! |
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In article ,
Rhonda Anderson wrote: gingerbread, and an equal number of recipes for gingerbread men etc. specifically stating _not_ to use blackstrap molasses. So, I'm after some advice. 1. I'm still looking around for recipes, in books and on the net.If anyone here has a tried and true recipe for a good tasting gingerbread dough, suitable for making a gingerbread house, I'd love to see it. 2. If I do use a recipe that calls for molasses is blackstrap the right sort to use? If not, what do you think would be an appropriate substitute? Would treacle work? I can buy that at the supermarket. Thanks Rhonda Anderson Cranebrook, NSW, Australia Rhonda, I've used honey for part of the molasses in my rye bread recipe. I don't know from treacle. -- http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 11-19-05 - Shiksa Varnishkes. |
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In article ,
Rhonda Anderson wrote: I'm going to be attempting to make a gingerbread house this Christmas for our little family gathering - aiming for my nephews to help me decorate When are you planning to bake this? I've never known them to be eaten; only decorated and sometimes saved for a couple years. Iced with Royal Icing (no fat). -- http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 11-19-05 - Shiksa Varnishkes. |
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On Sun 20 Nov 2005 06:10:33a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Melba's
Jammin'? In article , Rhonda Anderson wrote: I'm going to be attempting to make a gingerbread house this Christmas for our little family gathering - aiming for my nephews to help me decorate When are you planning to bake this? I've never known them to be eaten; only decorated and sometimes saved for a couple years. Iced with Royal Icing (no fat). LOL! You could break a tooth on some Royal Icing. It's like cement. -- Wayne Boatwright *¿* _____________________________________________ A chicken in every pot is a *LOT* of chicken! |
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Rhonda Anderson wrote:
2. If I do use a recipe that calls for molasses is blackstrap the right sort to use? If not, what do you think would be an appropriate substitute? Would treacle work? I can buy that at the supermarket. I've liked the taste of blackstrap molasses mixed with white sugar. The taste/stability question is harder since anything stiff enough to build with is likely too hard to chew. Could you choose a good-tasting cookie recipe, add extra flour and bake a tad longer to make it harder? Or another compromise: Choose a good-tasting cookie recipe, follow it exactly and bake half into cookies. Then add extra flour to the other half of the dough, and build with it. I've NOT built with this but have made these cookies often and love the way they come out. (Adapted from a Martha Stewart recipe.) 1 stick butter 1 Tablespoon freshly grated ginger (It is worth it to the flavor to make this fresh.) 1/2 cup dark brown sugar 1/2 cup unsulphered molasses 1 1/2 cups white flour 1/2 tsp. ground cinnamon a pinch of cloves a pinch of nutmeg (Honestly, I just throw in some sweet spices and don't measure.) 1 Tablespoon cocoa powder 1 1/2 tsp. boiling water 1 tsp. baking soda 7 ounces semi-sweet chocolate chips (I vary this. Sometimes I've used raisins or walnuts, even grated coconut.) 1/4 cup white sugar. 1. Soften the butter and beat with the brown sugar, molasses and ginger. 2. Sift the flour and dried spices together and add half into the butter. (I measure straight into a strainer and hold over the mixing bowl with the butter. I don't bother sifting into a separate bowl.) 3. Disolve the baking powder into the water. (I use the microwave to boil the water.) Add to the butter. 4. Add the rest of the flour mixture and mix. 5. Add the chips. 6. Roll into walnut sized balls. Flatten while pressing into the sugar. 7. Bake on parchment paper at 325 degrees until the surface begins to crack. |
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Rhonda Anderson wrote: I'm going to be attempting to make a gingerbread house this Christmas The recipe calls for molasses, but the only molasses I've ever seen for sale here is blackstrap molasses on sale in health food shops. So, I'm after some advice. dough, suitable for making a gingerbread house, I'd love to see it. 2. If I do use a recipe that calls for molasses is blackstrap the right sort to use? If not, what do you think would be an appropriate substitute? Would treacle work? Dark treacle is not quite the correct flavor for gingerbread but acceptible if you can't locate dark molasses. molasses [muh-LAS-sihz] During the refining of sugar cane and sugar beets, the juice squeezed from these plants is boiled to a syrupy mixture from which sugar crystals are extracted. The remaining brownish-black liquid is molasses. Light molasses comes from the first boiling of the sugar syrup and is lighter in both flavor and color. It's often used as a pancake and waffle syrup. Dark molasses comes from a second boiling and is darker, thicker and less sweet than light molasses. It's generally used as a flavoring in American classics such as GINGERBREAD, SHOOFLY PIE, INDIAN PUDDING and BOSTON BAKED BEANS. Blackstrap molasses comes from the third boiling and is what amounts to the dregs of the barrel. It's very thick, dark and somewhat bitter. Though it's popular with health-food followers, it's more commonly used as a cattle food. Contrary to what many believe, blackstrap is not a nutritional panacea. In truth, it's only fractionally richer than the other types of molasses in iron, calcium and phosphorus and many of its minerals are not assimilable. Sorghum molasses is the syrup produced from the cereal grain SORGHUM. Whether or not molasses is sulphured or unsulphured depends on whether sulphur was used in the processing. In general, unsulphured molasses is lighter and has a cleaner sugar-cane flavor. Light and dark molasses are available in supermarkets; blackstrap is more readily found in health-food stores. See also TREACLE. treacle [TREE-kuhl] A term used mainly in Great Britain for the syrupy by-product created during sugar refining. There are two types: dark treacle - which is very much like MOLASSES and which has a somewhat bitter taste, and light treacle, which contains fewer impurities than the dark variety, has a lighter flavor and is also called GOLDEN SYRUP. © Copyright Barron's Educational Services, Inc. 1995 based on THE FOOD LOVER'S COMPANION, 2nd edition, by Sharon Tyler Herbst. Sheldon |
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In article ,
Rhonda Anderson wrote: I'm going to be attempting to make a gingerbread house this Christmas for our little family gathering - aiming for my nephews to help me decorate it. It's intended to be eaten, not just for display, and I've found a recipe on a gingerbread house site which is supposed to be a good compromise between stability and tastiness! The recipe calls for molasses, but the only molasses I've ever seen for sale here is blackstrap molasses on sale in health food shops. I had my Rhonda, bag the gingerbread in favor of -- what do you have that's like our graham crackers? Ours our rectangular and flat and lend themselves to being glued together with royal icing. Might not be sturdy enough for heavy candy accessories, though,. -- http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 11-19-05 - Shiksa Varnishkes. |
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On Sun, 20 Nov 2005 12:06:36 GMT, Rhonda Anderson
wrote: 1. I'm still looking around for recipes, in books and on the net.If anyone here has a tried and true recipe for a good tasting gingerbread dough, suitable for making a gingerbread house, I'd love to see it. Since blackstrap is what is easily available here, I use it. Tastes good in gingerbread cookies, but can be too strong for other things. 2. If I do use a recipe that calls for molasses is blackstrap the right sort to use? If not, what do you think would be an appropriate substitute? Would treacle work? I can buy that at the supermarket. Treacle should be a fine substitute. I like to put that on graham crackers. :9 --- "Fountain of youth? We have enough youth, what we need is a fountain of smart..." -seen on a bumper sticker |
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Melba's Jammin' wrote in
: In article , Rhonda Anderson wrote: I'm going to be attempting to make a gingerbread house this Christmas for our little family gathering - aiming for my nephews to help me decorate When are you planning to bake this? I've never known them to be eaten; only decorated and sometimes saved for a couple years. Iced with Royal Icing (no fat). I've found from my web searches, and an American book I borrowed from the library, that they are often made just as decoration, with no intention of being eaten. I saw that there were quite a few gingerbread house competitions in the US. I don't know if there are any such competitions here. I also don't know that there's such a tradition of making them purely for decoration. I personally can't see the point to making a house out of food items if I don't intend to eat it! I'd make it out of less edible items if that were the case, I think. Anyhow, the last couple of years my sister has purchased one and we've broken it up on Christmas Day. They were definitely edible. If I do make one, it will be mostly for the fun of decorating it, I think! and having some gingerbread and royal icing (which I like). I would be making it fairly close to Christmas Day. It can get fairly humid here in summer, and I believe humidity is a major cause of collapsing houses! Rhonda Anderson Cranebrook, NSW, Australia |
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Julia Altshuler wrote in
: Rhonda Anderson wrote: 2. If I do use a recipe that calls for molasses is blackstrap the right sort to use? If not, what do you think would be an appropriate substitute? Would treacle work? I can buy that at the supermarket. I've liked the taste of blackstrap molasses mixed with white sugar. The taste/stability question is harder since anything stiff enough to build with is likely too hard to chew. Could you choose a good-tasting cookie recipe, add extra flour and bake a tad longer to make it harder? That's probably a good idea. I did find a recipe on a gingerbread house site, which they say bakes a stiff enough biscuit to build with, but still tastes good to eat. In my favour, I suppose, is that I don't need the house to stay in one piece for a long period of time. Working against me is the fact that it's usually fairly humid here in summer. However, I figure the worst that's going to happen is that we eat gingerbread ruins g. Thanks for the recipe. Rhonda Anderson Cranebrook, NSW, Australia |
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"Sheldon" wrote in
oups.com: Rhonda Anderson wrote: I'm going to be attempting to make a gingerbread house this Christmas The recipe calls for molasses, but the only molasses I've ever seen for sale here is blackstrap molasses on sale in health food shops. So, I'm after some advice. dough, suitable for making a gingerbread house, I'd love to see it. 2. If I do use a recipe that calls for molasses is blackstrap the right sort to use? If not, what do you think would be an appropriate substitute? Would treacle work? Dark treacle is not quite the correct flavor for gingerbread but acceptible if you can't locate dark molasses. OK, thanks. I'll look around and see if I can find dark molasses, but the treacle is easy to find. Most gingerbread man type recipes in cookbooks here that I've seen or tried call for golden syrup or honey, so they're quite light coloured. Rhonda Anderson Cranebrook, NSW, Australia |
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Melba's Jammin' wrote in
: In article , Rhonda Anderson wrote: I'm going to be attempting to make a gingerbread house this Christmas for our little family gathering - aiming for my nephews to help me decorate it. It's intended to be eaten, not just for display, and I've found a recipe on a gingerbread house site which is supposed to be a good compromise between stability and tastiness! Rhonda, bag the gingerbread in favor of -- what do you have that's like our graham crackers? Ours our rectangular and flat and lend themselves to being glued together with royal icing. Might not be sturdy enough for heavy candy accessories, though,. I know the graham crackers - I've seen them in parcels at work, and someone sent me some once so I've even gotten to try them (Nancy Dooley, IIRC). I really can't think of anything equivalent here. The only biscuit type things that I can think of in that sort of shape are crackers and crispbreads. Good idea, though. During my Googling I did see mentions of gingerbread houses made of graham crackers. Rhonda Anderson Cranebrook, NSW, Australia |
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In article ,
Rhonda Anderson wrote: (snippage) Rhonda, bag the gingerbread in favor of -- what do you have that's like our graham crackers? Ours our rectangular and flat and lend themselves to being glued together with royal icing. Might not be sturdy enough for heavy candy accessories, though,. I know the graham crackers - I've seen them in parcels at work, and someone sent me some once so I've even gotten to try them (Nancy Dooley, IIRC). I really can't think of anything equivalent here. The only biscuit type things that I can think of in that sort of shape are crackers and crispbreads. Good idea, though. During my Googling I did see mentions of gingerbread houses made of graham crackers. Rhonda Anderson Cranebrook, NSW, Australia Use a sharp knife for cutting doors and windows -- light pressure several times over the same place so as to not crack the rest of the 'wall'. :-) -- http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 11-19-05 - Shiksa Varnishkes. |
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In article ,
Rhonda Anderson wrote: (snippage) Anyhow, the last couple of years my sister has purchased one and we've broken it up on Christmas Day. They were definitely edible. If I do make one, it will be mostly for the fun of decorating it, I think! and having some gingerbread and royal icing (which I like). I would be making it fairly close to Christmas Day. It can get fairly humid here in summer, and I believe humidity is a major cause of collapsing houses! Here, too, if it rains hard enough. "-) Rhonda Anderson Cranebrook, NSW, Australia -- http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 11-19-05 - Shiksa Varnishkes. |
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