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  • Welcome To How To Cook That I'm Ann Reardon and

  • it's that time of year again when we make a gingerbread house.

  • This one has lights and candy inside and plenty of chocolate covering the roof.

  • For the gingerbread itself, you'll need sugar, milk, ground ginger, cloves, cinnamon, glucose

  • syrup, molasses, bicarb, flour and butter.

  • Add the glucose syrup to the butter and you can swap that for light corn syrup if you

  • can't get glucose syrup.

  • And I'll put all of the recipe quantities on my howtocookthat.net website for you and

  • I'll link to that below.

  • Pour in the molasses and I am doubling this recipe because I want to make two houses but

  • you can just make the normal quantity if you're only making one.

  • And then add the sugar.

  • Mix that all together.

  • Now if you don't have a stand mixer don't worry you can do this with a spoon and to

  • make it easier for you with this recipe you can actually just warm up the mixture in the

  • microwave so the butter melts and all of the syrups soften and it makes it really easy

  • to mix up.

  • Now I'm going to split mine into two because the bowl is so full - if you're not doubling

  • yours you can skip that step.

  • And then add in the milk and mix that through.

  • Then swap to a dough hook and add in about half of your flour.

  • And that's going to still get very full because we are making a big gingerbread house.

  • So what I want you to do is put the rest of the flour on your counter and tip the gingerbread

  • mixture onto the top.

  • Then use your hands to mix all the rest of the flour into the dough.

  • And now yes this is going to be very sticky and soft but you don't add more flour, just

  • mix what you have in and then wrap it in plastic wrap and refrigerate for a few hours.

  • Now it will be firmer and you can roll it out using a little flour on your rolling pin

  • and some baking paper underneath.

  • And then put your template pieces over the top and use a pizza cutter to cut along the

  • straight edges.

  • Use a knife to cut out the windows and fiddly bits but leave them in place.

  • Take off some of the excess gingerbread but leave a border of spare gingerbread all the

  • way around all of your pieces.

  • This just stops the corners especially the pointy ones and the edges of the house from

  • getting over-cooked in the oven.

  • Then peel off the template before you put it in the oven, I sometimes forget that.

  • Then for the little front part roll your gingerbread quite thinly so it is easier to put together

  • and then follow the same steps as we did for the other pieces.

  • And you can get the template for this house and lots of other gingerbread houses on the

  • HowToCookThat website and again I'll link to that below.

  • After baking for 15 minutes take your tray out of the oven and recut the lines and remove

  • any windows.

  • Then put it back in the oven for another 10-15 minutes to dry out.

  • Exactly how long it will take will depend on how thick you've rolled your gingerbread.

  • With the rest of my dough I'm going to cut out stars to make a Christmas Tree, you can

  • get creative and make fences, a little shed, a dog kennel or garden beds, anything your

  • heart desires.

  • For the icing we are going to need icing sugar, pavaolva magic mix or powdered egg white and

  • water.

  • Just mix all those together until you get a smooth paste.

  • Split it into bowls and add the colours of your choice.

  • I am making some grey first for outlines.

  • To do different patterns in sections on my house I'm just going to use a ruler and mark

  • off straight lines across.

  • I'm not trying to cut through the gingerbread, I'm just trying to leave a line so I've got

  • a guide.

  • Then take your grey icing and pipe along the line and remember to go around the edge on

  • both the front and back panels of the house because you will be able to see those edges.

  • We also want to draw a line around the edge of each piece so it gives a border so when

  • we will it with colour it doesn't just run off the sides.

  • Now draw a double outline around each of your windows and an extra bit at the bottom so

  • it looks like a window sill.

  • What you do from there is really up to you, it's your house.

  • I am going to put patterns in this middle section and swirls and shapes just to fill

  • that all in.

  • And then for the bottom to contrast that free-form bit in the middle, I'm going to do straight

  • lines, cut that into little squares and then cut those into triangles.

  • And then you can colour that in.

  • Now to colour in the pattern what we need to do is add a teaspoon of water to some of

  • your icing and mix it through.

  • This is just going to thin it down.

  • Now you want to thin it until it flows like this, like thick honey.

  • If it's too thin it will just soak into the gingerbread, if it's too thick it's going

  • to be too hard to work with.

  • For small areas you should be able to dip a skewer into your red icing , put some on

  • and spread it into the corners.

  • Do the same with the next colour.

  • And this is really just like colouring in but using icing.

  • I am going to do the swirls in the same colour so that it ties the two parts of the house

  • together.

  • Once you've coloured in all your swirls then add a bit of green to that colour for in between

  • those swirls and fill that in all the gaps.

  • For bigger spaces you can use a pipette or a syringe or even a teaspoon to add icing

  • into place and then just spread it out with your skewer.

  • To decorate a house neatly like this takes a bit of time, we are going to use this particular

  • one at a picnic with friends tomorrow.

  • The other house that I made the pieces for, that one is going to look completely different

  • - that is our family gingerbread house - we have a tradition every year of making a gingerbread

  • house together and everyone gets to decorate one side however they like - so it looks a

  • bit crazy, it looks fun, a little bit messy.

  • And we eat it for dessert on Christmas Day.

  • Let me know in the comments if you guys have any Christmas traditions that you like to

  • do every year?

  • I think this house is looking busy enough so I'm going to make the top section just

  • plain blue, you can spoon that in and again just use the skewer to spread it into the

  • corners all the way to the edges.

  • For the window frames add in some brown icing, and now when you make this colour only thin

  • down about 1/4 of it.

  • Leave 3/4 of it thick in another bowl - we'll use once this first layer is dry.

  • For the little front pieces I am outlining them in grey too, all the way around the edge

  • and around the windows.

  • Then filling them with plain cream colour.

  • Once your brown is dry pipe over the thick brown icing over the top in whatever pattern

  • you like.

  • Now you can make really precise window frames using fondant.

  • I'll link you to my other gingerbread house videos at the end so you can get some other

  • ideas of how to do them.

  • Last Christmas Pastry Chef Mike made a giant version of one of my gingerbread houses for

  • a meet and greet we had at a department store.

  • It was pretty amazing seeing one of my gingerbread houses blown up big and even more fun meeting

  • you guys, I love meeting subscribers face to face.

  • To assemble the walls of the house I am going to use compound chocolate because it sets

  • quicker than royal icing so it's a bit faster to put it together.

  • Pipe along the base of two walls and up one side of the back.

  • Then position those two bits into place.

  • Add more chocolate on the other side and add your next wall to that edge.

  • Now pipe along the outside edge of the side walls and across the base and put the front

  • of the house into place.

  • For the windows I am using gelatin sheets, these are technically edible, but they don't

  • taste great so I'd suggest not actually eating them.

  • I've got other alternatives for windows in the other gingerbread house videos as well.

  • Take the centre support piece and put chocolate along one side.

  • Down on the bottom inside the house and up the other side.

  • And put that into place - and this piece will help hold the roof on when we put that on

  • in a minute, you'll see how that works.

  • Now for that little front section, use more chocolate to glue that into place.

  • Once all that chocolate is completely set if you want to add a light just loosen the

  • house from the base and add the light into place threading it under and in.

  • Now make sure you are using a globe that doesn't get hot or you might burn your whole house

  • down not just your gingerbread house.

  • Use chocolate to secure the house back into place onto thee board.

  • And then before the roof goes on, add lots of candy to the inside of the house - I had

  • a little helper who was very excited to help me do this.

  • Then add chocolate along the joins of the roof and add your roof pieces into place,

  • you are going to need to hold them there for a moment until you can feel that the chcoolate

  • is starting to set and they're going to be able to hold there.

  • And then you can pipe more chocolate along the joins and it's important to make sure

  • that there's no light that comes out anywhere from the house except for the windows - you

  • don't want it coming through cracks in the roof.

  • Add the little roof bits into place at the front too.

  • And that roof is looking a bit plain so let's add some Freckles - that's what we call these

  • chocolates here in Australia, let me know if you have a different name for it in other

  • countries.

  • Add them in rows like roof tiles all over the roof.

  • Then add jelly beans along the top edge.

  • Add some chocolate to the roof of the entry.

  • And if you scrape down using a serrated knife as it sets you'll get a nice pattern on this

  • little roof.

  • For your tree you just need to stack up your stars, I like to use two of each size so the

  • tree ends up a bit taller.

  • Then add jelly beans to the sides to make it colourful and pretty.

  • Cover the base with melted white chocolate.

  • And if you don't want the ground to be flat you can always just add some marshmallows

  • or candy and drizzle them with chocolate so you have a little bit of uneven ground there.

  • Add your tree into place on one side and use a tree strainer to shake some icing sugar

  • to make it snowy.

  • If you make a gingerbread house this year you can post a photo of it in the comments

  • section on the website so I can see it.

  • Subscribe to HowToCookThat for more crazy sweet creations, click here for the recipe,

  • here for more gingerbread houses and Christmas ideas and here for the latest video.

  • Make it a great week and I'll see you Friday.

Welcome To How To Cook That I'm Ann Reardon and

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薑餅屋食譜如何烹飪,安里爾登 (GINGERBREAD HOUSE RECIPE How To Cook That Ann Reardon)

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