1993 1st Place: Ginger Cookies
Submitted by pepi
Award-winning ginger cookies built on a cooked sugar-and-spice syrup base. Roll, cut, paint, or hand-mold this stiff gingerbread dough into any shape, then bake into crisp golden spice cookies.
YIELD
60 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
7 minREADY
17 min1993 first place ginger cookies earned their ribbon for a reason. Instead of creaming butter and sugar like a standard cookie dough, this recipe starts with a hot syrup of sugar, dark corn syrup, water, and ground spices brought to a boil. The butter melts into that hot syrup, then the flour is stirred in to make a stiff, claylike dough that overnights in the fridge before rolling.
That 12-hour rest is the move. The flour fully hydrates, the spices bloom into the fat, and the dough firms up enough to hold sharp cookie-cutter edges through baking. Roll a sixth of the dough at a time on the cookie sheet itself so you don’t have to transfer cut shapes.
The ground ginger, cinnamon, and clove combination is a classic gingerbread profile, but the cooked syrup method gives a deeper, almost caramel undertone you don’t get from raw-mixed gingerbread. Once cooled, the cookies take painted decoration beautifully thanks to their flat, dense surface.
Pro Tips
- The dough must rest at least 12 hours. Skipping this step gives a sticky, hard-to-roll dough and softer-edged cookies.
- Roll directly on ungreased cookie sheets to avoid distorted shapes during transfer.
- Bake all cookies on a sheet at the same thickness. Mixing thick and thin shapes burns the thin ones before the thick ones set.
- Watered-down food coloring painted on with a fine brush after cooling gives gorgeous detailed designs that hold up in storage.
Variations
- Stir in 1 teaspoon black pepper and ½ teaspoon cardamom with the spices for a Scandinavian pepparkakor flavor.
- Swap dark corn syrup for molasses for a deeper, more bitter-edged ginger cookie.
- Sandwich pairs with lemon icing or cream cheese frosting after cooling.
Ingredients
Directions
time: 7 minutes 1. Put sugar, syrup, water, ginger, cinnamon and cloves into a large saucepan. Cook and stir over medium heat until mixture boils and sugar dissolves. Remove from heat. Add butter. Stir until butter is melted and mixture is no longer very hot. 2. Mix flour and baking soda. Gradually add flour mixture to butter mixture and stir to blend thoroughly. Dough will have a soft texture. Place dough in an airtight container and refrigerate overnight or at least 12 hours or as long as 1 week. 3. Heat oven to 375℉ (190℃). Remove about one-sixth of the dough and knead it until it is slightly softened. Roll dough directly onto ungreased cookie sheets until it is about ¼ inch thick. Use a cookie cutter to stamp shapes in dough, allowing a 1-inch margin between each cookie. Remove excess dough by lifting it and peeling it away. Scraps of dough can be kneaded together and re-rolled. 4. Bake until golden brown, about 7 minutes. Allow cookies to cool slightly and become crisp before removing them from the cookie sheet. Cool thoroughly on wire racks. If desired, you may “paint” the cooled cookies using a clean, small paintbrush and food coloring that has been watered down slightly. Store cookies in airtight containers.
Note: After the 12-hour resting period, this cookie dough can be hand-molded like clay--rolled, pinched, poked and pressed--and it will keep its shape, expanding slightly while baking. Thin cookies will become brown and bake quickly, large and thick shapes will require longer baking. Can be cut into any shape desired but make the cookies uniformly thick. The microwave oven can be used to cook the sugar mixture in step 1.
Comments




The best I have had in years! This should be in stores!