The after school gingerbread house wouldn’t have been a normal kitchen project without excessive silliness from my two monkeys.
Most of it happened off camera, but I captured some of the laughs as they went down. Oh my.
The after school gingerbread house wouldn’t have been a normal kitchen project without excessive silliness from my two monkeys.
Most of it happened off camera, but I captured some of the laughs as they went down. Oh my.
The moment we’ve all been waiting for has arrived – at least, if you are a small child who seldom is allowed unrestricted access to a table of candy, it has.
Our base gingerbread house is solid. We’ve assembled our decorations and mixed together the icing. This is the part of the after school gingerbread project where we can leave the recipe aside and get creative. It’s time to use our imaginations to decorate a gingerbread house that is pure holiday magic.
You’ll need another Ziplock bag with royal icing and one corner snipped, for applying the ‘glue’ to the house and your collection of candy for decorating.
Mateo’s tip: A warm cloth for sticky fingers is a good idea! [Read more…]
Last night in the bakery section of my supermarket, I spotted a stack of generic kits for gingerbread houses. I wasn’t tempted to buy one in the slightest, knowing that we were all set at home to assemble our very own, freshly baked creation.
Now that we have prepared our ingredients, mixed our dough, and baked our pieces, it is finally time to raise the walls and put a roof on our gingerbread house.
No, we’re not going to fully decorate in this post, because it is best to let the house dry overnight before adding roof tiles and all the other details. At least, this is my experience. You can certainly carry right on through if you like.
Let’s get to the recipe for royal icing and the assembly process.
Yesterday’s project was all about sifting and stirring; today is about snipping and sizing. It’s both a craft project and a baking project, so you’ll need scissors and a rolling pin.
Once again, Noah and Mateo are your hosts for this step, and they begin with cutting out the template for the gingerbread house pieces.
Yesterday I introduced our little gingerbread house project, five steps to be broken down into manageable tasks, ideally headed up by the kids after school.
Many of you chimed in on social media with enthusiasm and I was thrilled with the response. Excellent! Let’s get started then.
One list and one shopping trip is about the best thing you can do to start off on the right foot. Having everything ready to go at the beginning of the week will ensure the project goes smoothly. Hopefully, you won’t have to buy much; we made do with picking up a few candy canes and were able to work from a well-stocked pantry for the rest. [Read more…]
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