Funfetti Gingerbread House

Funfetti Gingerbread House

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It’s not Christmas without a gingerbread house, right?! Introducing the Funfetti Gingerbread House! Without really planning it, making a gingerbread house has become a bit of a tradition on this blog. I’ve done a Gingerbread Train, a Gingerbread house cake, and then we had the local ‘n lekker version of my Muizenberg Beach Huts last year! This year though, I was challenged to make a pretty pastel sprinkle-loaded Funfetti Gingerbread House of fun by the folks over at Stork. And yes, this was as fun to make as it looks!

Funfetti Gingerbread House

This is no dark and spicy gingerbread, though. It’s light and crisp with just a hint of ginger. Using Stork Bake for the base means that the biscuits will stay fresher for longer – so you can actually eat the house! It’s not just a decoration, guys!  Because the biscuit dough is loaded with funfetti, I kept the walls naked to show off the little bursts of colour. The trick to making a house that actually stands is to cut the gingerbread AFTER you’ve baked it, not before. If you cut the dough before, it will warp either during baking or when you move it onto the baking tray. Cutting it afterwards means you’ll have sharp, crisp lines that will make assembly so much easier!

Funfetti Gingerbread House

Then, it’s all in the decorating! I used white chocolate drops to form the roof tiles, marshmallow strips and milky jelly tots to trim the walls – and how cute are those jelly heart windows? *faints* I’d definitely want to live in a house like this… Although, knowing me, I’d be homeless pretty soon with such delectable walls!

Funfetti Gingerbread House

Feeling inspired to bake this Funfetti Gingerbread house? Or maybe you have your own festive recipe that’s a family favourite! Whip it up using Stork Bake and share a picture on the I Love Baking SA Facebook Page and you could WIN a Kenwood Mixer! Do it, go now!

Funfetti Gingerbread House

Funfetti Gingerbread House

Ingredients

  • 125g Stork Bake, softened
  • 220g castor sugar
  • 375g cake flour, plus extra for dusting
  • 2 tsp ground ginger
  • 1 tsp vanilla essence
  • pinch of salt
  • 1/3 cup funfetti sprinkles
  • 1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
  • 1/3 cup (80ml) milk
  • Royal icing
  • 1 egg white, beaten
  • 2 cups icing sugar, sifted
  • squeeze of lemon juice
  • To decorate
  • Variety of sweets, lollies, candy canes, mini meringues and sprinkles

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 180C (or 160 degrees celcius if using a fan-forced oven). Download and print a gingerbread house template from the internet (whichever shape takes your fancy) and cut out the pieces. Cream the Stork Bake and sugar until very pale and fluffy – about 6-8 minutes. Add the flour, ginger, vanilla, salt, sprinkles, bicarbonate of soda and enough milk to form a soft dough. Roll the dough out on a floured surface or between two sheets of baking paper until 5mm thick. Refrigerate for 30 minutes if too soft. Place the entire large piece of gingerbread dough on a baking sheet and bake in the preheated oven for 8-10 minutes or until golden and crisp. Remove from the oven and, while still hot, cut out the gingerbread house templates using a sharp knife.* Set aside to cool.
  2. To make the royal icing, whisk the egg white gently then add the icing sugar until a stiff paste forms. Add the lemon juice. The icing should be quite thick. Place the icing in a piping bag and snip off the tip.
  3. To assemble, use the front side of the gingerbread so you can see the funfetti. Start by piping the gingerbread pieces to the bottom of your cake stand or serving board and then add the roof. Use the icing to pipe on the various decorations – roof tiles, doorway and ‘grass’.
  4. *TIP If the gingerbread gets hard, simply pop it in the oven for a few minutes to soften up.
https://thekatetin.com/funfetti-gingerbread-house/

Gingerbread Beach Huts

Gingerbread Beach Huts

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Gingerbread Beach Huts

I’ve built quite a few gingerbread houses over the years – my very first one was a gift sent by my cousins. It came in a beautiful big box with all the pieces already baked, little plastic containers filled with icing and all sorts of sweets and sprinkles for decorating. My brother, sisters and I spent an entire day engrossed in building the (what felt like) gigantic edible house. Now that I think about it, it was probably more of a gift to my mother, who must’ve relished an entire day without 4 holiday-bored kids annoying her! By reliving and building this childhood memory over the years, I’ve learnt two tricks to making a gingerbread house:

 

  1. Always cut your gingerbread pieces out AFTER baking. The raw pastry cutouts simply stretch or spread in the oven leaving you with a wonky house. Not ideal.
  2. Stick the house together using caramel – not royal icing. Caramel hardens quickly giving the perfect structure. You can then pipe on royal icing afterwards if you’re going to keep the house for a few days.
Gingerbread houses are one of the European traditions we’ve somehow inherited and while it’s fun to dust them in icing sugar and pipe on icicles hanging from the windows, it just doesn’t make sense in our 30 degree summer! For us South Africans, Christmas is about having sand between your toes, licking a quickly-melting granadilla lolly and (depending where you’re holidaying) attempting to swim in the frigid Cape Town waters or basking in the warm Durban ocean! Since I’m a Cape Town gal, I decided to create a house that reminds me of a South African summer; so why not recreate the colourful Muizenberg beach huts – in gingerbread!
Not all gingerbreads are created equal – especially if you’re going to actually eat them – which if you aren’t, what is wrong with you?! Traditional gingerbread is all about that dark, deep molasses flavour so when Natura Sugars gifted me with their new Molasses sugar, it was a sign! Because it’s unrefined, it’s oozing with flavour and just takes any gingerbread to a whole ‘nother level! I’ve used 3 other kinds of Natura Sugars in this recipe (because, well, why not?!); demerara icing for the ‘bright paint’, light brown sugar for the caramel ‘glue’ and the silky soft brown sugar makes the perfect beach sand! Happy Holidays everyone – enjoy the time with your family, eat a gingerbread beach house or two and forget about the calories. Life is too short .

Gingerbread Beach Huts

Makes 1

 

125g butter, softened

90g Natura Sugars Molasses Sugar

230g golden syrup

375g cake flour, plus extra for dusting

2 tsp ground ginger

1 tsp mixed spice

1 tsp bicarbonate of soda

 

Royal icing

1 egg white, beaten

2 cups Natura Sugars Demerara Icing Sugar, sifted

squeeze of lemon juice

Food colouring

 

Caramel

1 cup Natura Sugars Light Brown Sugar

 

To assemble

Wooden chopping or cake board, to display

Natura Sugars Soft Brown Sugar, for beach sand

Cocktail umbrellas

Ocean sweeties, to decorate

Gingerbread house template here

Preheat the oven to 180C. Cream the butter and sugar well until very pale and fluffy. Add the syrup, flour, spices and bicarb and mix until a smooth dough forms. Roll the dough out on a floured surface or between two sheets of baking paper until 5mm thick. Refrigerate for 30 minutes if too soft. Bake in the preheated oven for 8-10 minutes or until golden and crisp. While still hot, cut out templates using a sharp knife. * If you want, cut out doors, a beach towel and a surfboard from the off cuts. Set aside to cool.

To make the royal icing, whisk the egg white gently then add the icing sugar until a stiff paste forms. Add the lemon juice. Divide the icing into 4 bowls, colour the batches in red, blue, green and yellow. Ice the biscuits with the royal icing, using sweets to decorate if desired. Allow to set completely.

To assemble, prepare the caramel by placing the sugar in a saucepan with 2 tbsp water and heat until dissolved. Bring to the boil and simmer until golden brown. Remove from the heat. Use the caramel to glue the beach hut together onto the cake board. Then glue on the roof and decorate as desired. Sprinkle the soft brown sugar around the base for ‘beach sand’ and arrange the beach-themed sweeties around.

 

TIP  If the gingerbread gets hard, simply pop it in the oven for a few minutes to soften up.

WATCH HOW TO MAKE THE RECIPE AND ASSEMBLE HERE: