A Little Bit Softer Now: The Right Way to Serve Gingerbread — As Told Over Brunch (2024)

I can’t name names here because I wouldn’t want to shame a small business, but yesterday I bought some gingerbread cookies at a local bakery and they were hard. I saw on their Instagram that gingerbread men were among the day’s lineup and I am a huge gingerbread fan. I won’t go so far as to say I wish gingerbread were available year-round (for some reason I don’t see myself snacking on nutmeg and cinnamon cookies on a beach in July?), but there are two flavored syrups at Starbucks that get me going: pumpkin spice and gingerbread! Have you ever mixed the two? Yes, I’m white and Protestant if you can’t tell from that last sentence.

Anyhow, there are two ways you can cook gingerbread, but there is only one right answer. Gingerbread cookies should be soft. They should be supple. They should bend to your teeth before the cookie skin breaks and the crumbs fall all over you. They should retain a bit of elasticity, and maybe you can even leave your fingerprints on the cookie if you hold them too hard because you’re just that excited.

What they should not be is hard.

I won’t even make a joke about hard gingerbread men (other than this one), but if your gingerbread cookies are hard, then you are doing things wrong. I’m here to tell you we all deserve the best this holiday season, and we should accept nothing less. You should only accept soft gingerbread cookies. I don’t care if your grandma made these with her heirloom recipe; she needs to crawl in a time machine and go tell her ancestors they are wrong. Hang them! Guillotine them if you have to! They’re wrong!

I told my dad this a few years ago. When I’m home for the holidays, I’m not allowed to help myself. My dad cooks for me. My mom does my laundry. It is not that I demand these things. It’s just, as their eldest son, I am royalty and I deserve nothing less. So, like I said, I only accept soft gingerbread cookies.

My dad is also aware I am health conscious. He promptly informed me that the excess softness of gingerbread comes from, uh, butter. In plainer terms, fat.

Did I still want soft gingerbread cookies?

While I wish he hadn’t informed me of this (sometimes I return from visiting my parents and just think the air is more caloric in Virginia Beach), I told him we sometimes have to accept the worst qualities of the things we love. Marilyn Monroe is famous for reminding us of this.

“But,” I added, “could we just not bake the cookies for as long and leave out some of that butter?”

Raw cookie dough is soft after all.

My dad also happens to be a health inspector. My idea was not greeted with proclamations of my creativity for thinking outside the Betty Crocker box and assuming our immune systems could handle partially cooked batter left on the counter for 72 hours. My dad followed the recipe. They were soft. I ran a few extra miles that week.

Which brings me to yesterday: When I go to a local bakery, I expect them to know how gingerbread cookies should be made. I expect my bakers to be forward thinking and not stuck in butter ration times. They asked if I wanted one for $2 or two for $3, and I am a mathematician. Don’t screw me over. Of course I’ll take two.

At home in my kitchen, I tore into the bag only to find these gingerbread men were, gasp, uncompromising to the teeth. Their skin hinted at some softness that eluded my bite. They were, oh dear Gabriel, harder than a fruitcake.

“What is this? What self-respecting bakery would sell such monsters?” I ranted. And then sat down to blog.

I polled my Instagram followers on their thoughts. Only two people claimed belief in a hard gingerbread deity. One is a troll, so I’m not sure he’s being truthful, and the other is part Irish, and maybe she comes from a lineage of butter rationing after that potato famine. But this is 2017. We need to worry about our healthcare and tax cuts and the education of our citizens, not bloody butter and whether our gingerbread cookies are soft enough to roll with the punches!

My one friend protested that hard gingerbread is meant for dipping in milk, and I won’t deny milk may help with that cancer of the cookie, but I want gingerbread that is independent of any beverage.

“Hard gingerbread is better for icing,” she reasoned.

“You can still ice soft gingerbread,” I snapped. “I’ve done it myself!”

Now you know: Don’t you dare try giving me hard gingerbread cookies. If I’m at a holiday party, I’m going to pass right over that atrocity. Of course, if you’re kind enough to personally make me cookies, I won’t spit in your face, but I may donate hard gingerbread to an animal shelter.

I recovered from the shock and loss of $3 by buying a pint of Halo Top Gingerbread House ice cream. And this, like it should be, was soft and OMG the best. Once I locate some soft gingerbread cookies, I will be making gingerbread ice cream sandwiches on soft gingerbread cookies and buying a Trenta iced coffee, light ice, light soy, four pumps gingerbread syrup.

You deserve only the best, remember! You deserve only soft gingerbread.

A Little Bit Softer Now: The Right Way to Serve Gingerbread — As Told Over Brunch (2024)

FAQs

How soft should gingerbread be? ›

Should gingerbread cookies be hard or soft? Soft gingerbread biscuits are ideal. They ought to be flexible. However, they should still be somewhat elastic, and if you hold them too firmly because you're so excited to eat them, you might even be able to leave your fingerprints on the cookie!

What is the difference between hard and soft gingerbread? ›

“There are some gingerbread recipes that are hard right after baking and need to sit for a few days to soften. Molasses and honey hardens gingerbread, but as the sugar absorbs moisture, it will get softer.”

How do you moisten gingerbread dough? ›

If your dough is too crumbly: mix in 1 tbsp of milk until the dough is soft and pliable again. Be sure to chill your dough for at least 3 hours. This will help the flavor of the dough and consistency so it doesn't spread when baking.

Does microwaving gingerbread make it softer? ›

If you've already baked your gingerbread though and it's harder than you'd like, you CAN make it a little softer for eating. I wrap mine in a damp paper towel and heat in the microwave for a few seconds.

How do you keep gingerbread cookies soft after baking? ›

Store cooled cookies in an airtight container and they will stay soft for days.

How to stop gingerbread from going soft? ›

Comments for gingerbread for houses getting too soft

My suggestion would be to bake them again in a low temperature oven to dry them out. I would start at 250 or 275 F. for about 40 min. Remember, when it cools it hardens.

How long does soft gingerbread last? ›

The general rule of thumb is a couple of weeks. It depends how its prepared and if you used a lot of icing. Also, gingerbread like any other bread turns stale quite fast. Eating it after 1–2 week with tea shouldn't be a problem.

How do you know when soft gingerbread cookies are done? ›

Easy to Notice Signs:
  1. Golden Brown Edges – Check the edges of the cookies for a golden brown colour. This indicates that the cookies have caramelized and are likely done. ...
  2. Set Centres – Gently touch the centre of a cookie. ...
  3. Light Cracking – Look for light cracks on the surface of the cookies.
Oct 18, 2023

What are the three types of gingerbread? ›

The three distinct types of gingerbread are brown gingerbread, wafer-based gingerbread and honey gingerbread.
  • BROWN GINGERBREAD.
  • WAFER GINGERBREAD.
  • HONEY GINGERBREAD.

How to make gingerbread harder? ›

A 1:4 ratio of butter to flour makes the gingerbread strong. Corn syrup keeps freshly baked gingerbread pliable and soft, so it's easy to cut while warm.

Does gingerbread harden as it cools? ›

The cookies will still feel a little bit soft in the middle, but they'll harden up when cool, so let them set completely before starting to build your houses. Baked gingerbread will last for at least two weeks if kept in an airtight container.

What is the best way to stick gingerbread together? ›

Fit Everything Together with Melted Sugar or Royal Icing

The second way is to use burnt sugar as your glue. Just melt C&H® Pure Granulated Cane Sugar in a pan on the stove, dip the gingerbread parts in and hold them together for a few seconds. Then, presto! You've created a solid house.

Is gingerbread dough supposed to be soft? ›

Tip the flour, bicarb and spices into a large bowl. Add the syrup mixture and the egg, stir to bring everything together, then gently knead in the bowl until smooth. The dough will feel a little soft, but will firm up once cooled. Wrap and chill for at least 30 mins or wrap and freeze for up to three months.

Why is my gingerbread puffy? ›

Too much butter made for sticky dough, but delicious cookies. I had to use a spatula to lift these people-shaped cutouts from my flour-dusted countertop and onto a baking sheet. The dough was sticky, which resulted in slightly swollen cookies, but the finished product was nearly perfect.

How do you make gingerbread hard again? ›

My suggestion is to put it back into the oven for up to 10 minutes. The temp of the oven should be around 325 degrees.

Why is my gingerbread hard? ›

Keep in mind that the longer the cookies bake, the harder and crunchier they'll be. For soft gingerbread cookies, follow my suggested bake times. Allow cookies to cool for 5 minutes on the cookie sheet. Transfer to cooling rack to cool completely.

What to do if gingerbread recipe is too dry? ›

If your dough is remarkably dry (this can happen depending on how you measure your flour), add 1 teaspoon of milk at a time until it comes together but is not wet/sticky.

What if gingerbread is too soft for the house? ›

Comments for gingerbread for houses getting too soft

My suggestion would be to bake them again in a low temperature oven to dry them out. I would start at 250 or 275 F. for about 40 min. Remember, when it cools it hardens.

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