Homemade Ginger Bread House

Every December the kids and I make a gingerbread house from scratch. It takes a few days, more because we have to wait for things to cool or wall joints to harden, but overall it is a pretty easy project. Just be sure to purchase LOTS of extra candies for decorating because half the fun of decorating the house is eating all of the “damaged” or “imperfect” candies. J We use our gingerbread house as a table decoration and then after Christmas dinner the kids get to bust it apart with a hammer (yes, it does make a huge mess) and eat it up.

Day 1 – Dough

(I use a stand mixer. This is a LARGE batch of dough.)

  • 1 C butter (room temp.)
  • 1 ¾ C brown sugar
  • 1 ¼ C white sugar
  • 2 Tbl molasses
  • 6 eggs
  • 6 C all-purpose flour
  • 2 tsp baking soda
  • 1 Tbl ground ginger
  • 1 Tbl ground cinnamon
  • 1 Tbl allspice

Cream the butter and sugars, then beat in the molasses and eggs. Combine all of the dry ingredients together in another large bowl. Then combine the mixtures and knead until smooth. Cover and refrigerate overnight.

Day 2 – Pattern, Cutting, Baking

Pattern: I have the kids measure these out on construction paper (help with illustrations needed!!!)

Roof – 2 rectangles: 7” x 11”

Side walls – 2 rectangles: 5” x 8”

End walls – 2 of these (each piece will look as if you took a square and set a triangle on top)

Square part – 5” x 5”

Triangle (peak part) – find the center of the base (2.5”) and measure up 9” to make your peak

Cutting/ Baking:

Preheat oven to 325F. You will need several cookie sheets lined with parchment paper or foil that has been greased and floured. Bake 15-20 min or until slightly firm. Dry overnight (so they are firm enough for building).

Roll dough out on a well-floured surface until ¼” thick. Place a pattern piece on the dough and cut around the edges. (I use a pizza cutter for this part.) Gently lift with and put onto prepared cookie sheet (sometimes the dough gets a little misshapen – I have found that lifting the cutting board and sliding the dough onto the cookie sheet works well, but this will never have the perfect edges of a store bought kit).

Save the scraps of dough for gingerbread men or drop cookies (wonderful if you roll them in crystallized ginger and sugar first).

Day 3: Assembly

Base: I use two pieces of cardboard glued together and covered in foil. A scrap piece of plywood or even a cookie sheet turn upside down would work well too.

Royal Icing: this is the glue that holds it all together and it must be VERY stiff! You will need several batches to complete the decorating of the house, but only make one batch at a time. Seal well and refrigerate any that doesn’t get used. I use a piping bag to apply, but a Ziploc bag with the tip cut off work well too.

  • 3 egg whites
  • 1 ½ tsp cream of tartar
  • 4 – 4 ½ C powdered sugar

Beat egg whites until they begin to foam. Add the cream of tartar and beat until mixture forms peaks. Gradually beat in sugar until it is VERY stiff (might take more than 4+ cups).

Assembly:

Pipe two thick lines of icing onto the base at a 90degree angle – one for a sidewall and one for a peak wall. Pipe the side wall where the edges will meet. Place the walls on the base, touching each other. (We usually have the sidewall edges on the exterior and the peak wall edges on the interior.) Repeat. Let the structure dry for about 2 hours – you can use cans to prop it up if needed. Pipe a lot of icing on the top of the wall and stick on the roof. (There will be an “unsightly” seem along the top of the roof but that gets coved up with icing and candies, so don’t worry about it.) Again, use cans or whatever to help prop it up while the roof dries.

Day 4: Decorating!!!!

Let your imagination run wild. We use peppermint candies, gum drops, candy canes, cookies for the roof, licorice, red hots, and whatever else looks good. Make another batch of royal icing, give each child a small “piping bag”, and turn them loose.

To make “stained glass windows”: roll out gum drops on a sugared surface and attach to the house with icing.

I hope this starts a new tradition in other households too! Happy holidays!

~Karen Hoffman

Here are a few more pictures of this gorgeous gingerbread house.

To support the blog, check out the HBHW eBooks available on Amazon. Thank you!

Disclosure: Some of the links below are affilate links, meaning, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase.

Click Here to Leave a Comment Below