The perfect Gingerbread House recipe with Kirsten Tibballs. With sweet spicy biscuits creatively decorated, the gingerbread house is the ultimate festive centrepiece.

 

As demonstrated by Kirsten Tibballs on The Festive Kitchen at the 2023 Sydney Christmas Market.

 

Gingerbread House

 

Gingerbread

Ingredients
870g      plain flour
250g      caster sugar
30g         gingerbread spice
410g      honey
60g         unsalted butter, softened
15g         bicarbonate of soda
130g      hot water
plain flour, for dusting

Method

  1. Add the flour, sugar, gingerbread spice, honey and butter to the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment. Mix until you achieve a fine powder and there are no lumps of butter. Dissolve the bicarbonate of soda in the hot water and add it to the mixture. Continue to mix until all the ingredients are incorporated and it comes together as dough. Press the dough into a flat disc, 1cm thick and cover in plastic wrap. Chill in the fridge for 30 minutes.
  2. Remove the dough from the fridge and cut it in half. Lightly dust the bench surface with flour and place one half of the dough on top. Dust the top of the dough and roll it at different angles to approximately 4mm in thickness. Use a stencil and knife to cut the gingerbread pieces for your house. Cut the roof first and place onto a tray lined with a Silpat mat or baking paper. Roll the scraps to 2mm in thickness to cut the ornaments, ensuring you do not overmix as this will develop the gluten. Cut out the decorations in assorted sizes in a variety of shapes (star, heart, snow flake etc). You should have 25-30 pieces in total. Place them onto a separate lined tray. Due to the difference in thickness, the decorations and house pieces need to be baked separately.
  3. Press any offcuts onto the remaining half of the dough. Dust the top of the dough with flour and roll out to a 4mm thickness. Place the stencil on top and cut out the front of the house. Cut out the door with a knife and use a 6mm cutter to cut out a window. Using a knife, carefully cut a window frame out of the circle and place into the centre of the window on the front of the house. Adhere it to the dough with some water. Repeat the process of rolling and cutting until you have all the pieces for the house. Finally, roll a sphere for the door handle and place onto the door.
  4. Bake the 4mm house pieces at 170°C for 8-10 minutes or until a dark golden-brown colour is achieved. Bake the 2mm decorations at 170°C for 6-8 minutes or until a dark golden-brown colour is achieved. Cool before decorating. If the gingerbread pieces are flexible at all they may need a little more baking.

 

Royal Icing

Ingredients
125g      egg whites
700g      pure icing sugar or icing mixture, sieved

Method

  1. Sieve the icing sugar. Place the egg whites into the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a whisk attachment and add the sieved icing sugar. Start the mixer on a slow speed and increase to aerate the mixture. Check the mixture periodically until you achieve a consistency that collapses but still has some body. If needed, adjust the icing by adding more egg white or icing sugar until you have a firm piping consistency.
  2. Royal icing sets very hard very quickly, so keep the bowl covered with a damp cloth while you are piping the decorations, ensuring it doesn’t touch the icing. Place the icing into a paper piping cone (see our online video for instructions) and cut off a small tip. Pipe assorted patterns of the prepared royal icing on top of the biscuits and allow to set for 20-30 minutes. Reserve the remaining icing for assembly.

 

Assembly

Ingredients
QS remaining royal icing (above)
445g      pure icing sugar
icing sugar, for dusting

Method

  1. Add the icing sugar to the remaining royal icing and mix together in a stand mixer. When you have finished mixing it must stick and not fall off the whisk. Ensure the gingerbread pieces are quite brittle before assembling the house.
  2. Transfer the icing to a disposable piping bag fitted with an 8mm piping nozzle. Line up the pieces of the house as you go before sticking them down. Stick the back of the house down first by applying icing with the piping bag, ensuring you leave a 1cm gap from the edge. Stick one of the sides on with icing, followed by the front and the final side. Ensure the house is sturdy and stick the roof on top. Stick the door to the front of the house and decorate with a few ornaments. Do not place all the ornaments onto the house at once or it will collapse. After you apply a few, allow to set for 15-20 minutes before applying anymore. Decorate the house with icing. Allow to set in one place for a couple of hours. The house lasts a couple of weeks and is best kept airtight in cellophane.

 

Chocolate All Day by Kirsten Tibballs

RRP: $49.99

Chocolate All Day is your invitation to indulge friends and family with choc-focused treats that are big on wow and low on difficulty. From a Chocolate Babka Knot with Peanut Swirl to Choc-chip Cookie Sandwiches with Orange Ganache, Rocky Road Chocolate Cake or Sticky Date Chocolate Puddings with Chocolate Caramel Drizzle. It’s a chocolate-lover’s paradise, brought to you by modern-day Willy Wonka Kirsten Tibballs, founder of the internationally renowned Savour School as well as star of the TV show The Chocolate Queen.

Recipes include tips to ‘fix it’ when there’s a problem, ways to take the bake to the next level, as well as Kirsten’s trademark skill-building know-how and technique advice so that you gain confidence with every recipe you make.