. . : 1989 2nd Place: Great-Grandma's Gingerbread Cookies Recipe - Quick Recipes, Easy Meal Ideas, Food online : : .
. : : Menu : : .


> Categories:
Appetizers   Baked Goods   Barbeque   Basics   Beans and Grains   Beef   Beverages   Breads   Breakfasts   Cake   Candies   Canning and Preserving   Casseroles   Cheese   Chicken   Chocolate   Condiments   Cookies   Crock Pot and Slow Cooker   Desserts   Duck   Eggs   Fruits   Grains   Herbs and Spices   Holiday   Hot and Spicy   Jellies and Jams   Kids   Lamb   Liquor   Main Dish   Mexican   Nuts   Pasta   Pets   Quick and Easy   Recipes for Pets   Regional Cuisine   Rice   Salad   Sauces   Sausages   Seafood   Side Dish   Snacks   Soups   Stews   Stuffings   Sweets and Desserts   Vegetables   Vegetarian   Wild Game  

1989 2nd Place: Great-Grandma's Gingerbread Cookies
Category Baked Goods
Total Hits 17
Rating Rating:0 | Voted:0 | voted : 0 times
1 Point 2 Point 3 Point 4 Point 5 Point 6 Point 7 Point 8 Point 9 Point 10 Point
The Recipe

1/2 c Vegetable shortening

1 c Sugar

3 Eggs

1/2 c Cold water

2 ts Baking soda

1 c Sorghum or molasses

All-purpose flour (5-6 cups) 1 ts Ground cinnamon

1/2 ts Ground cloves

1 ts Ginger

1/2 ts Salt

minutes 1. Cream shortening and sugar in mixing bowl, beat in eggs, one at a

time. Mix water and baking soda in small bowl until dissolved. Add baking soda mixture and sorghum to butter mixture. Sift 5 1/2 cups of the flour, the spices and salt together. Blend into dough. Divide dough into 4 balls. Wrap in plastic wrap. Flatten and refrigerate overnight. 2. Heat oven to 350 degrees. Roll 1 portion of dough out at a time on

lightly floured surface. Cut into desired shapes. Bake on a greased cookie sheet until puffed, 10 to 12 minutes. Do not overbake. 3. When cool, decorate with buttercream frosting and/or candies as

desired. Sorghum gives these cookies a special flavor, but molasses can be used as a substitute. Ann Smith of Plainfield won second place, and described how her gingerbread men left Bohemia in 1872 and immigrated to the United States. Smith's great-grandmother, "Babicka" Novak, lived in a small Czech-American town in South Dakota where Smith's mother grew up in the 1920s. At Christmas time, her great-grandma would give her neighbors Old World gingerbread men, reindeer and rocking horses. "One year when Great-grandma delivered the cookies, she brought along her teenaged grandson, who was visiting from a small ethnic Czech community in Nebraska," Smith wrote. "Introductions made that day over the watchful eyes of the gingerbread men eventually lead to wedding bells for my parents a decade later. Great-grandma Novak probably had planned this all along!" from the Chicago Tribune second annual Food Guide Holiday Cookie Contest December 14, 1989 -----

Render: 0.018 Sec ¦ By AhmBay