Gingerbread Haunted House Recipes

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HAUNTED GINGERBREAD HOUSE



Haunted Gingerbread House image

Create a creepy gingerbread house decorated with your favorite candies and cookies. It's a fun project for the entire family!

Provided by Betty Crocker Kitchens

Categories     Dessert

Time 2h25m

Yield 30

Number Of Ingredients 17

1/2 cup packed brown sugar
1/4 cup shortening
3/4 cup full-flavor molasses
1/3 cup cold water
3 1/2 cups Gold Medal™ all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground allspice
1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
Assorted candies and cookies
1 1/2 to 2 cups powdered sugar
1/3 cup butter or margarine, softened
1/4 teaspoon vanilla
1 tablespoon milk
1 tablespoon full-flavor molasses

Steps:

  • Heat oven to 350°F. Grease 9-inch square pan and 15x10x1-inch rectangular pan. In large bowl, mix brown sugar, shortening and molasses until well blended. Stir in cold water. Stir in remaining gingerbread ingredients except candies. Press one-third of dough into square pan; press remaining dough into rectangular pan.
  • Bake 1 pan at a time about 15 minutes or until no indentation remains when touched in center. Cool 5 minutes; turn upside down onto large cutting surface. Immediately cut as shown in diagram (cut windows if desired). Cool completely, about 25 minutes.
  • In medium bowl, mix 1 cup of the powdered sugar and remaining frosting ingredients until smooth. Stir in enough remaining powdered sugar to make stiff frosting. (If frosting becomes too stiff, stir in additional milk.)
  • Decorate front of house as desired using frosting and assorted candies and cookies. For windows as shown in photo, cut yellow tissue paper slightly larger than outline of windows. Brush paper with vegetable oil and "glue" to back side of windows, using frosting. Use frosting to attach supports to back of house, sidewalk to front of house, door and sign to front of house and fence to sidewalk. Complete decorating as desired.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 155, Carbohydrate 28 g, Cholesterol 0 mg, Fat 1/2, Fiber 0 g, Protein 2 g, SaturatedFat 1 g, ServingSize 1 Serving, Sodium 110 mg

GINGERBREAD HAUNTED HOUSE



Gingerbread haunted house image

Try your hand at this Halloween themed gingerbread house - don't worry about home-made wonkiness, it all adds to the creepy effect

Provided by Jane Hornby

Categories     Afternoon tea, Treat

Time 2h10m

Yield Makes 1 house, plus plenty of biscuits to share

Number Of Ingredients 21

175g unsalted butter
300g dark brown soft sugar
175g golden syrup
1 large egg , beaten
500g flour , plus extra for rolling
1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
1 heaped tbsp ground ginger
1 tbsp ground cinnamon
½ tsp salt
500g icing sugar , plus extra for rolling out
2 large egg whites
purple or grey food colouring paste
50g desiccated coconut
green food colouring paste
5 x 100g multipack of coloured fondant icing , including black, red, yellow and green
2 tubes Smarties
2 large bags chocolate buttons
1 Mars Bar for the chimney
disposable piping bags
a cake board or large flat plate about 12 inches across
cocktail stick

Steps:

  • First make the dough. Put the butter, sugar and syrup into a large saucepan and melt gently together. Cool for 5 mins then beat in the egg. Mix the flour, bicarbonate of soda, spices and salt, then sift into the pan. Stir to make an even and shiny dough. Spread two sheets of clingfilm on the work top, tip half the dough onto each, then wrap and cool. Once cold, chill in the fridge for a few hours or overnight.
  • Cut the template (available to download in tips, below left) from sheets of paper, following the pattern here. Line 2 large baking sheets with parchment. Lightly flour the work surface and dough, then roll one block of dough to just thicker than a £1 coin. Place the gable end template on top, then cut around with a sharp knife. Cut away the front door from one piece. Carefully lift the walls to a lined sheet, leaving some room for spreading, then bake for 12 mins, until risen and dark golden. When the biscuits are just out of the oven, carefully trim the dough back to its original size if needed, using the templates as a guide (an adult should do this). Cool, then transfer to a rack to cool completely. Keep in an airtight tin until you are ready to build. Repeat with the rest of the dough and trimmings, baking the door and other smaller pieces for 10 mins only, until you have cut out and baked the entire house. Cut small shapes from the leftovers, to give away at the door.
  • Make the icing for the 'glue' and decoration. Beat the egg whites and icing sugar together in a large bowl, to make a smooth thick icing. Set aside a couple of tablespoons of white icing for later. Cover well so that it doesn't dry out. Colour the rest purple, or grey, or whatever horror-house colour you like. Spoon it into a disposable piping bag and snip a few millimetres from the end. Practice piping; the line should be about 5mm across.
  • Stick the back of the house to the board first. Make sure that the smooth side of the biscuit is facing you, or the wall will be the wrong way around. Pipe a generous line of the purple icing along the bottom edge of the wall, then stick it to the board. Hold it there. Smooth any excess that has squished out at the bottom. The rest of the walls can go up smooth-side out. Now place one of the side walls up against the back and fix that to the board and the back wall using plenty of the icing as glue. When all of the main walls are standing, clean up any messy bits, then pipe a decorative but also structure-firming wiggly line (or rows of dots if you find that easier) over the wall joints and dry overnight. Meanwhile, fix the back, front and vertical panels of the dorma together and leave to dry.
  • Next day, fix the roof panels onto the house, right hand panel first, then the left. Once dry, attach the dorma window and then fix on its flat roof. Note that the back piece of the dorma will have to be rough-side outwards, or it won't fix together. While these firm up, colour the coconut with a little green colouring and splash of water; mix well with your hands until evenly green. Knead together the red and yellow fondant icing to make orange, then roll into balls of different shapes and sizes. To shape into pumpkins, score lines down the outside of each ball with a cocktail stick, then squash the ball to make it pumpkin-shaped. Use the green fondant icing to make leaves and stalks. Roll out and cut windows from the black icing.
  • When the roof is stable, you can cover it in button 'tiles'. Overlap the giant buttons, using a little blob of the purple icing on each one as glue. Cut to fit around any awkward bits, and attach a row of half-moon tiles around the front roofline.
  • Now you can fill any gaps in the roof with blobs of the purple icing, fix on the windows, the door, decorate their frames and fix on the Smartie decorations and door knob. Slice the Mars bar at an angle and affix the chimney. Loosen the leftover white icing with a few drops of water to make it pipe-able, then pipe on cobwebs (I used a size 2 nozzle, but you could snip off the end of the piping bag instead), then add the ghostly eyes at the windows. Loosen the white leftovers further, then spread over the board. Sprinkle with the coconut grass, then top with the pumpkins. For the finishing touch, add a dot of colour to the eyes, then leave to dry.

HAUNTED GINGERBREAD HOUSE



Haunted Gingerbread House image

Provided by Dylan Lauren

Categories     Dessert     Kid-Friendly     Halloween     Small Plates

Yield Makes 1 haunted gingerbread house

Number Of Ingredients 11

Royal icing or 1 (16-ounce) container vanilla frosting
Liquid food coloring in red, yellow, green, and blue
1 undecorated gingerbread house*
Black licorice laces
Gummy spiders
Candy corn in assorted flavors
Green apple sour belts
Mellocreme pumpkins
Sugar candy bats (also called dextrose candy bats)
Marshmallow ghosts
*Undecorated gingerbread houses can be purchased from Dylans Candy Bar or Amazon.com

Steps:

  • Place 1/2 cup icing in small bowl and tint purple (see Decorating Tips).
  • Place 1/2 cup icing in small bowl and tint green (see Decorating tips).
  • Place 1/4 cup icing in small bowl and tint orange (see Decorating tips).
  • Using small offset spatula or knife, spread purple icing in thin, even layer on roof.
  • Cut black licorice laces into shorter pieces, then arrange in crisscross pattern on right side of roof to create spiderweb. Gently press into icing to secure. Arrange gummy spiders on roof, gently pressing to secure. Arrange candy corn along seam where left and right sides of roof meet. Arrange candy corn in three vertical lines on left side of roof.
  • Using small offset spatula or knife, spread green icing in thin, even layer on base of house. Arrange green apple sour belts around base of house to form grass.
  • Using small offset spatula or knife, spread small dollop of orange icing on bottom of one Mellocreme pumpkin, then place in front of house. Repeat with additional pumpkins if desired.
  • Using small offset spatula or knife, spread white icing in thin, even layer across surface of door. Gently press sugar candy bats onto door. Place small dollop of white icing on 1 sugar bat and attach to left side of roof. Repeat as desired.
  • Using small offset spatula or knife, spread small dollop of white icing on marshmallow ghost then gently press it onto front of house.
  • Using small offset spatula or knife, spread thin line of orange icing along seam where roof meets front of house. Arrange candy corn along seam, gently pressing to secure.
  • Arrange candy corn along sides and back of house to form fence. If necessary, secure with additional icing.
  • Continue adding candy as desired.

HAUNTED GINGERBREAD HOUSE



Haunted Gingerbread House image

Start gingerbread season a little early this year with a fun display for Halloween. Make gumball pumpkins, chocolate tombstones and a scary (but candy-sweet!) monster hiding inside the house.

Provided by Heather Baird : Sprinkle Bakes : Food Network

Categories     dessert

Time 4h

Yield 1 gingerbread house

Number Of Ingredients 29

3 1/2 to 4 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons ground ginger
1 1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, at room temperature
3/4 cup packed dark brown sugar
1/2 cup molasses (not blackstrap and preferably golden, mild or sorghum molasses)
1 large egg
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
12 ounces white candy melting wafers
1 cup ready-made chocolate frosting
12 cream-filled chocolate sandwich cookies, crushed to fine crumbs
2 cups woven corn cereal squares
2 tablespoons cocoa powder
12 ounces black candy melting wafers
Candy buttons
Black food color marker
3 ounces green candy melting wafers
1/4 cup green sanding sugar
Chocolate sprinkles
2 chocolate chews
3 to 4 round gumballs
3 ounces orange candy melting wafers
3 chocolate-filled rolled wafer cookies
Black sanding sugar
4 pretzel sticks
3 chocolate snack cake cupcakes
2 mini break-apart chocolate bars

Steps:

  • Make the cookies: Sift 3 cups of flour, the ginger, cinnamon, baking soda and salt into a large bowl. Beat the butter in the bowl of an electric mixer at medium speed until smooth and creamy, about 2 minutes. Add the brown sugar and molasses. Mix until combined. Beat in the egg and vanilla. Add the flour mixture to the butter mixture and mix until a thick dough forms. If the dough is sticky, mix in the remaining flour a little at a time until the dough can easily be handled without it sticking to your fingers. You may not have to use all of the flour.
  • Gather the dough into a ball; divide in half. Roll each dough piece flat to 1/4-inch thickness between parchment paper sheets. Transfer the dough inside the sheets to the refrigerator to chill for 30 minutes.
  • Position a rack in the center of the oven; preheat to 350 degrees F. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.
  • Print the Haunted Gingerbread House Walls and Roof Template (link below) and cut the shapes out with scissors. When the dough is well chilled, remove it from the refrigerator and peel back the top sheets of parchment. Lay the templates on the dough and cut around them using a flat-edged knife (do not discard the templates). Transfer the dough shapes to the prepared baking sheets. Leftover dough can be re-rolled and cut into cookies, or you can shape it into a baton and store it in your freezer for up to 1 month.
  • Bake the shapes for 15 minutes, or until lightly golden around the edges. While the cookies are still warm, lay the templates on top of the baked cookies and re-cut them using a knife. This will help the shapes fit together perfectly when you are assembling the house.
  • Assemble the house: Place the white candy wafers in a heatproof bowl and cook at 100 percent power in the microwave at 30-second intervals. Stir well after each interval until the candy is smooth (this should take about 1 minute total cook time). Transfer the candy to a disposable piping bag with a small hole in the end snipped (you may also use a zip-top bag with the corner snipped). Use cans from your pantry to help prop the house pieces up as you work. Glue the sides, front and back of the house together using the white melted candy. Let stand until dry, about 10 minutes.
  • Meanwhile, prepare the landscape: Spread half of the chocolate frosting over a 14-inch cake board or serving platter. Sprinkle the surface with the cookie crumbs and press them down slightly with flattened palms. Save leftover cookie crumbs and frosting for later use.
  • When the candy holding the gingerbread walls together is dry, gently lift the assembled house and place it in the center of the prepared board. Pipe white melted candy along the top edges of the house and attach the roof; hold the pieces steady with your hands until they hold on their own, about 2 minutes. Pipe extra candy around the roof edges and walls to fill in any visible gaps.
  • Place the corn cereal in a bowl or zip-top bag and add the cocoa powder. Mix together until the cereal pieces are well coated with cocoa. Pipe a line of candy on the bottom edge of a roof piece and place cereal pieces end-to-end in a single layer to make roof tiles. Pipe another line of candy just above the first row of cereal and add another row, slightly overlapping the first. It's okay to use broken cereal pieces, as this will add to the character of the haunted house. Cover the entire rooftop with cereal. Pipe candy on the front and back top edges of the house and line with cereal squares. Allow the house to stand at room temperature until the candy is set, about 15 minutes.
  • Make the windows and door: Print the Haunted Gingerbread House Windows Template (link below). Place the template on a flat work surface and cover it with a large sheet of parchment or waxed paper. Melt the black candy wafers in a heatproof bowl and cook at 100 percent power in the microwave at 30-second intervals. Stir well after each interval until the candy is smooth (this should take about 1 minute total cook time). Transfer the candy to a disposable piping bag with the tip snipped. Pipe the candy over the black boxes (windows and doors) on the template. Use a toothpick to push the candy into small corners and to fill in gaps. Make as many windows as you wish for your haunted house by moving the template under a new sheet of parchment paper. Place candy buttons in each of the smaller windows before the candy is set. Use a food color marker to draw on eyeballs. Allow the candy to stand until set, about 15 minutes at room temperature or 5 minutes in the refrigerator. Peel the candy boxes with eyes off of the parchment and use a little melted candy to attach them to the top front of the house. Position each window tilted inward slightly. Attach the larger candy rectangle below the 2 windows to create the door. Use the white melted candy (reheat if necessary) to pipe dots on the top and bottom edges of the door. Use a toothpick to pull the melted candy into points to create fangs.
  • Make the monster arms: Melt green candy wafers as previously directed with the white and black candy wafers. Transfer the candy to a disposable piping bag with the tip snipped. Lay a sheet of parchment on a work surface. Pipe a 4-inch L shape on the parchment paper with the green candy. Use a toothpick to smooth the candy into an arm shape. Use the toothpick end to pull the bottom of the L shape into fingers. Pour green sanding sugar over the top portion of the arm, leaving the hand uncovered. Place a chocolate sprinkle on each finger to create long claws. Allow the shapes to set until firm. When the candy is firm, peel it off of the parchment and shake the excess sugar off of the arm. Repeat this process with a backwards L shape so that you have 2 monster arms. Attach a candy window with melted candy to each side of the house and hold until set, about 2 minutes. Attach an arm to each window and hold until set. Further decorate the sides and back of the house with more windows.
  • Create boards for the windows: Knead 2 chocolate chews together and roll flat with a rolling pin (if the chews are too firm to flatten, heat them in the microwave for 5 seconds). Cut small board shapes (about 1/4 inch by 1 inch) from the candy using a knife. Use the end of a toothpick to striate the pieces. Use the pointed end of the toothpick to poke 2 small holes in each end, creating nail holes on the boards. Attach the pieces over the windows using melted candy.
  • Make candy pumpkins: Carefully poke holes in the gumballs using a metal skewer or knife, and thread them onto the pointed ends of toothpicks. Melt the orange candy wafers as previously directed. Dip the gumballs into the candy and place them on parchment paper. Remove the toothpick. Use leftover chocolate chews to fashion small pumpkin stems. Place them standing upright on top of the pumpkins. Allow to stand until set, about 15 minutes.
  • Make scary trees: Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Use the black melted candy (reheat as needed) to pipe 3 well-spaced lines on the cookie sheets. Place a rolled wafer cookie on top of each line. Use the black candy to completely cover the wafers. Draw tree branches with the candy coming off of both sides and the top ends of the wafers. Cover with black sanding sugar. Let stand until firm, about 15 minutes.
  • Meanwhile, make the pretzel ladder: Break 2 of the pretzel sticks in half. Place 2 whole pretzel sticks parallel to each other. Attach the broken pretzel rungs to the whole pretzel sticks using melted candy. Let stand until set. When firm, lean the ladder against the house, preferably leading up to a window with eyeballs peering out.
  • When the trees are firm, lift them from the parchment and shake away excess sugar. Place each snack cake on the cake board upside-down and press a candy tree in its center. Cover the snack cakes with leftover cookie crumbs, if desired.
  • Make tombstones: Place leftover chocolate frosting in a piping bag. Break the chocolate bars at their perforations. Pipe a small dot of frosting onto the crumb-covered cake board and press an upright turned chocolate piece into the frosting. Repeat with remaining chocolate pieces to create a graveyard.
  • Finishing touches: Use melted white candy to pipe spider webs onto the house. Use the food color marker to draw cracks on the house, and spiders near their webs. Place the pumpkin decorations on the landscape and around the house as desired.

GINGERBREAD HOUSES RECIPE BY TASTY



Gingerbread Houses Recipe by Tasty image

Ready to make your own Gingerbread Houses? Check out our guide and template for this recipe.

Provided by Vaughn Vreeland

Categories     Desserts

Yield 12 servings

Number Of Ingredients 14

5 cups all purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
3 teaspoons ground ginger
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon kosher salt
nonstick cooking spray, for greasing
1 cup vegetable shortening
1 cup granulated sugar
1 cup molasses
4 large egg whites
1 teaspoon cream of tartar
6 cups powdered sugar, sifted
water, as needed

Steps:

  • Preheat the oven to 350ºF (180ºC). Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.
  • In a large bowl, sift together the flour, baking soda, ginger, nutmeg, cinnamon, and salt. Set aside.
  • Grease the bottom and sides of a heavy-bottomed pot (such as a Dutch oven) with nonstick spray. This will ensure the dough doesn't stick to the pot as you turn it out.
  • Melt the shortening in the greased pot over medium heat. Add the molasses and sugar, bring to a boil, then turn off the heat.
  • Gradually stir in 4 cups (500 grams) of the flour mixture, 1 cup (125 grams) at a time, making sure to fully incorporate each addition before adding more. You'll have some of the flour mixture left over.
  • Dust a work surface with some of the remaining flour mixture. Carefully turn the dough out onto the floured surface and work in the flour mixture. (You don't want the dough to be too crumbly. You may have some flour mixture left over, which can be used for rolling out the dough.)
  • Once the flour is incorporated, shape the dough into a 12-inch (30.5 cm) log and cut into 3 portions, 1 piece slightly larger than the others for the roof.
  • Set aside the smaller pieces of dough in the pot (it still should be warm, but not hot), cover with plastic wrap, and put the lid on. You'll want to work with the dough while it's warm as it tends to harden at room temperature. If it hardens, simply microwave for about 30 seconds.
  • On the floured surface, roll out the larger piece of dough to a rectangle about ½-inch (1 ¼ cm) thick. Using a house template, cut the 2 pieces of the roof and set on a prepared baking sheet, spacing about 1 inch apart as the dough will expand while baking.
  • Roll out the rest of the dough and cut out the front, back, and sides of the house using the templates. Place on a baking sheet.
  • Wrap the leftover dough in plastic wrap and store at room temperature for up to 1 day. Microwave to soften and roll out to make decorations for the house or another gingerbread creation.
  • Bake the gingerbread house pieces for 12-15 minutes, until they have hardened and baked through. Let cool completely.
  • Make the royal icing: In a large bowl, beat the egg whites and cream of tartar with an electric hand mixer until frothy. Gradually add the powdered sugar, 1 cup (120 grams) at a time, until the icing is smooth and thick. NOTE: The icing is used for gluing the house together. It's very thick. To use the icing for decorating, add about 1 teaspoon of water at a time to thin the icing to your desired consistency.
  • Assemble the gingerbread house with the royal icing. TIP: Put the roof pieces side by side with the underside up (and the eventual exposed part of the roof down). "Glue" a cut piece of a paper shopping bag across these two pieces with royal icing. Place two small glass bowls on either side of this upside-down roof to prop the pieces up into a "V" shape. Let dry completely. When assembling, this will help ensure that your roof doesn't slip down the sides of the house.
  • Decorate the house with more royal icing and your desired decorations.
  • Enjoy!

Nutrition Facts : Calories 834 calories, Carbohydrate 142 grams, Fat 26 grams, Fiber 1 gram, Protein 8 grams, Sugar 96 grams

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2020-09-21 Combine powdered sugar and water to make a royal icing glue. Add water 1/2 teaspoon at a time until desired consistency is achieved (2 1/2 teaspoons works well for me). Spoon icing into a ziploc bag and cut the tip off. Glue the 4 walls together with icing and hold in place for a minute or so.
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KAREN GORDON: HAUNTED VICTORIAN GINGERBREAD MANSIONS CAN BE …
2021-10-20 1 tsp ground ginger 1-1/2 tsp ground cinnamon 1/8 tsp salt In a stand mixer, add shortening, molasses, brown sugar, and vanilla extract. Beat on medium speed until light and creamy. In another...
From vancouversun.com


HAUNTED GINGERBREAD HOUSES: EERIE HALLOWEEN CREATIONS …
2012-10-22 Food & Drink Halloween Recipes Halloween Video gingerbread Taste . Haunted Gingerbread Houses: Eerie Halloween Creations (PHOTOS) These gingerbread creations will haunt your house. Oct. 22, 2012, 09:02 AM EDT. Most people think gingerbread houses are made only for Christmas time, but that's not necessarily the case. We've seen our share of …
From huffpost.com


HAUNTED GINGERBREAD HOUSE - NORINE'S NEST
After the house pieces have baked and cooled, she makes the liquid sugar for the windows and to “glue” the house together. The Recipe for the Liquid Sugar is 2 cups of sugar. Place the sugar in a medium skillet over medium/high heat. Stir continuously until sugar is melted and golden in color. CAUTION: It is VERY hot!
From norinesnest.com


HAUNTED GINGERBREAD HOUSE - RECIPE GOLDMINE RECIPES
Ingredients. Gingerbread and Decorations. 1/2 cup packed brown sugar; 1/4 cup shortening; 3/4 cup full-flavor molasses; 1/3 cup cold water; 3 1/2 cups Gold Medal® all-purpose flour
From recipegoldmine.com


HOW TO MAKE A HALLOWEEN HAUNTED GINGERBREAD HOUSE
2014-09-17 Thread wire through the centers and trim the wire so it's hidden. Bunch the Twizzlers together and wrap a piece of wire around the center, toward one end. Bend out the shorter half to form a tree ...
From womansday.com


GINGERBREAD CAKE HAUNTED HOUSES - THE GREAT BRITISH BAKE OFF
Heat the oven to 180°C/160°C fan/350°F/Gas 4. Sift the flour, bicarbonate of soda, cinnamon, mixed spice, ginger and salt into a mixing bowl. Step 2. Gently melt the butter with the syrup, treacle and sugar in a small pan. Remove from the heat and leave to cool.
From thegreatbritishbakeoff.co.uk


HAUNTED GINGERBREAD HOUSE | DELICIOUS RECIPES
2017-10-27 Make the cookies: Sift 3 cups of flour, the ginger, cinnamon, baking soda and salt into a large bowl. Beat the butter in the bowl of an electric mixer at medium speed until smooth and creamy, about 2 minutes. Add the brown sugar and molasses. Mix until combined. Beat in the egg and vanilla.
From recipesandhealth.wordpress.com


HEIDI’S HAUNTED GINGERBREAD HOUSE | GINGERBREADARTIST
2020-08-15 These templates are pre-printed for you to then cut-out the template pieces, cut your pieces from gingerbread dough, bake, and assemble per the instructions provided. The pre-printed template packet includes: Template printed on 67lb card stock. Supply and Candy List. Recipes, including number of batches needed.
From gingerbread-artist.com


HAUNTED GINGERBREAD HOUSE - QUIRKY INSPIRED
Instructions. In a large mixing bowl, cream sugar, butter, and molasses; In another bowl, mix all of the dry ingredients. /4 cup at a time, mix the dry ingredients into the wet mixture.
From quirkyinspired.com


GINGERBREAD HAUNTED HOUSE | COOKIE CONNECTION
2015-10-31 Recipe Rescue! Cookie Conundrums; Icing Issues; Other Recipe Help Needed - STAT! Cookie Craft. Individual Packaging; Platter Possibilities; Cookie-Scapes; The Business of Cookies. Start-up Shoulds and Should Nots; To Be Home-Based or Not To Be? The Ins and Outs of Etsy; Legalese; Pricing; Marketing and Promotion; Packaging and Shipping; After ...
From cookieconnection.juliausher.com


HAUNTED HALLOWEEN GINGERBREAD HOUSE RECIPE - RECIPES.NET
2021-08-12 Put the green apple sour belts on the base of the house to make the grass. Spread a small dollop of orange icing on the bottom of one Mellowcreme pumpkin, then place it in front of the house. Repeat with additional pumpkins if desired. Spread white icing across the surface of the door. Gently press the sugar candy bats onto the door.
From recipes.net


HOW TO MAKE A HAUNTED GINGERBREAD HOUSE FOR HALLOWEEN | HGTV
Coat the back of a chocolate graham cracker with purple frosting and stick it in place as the front door. To up the haunted ante, cut your graham cracker to fit slightly tilted. In the same fashion, stick chocolate block windows to the house, lining the edges with white royal icing to help them stand out (Images 1-2).
From hgtv.com


HALLOWEEN HAUNTED GINGERBREAD HOUSE | BAKE TO THE ROOTS
2019-10-30 DIRECTIONS / ZUBEREITUNG English Deutsch 1. For the dough add the butter to a large bowl and mix until softened. Add the brown sugar, gingerbread spice, ground cinnamon, and salt and mix until light and fluffy. Add the beet syrup and vanilla extract and mix it in. Add the flour and mix/knead until you get a nice smooth dough.
From baketotheroots.de


GINGERBREAD HOUSES ARCHIVES - JUSTJENN RECIPES
I have been making gingerbread houses for years, so much that people were asking for business cards and how to place orders. Only…I didn’t have a business. My mom and… Continue Reading » Posted in christmas, desserts, gingerbread houses, kids, party food. Gingerbread Haunted Mansion 2003. My Mom loves Halloween, so we took our gingerbread house …
From justjennrecipes.com


HOW TO MAKE A SPOOKY FUN HAUNTED HALLOWEEN GINGERBREAD …
2020-10-23 Begin your Haunted Halloween Gingerbread House base with hot glue. This is really the only part of this project that I recommend hot glue, because you want a Haunted Halloween Gingerbread House to be edible! But, for the purpose of creating a sturdy, lasting base, I use hot glue to attach my graham crackers to the milk carton.
From freshmommyblog.com


ZOMBIE GINGERBREAD HALLOWEEN HOUSE DIY PROJECT - MOM ON THE …
2013-10-13 The Haunted House Cookie Cutter Kit from Sweet Creations by Good Cook helped the making and baking of the Zombie Gingerbread Halloween Haunted House go a lot smoother. This kit includes a recipe for the dough, three cookie cutters, and two rollers and stamps to make spooky imprints on your house. The recipe was a pretty simple gingerbread ...
From momontheside.com


GINGERBREAD HAUNTED HOUSE RECIPE
2021-10-06 Directions For the gingerbread, put the flour, bicarbonate of soda and ginger into a food processor and pulse to combine. Add the butter and pulse until mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs. Add the...
From goodhousekeeping.com


HAUNTED GINGERBREAD HOUSE | COOKIE CONNECTION
2014-10-23 If You Give A Nerd A Cookie
From cookieconnection.juliausher.com


HAUNTED GINGERBREAD HOUSE FOR HALLOWEEN - HANIELA'S | RECIPES, …
2015-10-20 House has 2 front doors, haunted 13 hour clock, carpet flying over carrying a bleeding cake…be sure to view the video below for all the details and make sure you don’t eat the bleeding cake or you’ll turn into a…
From hanielas.com


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