The best gingerbread cookie cutout recipe that keeps its shape and is perfect for decorating (2024)

by Janice Lawandi; 2 Comments

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This easy recipe makes classic gingerbread cutout cookies that don't spread when baked. They hold their shape perfectly so that you can decorate them, store them, and even ship them.

The best gingerbread cookie cutout recipe that keeps its shape and is perfect for decorating (1)

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The great thing about gingerbread cookies is that you can work on them in stages: make the dough and then chill it until you are ready to roll them (just let the dough warm up a bit on the counter before you attempt to roll it out).

Once you've baked them, you don't have to decorate them unless you absolutely want to, and you certainly don't have to do so right away. In fact, I decorated these a week after I made them because it took me a week to find the energy to make icing and dig out the decorating kit.

The best gingerbread cookie cutout recipe that keeps its shape and is perfect for decorating (2)

What are gingerbread cookies made of

If you want to make gingerbread cookie cut-outs, you will need the following ingredients:

  • butter, preferably unsalted butter because you will add salt to the dough, but if you have salted, it will work. Just adjust the salt in the recipe accordingly, otherwise your cookies may be too salty
  • light brown sugar though granulated sugar would also work here, though it would not contribute to the molasses flavour. Brown sugar may also lead to a slightly thicker cookie that is less prone to spreading
  • molasses, specifically Fancy molasses or baking molasses. Do not use blackstrap molasses, which is too bitter for this recipe
  • large eggs, don't use smaller eggs because your cookie dough may be too dry and your cookie dough won't roll out nicely, but don't use extra large eggs because they could cause the cookie dough to puff too much as it bakes, leading to a more cake-y cookie or a spread out cookie.
  • all-purpose flour is needed to bind all the ingredients together and give the cookies structure. If you don't use enough flour, your cookies may spread too much as they bake
  • baking soda is a base (alkaline). You need baking soda for the cookies to help with browning and also rise. Do not use baking powder. Read up on baking soda vs baking powder if you are unsure
  • ground ginger, cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves are added to the dough to make these cookies very flavourful—these are the usual spices in gingerbread, though some may add anise or even ground pepper
  • salt is really important to balance out the sweet molasses flavour. Don't skip it. I like to use Diamond Crystal fine kosher salt, but table salt will work, though the cookies will be saltier and you may want to halve the salt in that case.
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Type of molasses and substitutions

In this recipe, we are baking with Fancy molasses (which you can find on Amazon), which is sometimes called baking molasses or original molasses in the US (available on Amazon). Mild molasses also works.

Another option worth exploring would be black Treacle, which I used in these soft gingerbread cookies. Lyle's Black Treacle is very popular in Great Britain and it's used to bake instead of molasses. You can also order it on Amazon.

Do not use blackstrap molasses. Blackstrap molasses is very dark and has a more bitter taste, whereas Fancy molasses has a milder taste that is more suited for Christmas cookies.

The best gingerbread cookie cutout recipe that keeps its shape and is perfect for decorating (4)

If you want a baking substitution for the molasses, I have tested this recipe with maple syrup and it works perfectly. Replace the molasses with the same quantity of maple syrup. Please note that the flavour will be quite different and the cookies will be lighter in colour, even if you use amber maple syrup.

The best gingerbread cookie cutout recipe that keeps its shape and is perfect for decorating (5)

Chill the cookie dough

To stop cutout cookies from spreading as they bake (or slow it down), always chill the cookie dough before baking it. Cold butter takes more heat and/or more time to melt than room temperature butter.

To chill it before baking, gather the cookie dough into a disk and wrap it well in plastic wrap. Store them in an airtight container or a freezer bag in the fridge. In fact, you can freeze this dough for about a month, allowing you to get ahead of the Christmas baking. Simply defrost overnight in the fridge, taking it out the day before you want to roll it out and make cookies!

The best gingerbread cookie cutout recipe that keeps its shape and is perfect for decorating (6)

For another recipe, try these German gingerbread cookies, or these matcha gingerbread cookie cutouts for a green version that's super fun! If you love gingerbread, you can also make gingerbread muffins and even gingerbread granola!

You keep these gingerbread cut-outs plain, without any icing, but if you want to jazz them up, decorate them with a batch of royal icing: beat together 190 grams of icing sugar with 1 egg white, and a splash of lemon juice. Whip it for a long time to build it up and thicken it. I used this white royal icing to decorate without adding anything else. The icing should be quite stiff so it doesn't run off the cookies, as you can see.

📖 Recipe

The best gingerbread cookie cutout recipe that keeps its shape and is perfect for decorating (7)

Gingerbread Cutout Cookies

AuthorAuthor : Janice Lawandi

If you want to decorate gingerbread men, you need a good gingerbread cookie dough. This gingerbread cookie dough is great for decorating (and eating) because the cut cookies don't puff or distort in the oven. And they taste great too!

5 from 1 vote

Prep Time 25 minutes mins

Cook Time 10 minutes mins

Total Time 35 minutes mins

Course Dessert

Cuisine American

Servings 50 small cookies

Calories 45 kcal

Ingredients

  • 280 grams bleached all-purpose flour
  • 10 mL ground ginger
  • 7.5 mL ground cinnamon
  • 3.75 mL ground nutmeg
  • 2.5 mL ground cloves
  • 1.25 mL baking soda
  • 1.25 mL Diamond Crystal fine kosher salt
  • 115 grams unsalted butter room temperature
  • 67 grams light brown sugar
  • 80 mL Fancy molasses
  • 1 large egg(s)

Optional for decorating

Instructions

  • Sift together the flour, spices, baking soda, and salt. Set aside.

  • In the bowl of an electric mixer, fitted with the paddle, cream together the butter and the brown sugar, then add the molasses, scraping down the sides of the bowl as needed.

  • Add the egg, and beat it in. Add the flour mixture a third at a time. You might have to work the last bit in by hand.

  • Divide the dough in two, flatten into disks, and wrap in plastic wrap. Chill for a couple of hours or until cold and firm.

  • Preheat the oven to 350ºF. Line sheet pans with parchment paper.

  • Roll out the dough, working with 1 disk at a time, to ¼ inch on a floured surface. Cut out desired shapes and transfer to a parchment-lined baking sheet. Bake for about 10 minutes.

  • Let cool completely before decorating with royal icing and store in an airtight container.

Nutrition

Calories: 45kcal

Give backIf you enjoy the free content on this website, buy me a pound of butter to say thanks!

I found this recipe in Josée di Stasio's Le Carnet Rouge, which is a gorgeous Christmas book: it's a smaller format Christmas cookbook, full of stunningphotography, reliable recipes, and festive ideas. I honestly wish that I lived inside the pages of this book. It's beautiful! Di Stasio actually credits Nick Malgieri for this recipe. I guess it's a small world. So, from Nick Malgieri to Josée di Stasio, and then fromme to you.

If you are in need of some Christmas spirit, make this recipe and buy Josée di Stasio's book (available on Amazon).

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Chelsea @ Chelsea's Healthy Kitchen says

    These are great! I always make gingerbread cookies with my family every year - although my mom's recipe uses shortening, which I'm not a big fan of. Love that these are made with all butter!

    PS. I'm posting a round up of homemade gift ideas on my blog next week and I would love to include these. Let me know if it's okay for me to include these in the round up along with one of your pictures (full credit will go to you as well as a link back to your blog of course). You can tweet me at @healthychels to let me know. 🙂

    Reply

  2. Mardi (eat. live. travel. write.) says

    Janice these are so cute - love them! I wish I had time to fit this into my curriculum with the boys!

    Reply

Leave a Reply

The best gingerbread cookie cutout recipe that keeps its shape and is perfect for decorating (2024)

FAQs

What is the best way to decorate gingerbread cookies? ›

Just stir up a batch of easy royal icing (it's our Test Kitchen's favorite frosting for decorating cutout cookies), add it to a piping bag fitted with a small round tip and pipe away! You can use small candies and sprinkles to add more detail. It's Christmastime, so go crazy with the extras!

Why are gingerbread cookies shaped like people? ›

Legend traces gingerbread men back to Queen Elizabeth I, who supposedly had her cooks mold the pastry into the shapes of her favorite courtiers and liked to give VIP guests ginger "biscuits" that were edible caricatures.

How to decorate gingerbread without icing? ›

But sometimes I just want to jazz them up a bit without hours of decorating. And that's where almond bark or melting chocolate saves the day! You can also use the fun-colored candy melts too. These products make it SO easy to simply melt and then drizzle or dip for beauty and flavor!

Which molasses is best for gingerbread cookies? ›

Medium Or Dark Molasses

“It adds enough bold flavor and sweet notes with a hint of bitterness to any recipe, which is exactly what you want for making gingerbread cookies.”

How to decorate gingerbread shapes? ›

Add color with gumdrops and other candies

Gumdrops are the perfect candy for giving gingerbread men buttons and providing different textures and flavors. Other candies commonly used to garnish gingerbread cookies and houses include licorice, candy canes, jelly beans, and mints.

What tips are best for cookie decorating? ›

Outlining-consistency icing should squeeze easily out of a #2 pastry tip, stay in place, and hold its shape on the cookie when it lands. If the icing is too stiff, it will be hard to squeeze. If it is too loose, it will spread a little when it lands on the cookie—this won't help when you start flooding.

What makes cookies keep their shape? ›

Sandwich your dough between two sheets of parchment, roll, then freeze; it makes cut-out cookies a breeze! If you plan to store it for only a few hours or days, there's no need to overwrap the baking sheet; for longer storage, wrap the entire baking sheet tightly with plastic wrap before freezing.

Why is gingerbread so strong? ›

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. Rolling the dough directly on parchment makes it easy to transfer to the pan.

Why do cookies change shape? ›

Cookies really only spread out because of their fat content: when it gets warm it flows, and if it flows too much before the glutens start binding to give it structure, you get flat cookie. So, in this case, if the dough is colder at the start the fat stays stable longer, and lets the cookie set up.

How do you get gingerbread house to stay together with icing? ›

Just melt the sugar in a pan over low heat. You want to allow it to turn brown, but make sure not to burn it (otherwise it won't taste so great). Then take your gingerbread house pieces, dip the edges in melted sugar and hold them together for a few seconds. That's it!

How to decorate the perfect gingerbread house? ›

Festive wreaths and garlands are great for adding extra details, textures and color to your gingerbread house. Garlands can be used to decorate the roof or you can use them to dress up your side or front windows. Go more modern with your décor with a cute pom-pom wreath.

Why can't you use blackstrap molasses in gingerbread cookies? ›

Blackstrap Molasses

Though it's ideal for savory foods such as barbecue sauces and stews, Bourdon cautioned against choosing blackstrap for cookies. “Please avoid this dark and bitter molasses for your baking recipes,” she said. “It will make your cookies dry and quite frankly inedible.

Can I use golden syrup instead of molasses? ›

Golden Syrup

With its golden, amber color, it is lighter than molasses, though the two are similar in their thickness. Golden syrup also a liquid sweetener, so 1 cup of golden syrup can replace 1 cup of molasses. Golden syrup has a unique flavor, so it may alter the flavor of your recipe slightly.

What do you decorate gingerbread with? ›

One of our favorite aspects about making gingerbread cookies from scratch is being able to decorate them after they cool. Sprinkles, icing, gum drops, mints, chocolates—you can use all these edible items and more to give your cookies their own unique personalities.

How do you stick decorations to gingerbread? ›

To attach the decorations, turn them over to their flat side and use the Royal Icing as glue. They're very light, so just a touch will do it. Gently press the decoration into place and hold it for a minute or so. It should stick right in place.

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