Reindeer Gingerbread Biscuits

Reindeer Gingerbread Biscuits. Gingerbread can either be a spiced biscuit cut into shapes such as a heart or human figure. Or gingerbread is a sticky cake made with molasses or honey. Decorated gingerbread biscuits are one of the festive seasons most popular bakes. From elaborately decorated gingerbread houses used as table centre pieces to Christmas gingerbread men made to hang on your tree.

Reindeer Gingerbread Biscuits

A bit of Gingerbread Biscuit History

You can find gingerbread biscuits around the world. The origin of the first gingerbread man was said to be at the court of Queen Elizabeth I of England. She had her cooks create edible figurines of foreign dignitaries as gifts. Fairings were a type of gingerbread sold at county fairs, hence the name, bought as treats. Cornish Fairings are still available and very popular in the south-west of the UK. In my opinion they far superior to the commercial Ginger Nut biscuits. You will find them really great to dunk in a cup of tea.

Cutting Gingerbread Biscuit Dough

You can use the recipe to bake gingerbread and download plans from the internet to create your own gingerbread house. If you make Gingerbread tree decorations don’t forget to punch in a small hole for the ribbon before baking. If you are making reindeers, you need to cut out gingerbread men and turn them upside down.

Print

Reindeer Gingerbread Biscuits

You can make the dough in advance and store in a freezer for up to a month, carefully wrapped in plenty of cling film.
Course Cakes and Biscuits
Cuisine English, European
Keyword Christmas Baking, Christmas Recipes
Prep Time 1 hour
Cook Time 15 minutes
Servings 12 Biscuits

Equipment

  • 1 Gingerbread man cookie cutter
  • 2 Baking trays
  • Non-stick Baking Paper

Ingredients

For the Biscuits

  • 350 gr Self-raising Flour plus a little extra
  • 175 gr Soft Brown Sugar
  • 125 gr Salted Jersey Butter diced
  • 4 tablespoons Golden Syrup
  • 1 large free-range Egg
  • 2 teaspoons ground Ginger
  • ½ teaspoon ground Cinnamon
  • A large pinch of ground Nutmeg

To Decorate

  • 50 gr Icing Sugar sifted
  • Red Food Colouring
  • Small Chocolate Buttons
  • Flaked Almonds

Instructions

For the Biscuits

  • Sift the flour and spices into a large bowl. Add the butter and rub together until the mix resembles a sandy texture. Stir in the sugar.
  • Whisk the egg and golden syrup together, pour into the bowl and bring the ingredients together with a large fork. When combined tip onto a lightly floured work surface a knead until the mix is smooth. Roll into a ball then wrap in cling film and place in your fridge for at least quarter of an hour.
  • To cook preheat your oven to 350 F / 180 C / Gas Mark 4, and butter and line two baking trays with baking paper.
  • Lightly flour your work surface again and roll out the dough until it is half a centimetre thick. Cut out gingerbread men with a gingerbread man shaped cutter and place evenly on the baking trays.
  • Place in the oven and bake for twelve to fifteen minutes, or until lightly golden-brown. Carefully remove from the oven and allow to cool on the tray for ten minutes before transferring to a wire rack to finish cooling.

To Decorate

  • Place the icing sugar in a bowl and mix with a little cold water sufficient to make a thick icing. Divide into two and colour one half red. Transfer the icing to two small piping bags made from greaseproof paper.
  • When the biscuits are totally cool pipe on the icing and decorate as the pictures. Use the chocolate buttons for eyes and the almonds for ears stuck on with white icing. The red icing is for the nose. Store in an air-tight container.

Notes

Allergens in this recipe are;
       
Please see the Allergens Page

May I ask a favour?

If you enjoyed this post or any of my recipes on my blog, grab yourself a coffee and please drop me a line. Or you can simply like the recipe above, share it, leave a comment, or like my post on Instagram, and don’t forget to sign up for my free newsletter. Thank you.

Published by Christian Gott - An Island Chef

I am a food and drink writer, chef, one-time publican and restaurant manager, and qualified ASET trainer with over thirty years of experience in hospitality. I now live and work in the Channel Islands with my beautiful family. I’ve worked on six islands and in probably just about every type of business you can imagine, from beachside burger joints to world-famous pizza restaurants and in more than a few really good food pubs, historic country inns, and a former RAC Blue Riband UK Hotel of the Year. I have helped to create a small informal dinning group, been a group executive chef for eighteen diverse bars and eateries, demonstrated at food festivals, and contributed to the Real Food Festival Cookery Book, national and local publications, and podcasts. I am a proud member of the Guild of Food Writers and the British Guild of Beer Writers.

Leave a comment

Please leave a comment I'd love to hear from youCancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from An Island Chef

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

Exit mobile version