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Gingerbread Man Cookies

Gingerbread Man Cookies

No cookie says Christmas more than a gingerbread man cookie. It's been thirty years since I last made gingerbread men, and it took all weekend to get this recipe right. After starting with a truly terrible recipe from a 1974 edition of the Joy of Cooking (1/4 cup of butter for 3 1/2 cups of flour? - had to throw the whole batch out), I settled on this recipe, which makes some rather tasty cookies.

After running around to several stores looking for the perfect gingerbread man cookie cutter, and getting nowhere, I created my own stencils (see links below). To use them, print them out and fold them in half lengthwise to make it easy to cut along the lines (don't worry if the lines don't perfectly match up, I drew them freehand.) Place the stencil over the rolled-out dough and use a small sharp knife to cut along the inside of the stencil.

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Gingerbread Man Cookies Recipe

Ingredients

Cookies

  • 3 1/4 cups sifted all-purpose flour
  • 3/4 teaspoon baking soda
  • 3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter (room temperature, softened)
  • 1/2 cup dark-brown sugar, packed
  • 1 Tbsp ground ginger
  • 1 Tbsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoons ground cloves
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • 1/4 teaspoon finely ground black pepper
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 large egg
  • 1/2 cup unsulfured molasses
  • Optional raisins, chocolate chips, candy pieces, frosting

Royal Icing

  • 1 egg white
  • 1/2 teaspoon lemon juice
  • 1 3/4 cup confectioners sugar (powdered sugar)

Method

1 In a large bowl, sift together flour, baking soda, and spices. Set aside.

2 In an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream the butter. Add sugar and beat until fluffy. Mix in eggs and molasses. Gradually add the flour mixture; combine on low speed. (You may need to work it with your hands to incorporate the last bit of flour.) Divide dough in thirds; wrap each third in plastic. Chill for at least 1 hour or overnight. Before rolling out, let sit at room temperature for 5-10 minutes. If after refrigerating the dough feels too soft to roll-out, work in a little more flour.

3 Heat oven to 350°. Place a dough third on a large piece of lightly floured parchment paper or wax paper. Using a rolling pin, roll dough 1/8 inch thick. Refrigerate again for 5-10 minutes to make it easier to cut out the cookies. Use either a cookie cutter or place a stencil over the dough and use a knife to cut into desired shapes. Press raisins, chocolate chips, or candy pieces in the center of each cookie if desired for "buttons".

4 Transfer to ungreased baking sheets. Bake until crisp but not darkened, 8 to 10 minutes. Remove from oven. Let sit a few minutes and then use a metal spatula to transfer cookies to a wire rack to cool completely. Decorate as desired.

Makes 16 5-inch long cookies.

Royal Icing

The traditional way to make Royal Icing is to beat egg whites and lemon juice together, adding the powdered sugar until the mixture holds stiff peaks. With modern concerns about salmonella from raw eggs, you can either use powdered egg whites or heat the egg whites first to kill any bacteria. With the heating method, mix the egg white and lemon juice with a third of the sugar, heat in a microwave until the mixture's temperature is 160°F. Then remove from microwave, and beat in the remaining sugar until stiff peaks form. Using the powdered egg whites method, combine 1 Tbsp egg white powder with 2 Tbsp water. Proceed as you would otherwise. (Raw egg white alternatives from the 2006 Joy of Cooking)

If the icing is too runny, add more powdered sugar until you get the desired consistency. Fill a piping bag with the icing to pipe out into different shapes. (Or use a plastic sandwich bag, with the tip of one corner of the bag cut off.) Keep the icing covered while you work with it or it will dry out.

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106 Comments

I'm from Finland, and we use the following kind of icing for decorating gingerbread cookies:
(it's metric, sorry...)
4 dl / 225 g powder sugar
1 egg white
1 tbsp water or lemon juice

Mix the ingredients to a smooth paste, the water or juice may not be needed, if the mixture feels pipe-able enough without it.
You can dye the icing with food coloring, if you fancy different colors than pure white.

Posted by: Christine on December 14, 2005 11:13 AM

Love your website...but would like to confirm what exactly is 1.5 sticks of butter?
Is 1 stick = 250 grams of butter?

Cheers!

Posted by: dav on December 3, 2006 4:05 PM

Hi Dav - 1 stick of butter = 1/2 Cup of butter = 1/4 pound of butter = approximately 113 grams. So, 1 1/2 sticks of butter is approximately 170 grams.

There is a measurement converter on the left side of the page with a link to more metric conversions.

Posted by: Elise on December 3, 2006 5:51 PM

What a coincidence! I just posted some historic recipes for gingerbread on my blog. Fourteen recipes from the fifteenth to the nineteenth centuries. Gingerbread was very different in previous times, and recipes were certainly not very exact. If you are interested, they are at

http://theoldfoodie.blogspot.com/2006/12/through-ages-with-gingerbread.html

Posted by: The Old Foodie on December 3, 2006 10:26 PM

Some cookie recipes call for a combination of butter and shortening. Apparently adding shortening gives you a more cakey texture--I learned this from Alton Brown. This transcript from his Good Eats show discusses how to alter cookie recipes to get either a crispy, puffy or cakey result.

Three Chips For Sister Marsha

Posted by: Lisa on December 4, 2006 6:11 AM

My mother makes the best gingerbread men with a recipe and cookie cutter my grandmother gave to her (and she still has the molasses covered recipe page too). After the original cutter broke she found a replacemnt from the catalog Maid of Scandinavia, which is now called Sweet Celebrations. They have a variety of cutters for gingerbread men and I know my mother stocked up for my sister and I because good ones are so hard to come by. The catalog can be previewed at http://www.sweetc.com/. The cutters are on page 38 of the catalog. Also I may be old school but frosting doesn't belong on gingerbread only raisins for the eyes and buttons! Enjoy everyone!

Posted by: Kristen on December 4, 2006 7:13 AM

Does this icing harden well? The main issue I've had with gingerbread men in the past was icing that would smash under the weight of another cookie when they're stored. I was using the Confectioner's suger / heavy cream type of icing before.

Note from Elise: Royal icing hardens well, but it can be fragile too.

Posted by: Rob on December 5, 2006 6:08 AM

Hi! I was wondering if this recipe turned out to be softer cookies than the others you had tried. Every Christmas I try to make gingerbread cookies and they always are so hard after they cool that you can't even eat them. Any suggestions??
Thanks!
Jamie

These cookies were much softer than the cookies from the first recipe I used, which as I mentioned were barely edible. The difference is the amount of butter. These are definitely cookies for eating, not decorating a tree with. ~Elise

Posted by: Jamie on December 5, 2006 12:08 PM

My kids are decorating these right now. I have them using an icing that is just some butter, powdered sugar, cream, and vanilla, all whipped up fluffy in the kitchenaid.

The cookies turned out very tasty, although I do wish I hadn't been a tad low on molasses. Also, I skipped the pepper. They are fairly soft and cakey. Much better than my old recipe.

I love your site!

Posted by: April on December 5, 2006 3:58 PM

Hey Anna,

I tried the recipe today and had the same problem of the dough not being firm enough, but what I did was to add more flour.. I freezed it out for about an hour and actually rolled out my gingerbread men one by one on a greaseproof paper.. that way, you can just peel off the paper and dump the fella on the tray straight after cutting him out... It turned out great!

Anyone has any advice on whether "treacle" should be used in gingerbread? Cos I came across some recipes which suggested treacle.. Any advice anyone?

Posted by: Scent on December 6, 2006 7:54 AM

I would love to know what "treacle" is??

it's funny - this is the second time in as many weeks that I've landed on your site. My husband, kidlet and I are all foodies. [kid's favorite veg is grilled artichokes, he's 3]

anyhow, I was looking for a recipe that would provide a tasty cookie that would say more than "I spent a couple hours in the kitchen playing with my son to bring this to you"

Someone asked about softer cookies -shortening can also add to the softness factor (as well as increasing the flour content and lowering temp a bit.

Thanks for your site, I love it!

Posted by: Cookerlady&toddlerCook on December 6, 2006 6:31 PM

OMG, Elise... I just made there last night. I made a double batch of dough and I boosted the spices a bit, but this is one of the best tasting cookies everrrr.... :) Thanks for pointing it out. I was looking for a reliable gingerbread cookie recipe and was so happy to see you post one!

Posted by: cakegrrl on December 7, 2006 9:46 AM

Hi all,

I did some research and found out what "treacle" is.. Treacle is actually a form of the product of some sugar extraction process, so it's the group name for the sugar syrup extracted from such a process.. Molasses and Golden syrup are members of the treacle family.. While Molasses is the darker syrup (more concentrated), Golden syrup is the lighter syrup (less concentrated) of the treacle family...

Posted by: Scent on December 8, 2006 6:40 AM

This recipe turned out wonderfully! I've never really had a gingerbread cookie that worked well until now. Everyone who tried one of these (took them to a party) raved about them. I, of course told them to check out this site.

Posted by: Scott on December 17, 2006 2:52 PM

These came out really well with the cutouts on the site. Couldnt find any molasses...so used honey...but as you know..the colour was wrong..taste was lovely. A

Posted by: Anamika on December 28, 2006 7:11 PM

For those people in other countries, e.g. Australia where molasses is not commonly used, or stocked use golden surup instead, it tastes delightful.

Posted by: Jo on April 26, 2007 11:39 PM

Hi just seeing your great recipe. Is all-purpose flour the same as plain flour or is it Self Raising Flour (Sorry I am an Aussie and we don't have what they call all-purpose flour. I presume it is plain flour as you have baking soda in your recipe. Could someone please confer.

Posted by: Jill Etheridge on April 30, 2007 9:22 PM

All-purpose flour is plain flour, not self-rising.

Posted by: Elise on April 30, 2007 9:56 PM

Just to let you know that I made the gingerbread man cookies and they turned out absolutetly yummy. I used golden syrup instead of molasses (as we don't have that here in Australia) and I decorated them with chocolate chips. I only needed to put the dough in the fridge for 2 hours and it was perfect to work with. My husband thought they were pretty good as he said "you could sell these".

Posted by: Jill Etheridge on May 9, 2007 4:23 PM

Elise, I made these this weekend and they were wonderful! My dad loves that they're soft and not too sweet. I can't wait to make them again!

Posted by: C on December 3, 2007 10:47 AM

I just made the cookies and they turned out sooooo gooooood I am very pleased with how simple it was to make perfect gingerbread cookies. thanks!!!

Posted by: Lydia on December 14, 2007 11:08 PM

I found fun little cutters at Michael's. They are made by Wilton, and are little boy and girl with pigtails. I've had them for 10 years.

Posted by: joanne on December 15, 2007 3:22 PM

I can't remember the last time I made Gingerbread People, but I do remember taking an inordinate amount of time decorating them. Whenever I make cookies now, though, we can't wait to eat them, so decorating usually gets thrown out the window. Perhaps it's time to find a happy medium?

Posted by: Lady Amalthea on December 15, 2007 10:07 PM

I keep looking for a recipe that will be like my grandmother's. Her cookies are very thin & elegant, while most recipes I've tried make thicker cookies (still good -- but you understand the search for the remembered). She's of Swedish extraction, although never lived in Sweden, but I'm starting to wonder if my error is always trying US/UK recipes. Any ideas?

Check out the gingersnap cookies recipe on this site. ~Elise

Posted by: Anonymous on December 16, 2007 9:53 AM

Anonymous, looking for her Swedish grandmother's recipe:

I think her cookies were Pepparkakor. Do a google image search to see if they look right, if so a suitable recipe should be easy to find.

Posted by: Diane on December 16, 2007 5:26 PM

Thank you, Diane -- I think you're right that Pepparkakor are probably what she made. Now I have a new direction for experimentation!

Posted by: Sarah on December 17, 2007 4:48 PM

I will be making these for sure, but I'll have to find cutters, because I'm too lazy to use a knife. Also, I saw some cookie tips on one of the morning news shows, and the expert lady suggested rolling out the dough directly on the baking sheet. Then you remove the extra and leave the cookies, and they don't get stretched or distorted. I can't believe I never thought of that before!

Posted by: Heather on December 19, 2007 5:43 AM

Good recipe. Made six batches for church youth group decorating party, 144 cookies. Wow! First batch we used baking powder instead of soda and they were just a little more "cookie" like instead of "bread" like and they stayed more thin and crispy (very old baking powder). Michaels Crafts had a 4" cookie cutter and we got about 24 per batch.

Posted by: Brian S. on December 21, 2007 2:15 PM

I tried this recipe yesterday, and I found the cookie to be kind of bland on its own (maybe its because I still have a cold) but they were excellent with the frosting. I had no problem with the dough, though - but I double-sifted it.

Your tongue is what tastes sweetness, so even with a cold you would be able to taste that. Most flavor however comes from the aromatics being processed through your nose. When you have a head cold, that can definitely affect what you are able to taste. ~Elise

Posted by: Grace on December 24, 2007 9:04 AM

we made these last night and were very disappointed. The flavor was almost completely bland... very little of the spice flavour came through and they tasted almost completely of flour. I'd prefer them a good deal sweeter, and i'd cut down on the amount of flour. the icing does help with the flavour but the gingerbread itself was a big disappointment. and we arent sure why, but ours look nothing like the picture. we were excited about the rich dark color, but ours are much paler. That said, they made our apartment smell fantastic!

Funny, this recipe has more than twice as much spice as the original JoC recipe called for. If you want them spicier, just up the spices even more. If you want them darker, up the ground cloves in particular. Using blackstrap molasses will help too. I wouldn't reduce the flour amount as that would probably make the dough too sticky to roll out. But if you increase the sugar, it should make the cookies chewier. Also, make sure your spices are fresh! Anything older than a year needs to be replaced. ~Elise

Posted by: aspen on December 24, 2007 11:04 AM

I've had great success with this version of Royal Icing (http://www.theperfectpantry.com/2007/11/drop-in-decor-1.html) made with meringue powder. It's easy to pipe and has a wonderful consistency, and no raw egg whites. We've used it for six years for our cookies-for-donation project.

Posted by: lydia on December 28, 2007 6:35 AM

I also found they were a bit bland. I think I will still use this same recipe next time, but add a bit more spices.

Posted by: Brittany on June 6, 2008 7:15 PM

Haven't made gingerbread men for years but these turned out excellent! They also made about 21 instead of the said 16 (although this is probably cause I may have rolled them a bit thinner than usual) these taste brilliant and I didn't even refridgerate them!!
thanks a lot!

Posted by: Elle on June 26, 2008 9:35 AM

Nice to see that this recepie has been looked up for a number of years now. We baked these cookies but with an Ozzie twist! We made liquid toffee instead of using molasses and deleated the pepper. While my youngest son was cutting out his dough he decided that he didn't want to make little man, he cut out "love heart shapes for all the girls!!", mind you he is only 4yrs old (he,he) Thanks for the great recepie, they turned out yummylicious!!

Posted by: licia on August 28, 2008 3:44 AM

Hey, I'm probably not the norm' for people who use your recipes since I'm just 13. Nobody in my family bakes except me. Well my mom does some but usually uses box mixes in baking sweets.
I tried this recipe today(just pulled some out of the oven in fact). It turned out perfect, they weren't too spicy which is good because my sister and dad don't like things too seasoned, but they were totally not bland. The dough was perfect to work with after an hour in the fridge, and they were darker then my normal cookies. I changed the recipe a little bit. I used light brown sugar(we didn't have any dark), I also omitted the cloves(we only had whole cloves and I have no way to grind them,) and pepper because I forgot to add it. But they are delicious and they made the kitchen smell really good lol. This is so far my absolute favorite recipe for gingerbread men. Thank you for sharing this delightful recipe.

Posted by: Rebecca S. on November 18, 2008 12:44 PM

Can you make the frosting ahead of time and save it? Does it keep well?

Royal icing tends to harden up pretty quickly, so no, I would not make the icing ahead of time. ~Elise

Posted by: Brenda on November 24, 2008 6:12 AM

Hi Thanks you for the wonderful recipie. I've tried making the cookies today. It smells wonderful. I found that the gingerbread men tasted a little bitter. Not sure what could have gone wrong. Would it help if I cut down a little of the mollases? or spices?

Posted by: Joyce on December 4, 2008 7:56 AM

Hi--I made these tonight, and they came out very well, I thought. They were crisp but not hard and were pleasingly spicy. I couldn't find my gingerbread men cutters and didn't make the icing, but we did the best we could with what we had: http://snipurl.com/78bzn

The recipe made approximately 40 4" bears, and I had to re-roll the scraps twice. Thanks!

Posted by: Jeanine on December 5, 2008 12:52 AM

The icing has egg whites in it. Are these safe to store unrefrigerated? How long does the applied icing keep?

The icing will dry and harden. Royal icing is the same that is used on gingerbread houses and that will keep for months. Now, regarding the safety of this approach, it's up to you. For generations this icing was used as is. Recently there has been concern about salmonella with raw eggs, for which alternatives are suggested. ~Elise

Posted by: Elissa on December 5, 2008 12:04 PM

Not for the novice cookie baker. The dough was very sticky, even after an hour and a half's refrigeration. I rolled it out between two sheets of waxed paper because otherwise it stuck to the rolling pin. I am not an experienced cookie baker and don't know how to fix this. Add flour? Refrigerate longer? Chuck it into the dust bin and head to the bakery?

I tried this recipe because I wanted soft gingerbread cookies. Is soft gingerbread dough always this difficult to work with?

If it's sticky, add a little flour. ~Elise

Posted by: Linda on December 6, 2008 11:59 AM

Hi. I had searched Gingerbread Man Cookie's recipes last year for Christmas. And I found your website. I tried to bake it with your recipes. It was very good even though I baked Gingerbread man cookies first time. My family loved that too. http://euancraig.blog.ocn.ne.jp/blog/2007/12/index.html
I often checked your website since then. I like your web site. It's a beautiful!
I finally get an encourage to say, "Thank you" from Japan.

Posted by: Mika on December 6, 2008 11:56 PM

Thanks for the stensils! I'm making these for a friend and I've been having the hardest time finding a cookie cutter without the stubby legs and arms!!

Happy Holidays!
Tiera

Posted by: Tiera on December 12, 2008 1:42 PM

What about using Cream of Tartar in the icing? I think my mom used that.

And Props to the 13 yr old. That's the same age I was when I went through a cooking frenzy stage. :)

Posted by: Traci on December 13, 2008 3:54 AM

Thank you for this terrific recipe! It makes for delicious gingerbread cookies that Santa now gets to enjoy at our home each year.

Posted by: Robert on December 13, 2008 7:17 PM

These cookies are fabulous....soft and flavorful! I don't even like gingerbread cookies, but I love these! They are also fun to decorate with the kids!

Posted by: melissa on December 15, 2008 9:08 AM

This recipe looks great! I have plans to make gingerbread cookies with my nieces next week and I can't wait to try this. Maybe we'll even create our own stencils! Thanks for sharing!

Posted by: lisa (dandysugar) on December 16, 2008 8:14 AM

I love that you made your own stencils! The ginger bread woman is particularly whimsical!

Posted by: Katelyn on December 16, 2008 8:20 AM

I noticed that some readers thought these cookies were bland. Spices lose flavor over time, perhaps they need to get some new ones!

Posted by: Tres Amie on December 16, 2008 8:39 AM

In the words of Quagmire from Family Guy-Giggity.

Posted by: Cathy Viviano on December 16, 2008 2:06 PM

Hi, Elise, I am from Brazil and I like you site very much. I have done another recipe, but it was not good. Now I'll try yours. Please tell me how you cut the the cookies using the stencil, is it with a knife? or you made your own cutters? How? I wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

I used a knife, and just cut around the dough following the form of the stencil. ~Elise

Posted by: claudia on December 17, 2008 4:59 AM

Just made these cookies and couldn't keep the kids from eating the dough! They turned out soo adorable, although I had trouble frosting them. I guess I need to invest in a piping bag for the frosting instead of a plastic sandwhich bag:) the kids loved them and sometimes kids don't like all the spices so I was pleased! LOVE your blog!

Posted by: amy on December 17, 2008 8:16 AM

How do you store gingerbread cookies? I made 4 large gingerbread cookies (I think I cooked them a bit longer than I should have as they are bit harder than we like...). Should I put them in a few slices of fresh bread in the container to keep them from getting too hard? Any ideas would be helpful. Thanks a million!

Posted by: gina on December 18, 2008 5:12 PM

I like the Joy of Cooking recipe as it makes a kid-resistant dough and a crispy cookie. If I didn't have kids, I'd go for a softer dough with a more tender cookie, but for this era of my life, I use a modified version of the Joy recipe.

Which edition of Joy of Cooking? Different editions have different recipes. ~Elise

Posted by: Suzanne :: Adventures in Daily Living :: on December 19, 2008 1:19 PM

I just made this recipe for a Christmas party and the cookies turned out wonderful!! They are so cute and taste great! Thank you for the recipe.

Posted by: Lisa on December 19, 2008 4:33 PM

I made a double batch today. Best gingerbread cookies ever--rolled out like a dream, taste great. Thank you!

Posted by: Nina on December 19, 2008 8:45 PM

I made these cookies for people at work and everyone gave me high compliments. I can only claim the preparation compliments the recipe compliments I direct your way. Thank you for making my first gingerbread man baking a great experience!

Posted by: Eric McAnly on December 21, 2008 10:29 AM

I just made these today and "dough" came out very powdery? Not sticky like dough at all. I do not have a mixer, so I did this by hand with a whisk. Any idea how I can save the dough?

On the plus side, powdery as it is, the dough tastes great.

Wet your hands with water and work the dough a little, wet some more, work some more until it is no longer dry. But don't keep going until it is sticky, you don't want sticky dough, too difficult to work with. ~Elise

Posted by: Damon on December 21, 2008 3:31 PM

As a follow-up to my 12/19/08 post, I wanted to share a friend's message to me on Facebook:


********* wrote at 5:36pm
Nina! Those cookies you gave me the other day were quite possibly the best I have ever eaten!!!!!!!!

Posted by: Nina on December 21, 2008 4:00 PM

I tried out this recipe a few weeks ago and wow! I shared them and everyone raved about them. Now, I will be making 3-4 batches and give as Christmas presents. This was my first time making gingerbread men. My only problem was that I could only find whole cloves and ground them up with motar and pestle. This time, I will try grinding them up in my blender.
Thanks for the wonderful recipe!

Posted by: Joey Dressel on December 22, 2008 9:55 AM

Hi Elise, I've always counted on your website for the best cookie/pie/desert recipes (I love baking, but I'm not such a good cook) - and this one is amazing. I absolutely love the way these gingerbread cookies came out. (I used buttercream instead of royal)
I made them for a Christmas party, and also as stocking suffers for our families (along with Christmas tree sugar cookies).
Thank you so much :)
Merry Christmas

Posted by: Chantal on December 22, 2008 5:37 PM

The cookie only tasted like Molasses. Sadly the only taste i have in my mouth now is Blackstrap Molasses. (Unsulfered =)) but i recommend more cinnamon and less molasses. In the frosting, if you dont want to use eggs: it tastes better with 3/4 tablespoon of vanilla extract instead of lemon juice. Also add just a little under 1/4 cup of milk. That half drowns out the molasses taste.

Thanks Elise.. Kindof

Posted by: Aunt Moe on January 7, 2009 10:29 AM

Love this recipe, very tasty. Thanks a lot.

Posted by: fatma on September 10, 2009 6:45 AM

I made the gingerbread family last night using this recipe. They are delicious! And they turned out quite soft - I cooked them for 8 mins and 30 seconds and anyway they continue to harden when they cool, but I think the texture was perfect. I used 1/4 cup molasses and 1/4 cup honey. And I also skipped the pepper and removed the nutmeg as the taste is quite strong and not a favourite with my family. We will decorate them today. Thanks for posting the recipe! I will surely use it again!!! :)

Posted by: Valerie on November 13, 2009 2:03 AM

So, I probably made these wrong because I kept adding a dash of cinnamon here, a little honey there, and a bit of molasses. It doesn't help that I don't have much experience (I'm only 15). I made the dough tonight and plan to make them tomorrow evening after I get home from ballet practice...I hope they work out. It smells a bit interesting and of course, the color isn't right because I used light brown sugar, but I don't mind that. Thanks, Elise! I'll let you know how they turned out :]

Posted by: Mikaela on November 18, 2009 10:36 PM

Great recipe! One day while making the little guys I had some oranges on the counter; naturally my taste buds got to work on my imagination, and wondered what the zest would taste like in the dough.
After smooshing some raw dough and a little zest in my fingers, and tasting it, I decided I would try it in your Ginger Bread cookies. I added 2tsp of fresh orange zest to the dough along with the same amount of fresh grated dry ginger.
This is the second year of making these and I love them. And so do my friends! Thanks for the recipe Elise.

Posted by: Gene on November 29, 2009 11:14 AM

Whats a substitute for molasses? We dont get molasses in India. Can I use honey instead? How much?

Another word for molasses is treacle, which you may be able to find. I do not think that honey would well as a substitute, but you could try it. ~Elise

Posted by: reena on December 1, 2009 5:16 AM

Make your own cookie cutter with aluminum roof flashing. Just cut a strip and shape it round the stencil and then crimp the ends together. If you make the arms a bit longer you can vary the position.
Molasses should be available at health food stores.

Posted by: Audrey on December 5, 2009 10:04 AM

I just baked an apple pie with the same dough. Thats a delicious way to use ginger bread too.

Great idea, a gingerbread crust, thank you! ~Elise

Posted by: tobias on December 5, 2009 4:02 PM

I'm addicted to buying cookie cutters and have spent years hunting down a nicely-shaped Gingerbread Man cutter and I finally found a store that stocks the Wilton version. We don't have Michael's here in this part of the world. You, North Americans are sooooo lucky. I almost ordered one off Amazon despite the shipping costs.

I am so in love with it.
They even make copper ones - a perfect heirloom gift.
I love cut-out cookies and gingerbread is the best and smells just like Christmas.I'll be trying your recipe this Christmas.
Will this recipe make a puffy cookie? I'm actually more fond of crispy, flatter-style cookies. Actually all of my cookies end up puffy. Am I supposed to replace baking powder with baking soda?
By the way, your Snickerdoodles recipe is the best and my entire family loves your Orange Poppyseed cookie recipe. Thanks so much. You have a great site. I visit often.

If you like crispy, flat cookies, you might want to try the gingersnap cookies here on the site. ~Elise

Posted by: Jood on December 7, 2009 12:12 AM

I baked a batch yesterday for Saint Nicholas! :)

Posted by: Dolce on December 7, 2009 9:48 AM

Oh my gosh, I made these and the sugar cookies from the archive and they were awesome! I made them for a cookie decorating party my mom went to and everyone was impressed at how little they spread and how good they were. Thank you!

Posted by: Kristal on December 7, 2009 10:18 AM

MMMMM....I just took them out of the oven; the smell is so lovely. The kids can't wait to decorate and devour!!

Posted by: Megan on December 7, 2009 9:27 PM

Will love to try this recipe but as I am new to baking I have few questions. What is unsulfured molasses? Where can I get it? Is there substitute for that ingredient?
Thanks in advance.

Unsulfured molasses is high quality molasses made from ripe sugar cane. If you can't find it where you are, you might try treacle. ~Elise

Posted by: chandani on December 8, 2009 2:42 PM

I was wondering if I could make the dough and freeze it until I am ready to bake it?

I don't see why not, though I haven't done it. You will still need to defrost the dough to roll it out. So you may want to freeze it in the shape of a long tube, so it defrosts more quickly and evenly. ~Elise

Posted by: mia on December 9, 2009 10:44 AM

Great Recipe. My 4 year old and I had a wonderful time making these today!

Posted by: Brandy on December 9, 2009 6:51 PM

I made these last night and they are wonderful! Thank you so much!

Posted by: Susan on December 11, 2009 9:53 AM

i followed the recipe exactly and they tastes horrible too much mollasses i think!

Posted by: jackie nguyen on December 16, 2009 5:26 PM

I didn't care for the taste much either. I actually thought they were a little weak; maybe my spices are getting old. Did have some fun with the stencils. Picture in url.

Posted by: S on December 18, 2009 9:12 AM

I just used this recipe for my first attempt at making Gingerbread cookies (for 6 year old class Christmas party today). I made a couple of modifications and these were the BEST gingerbread cookies we've ever had!

First, I left out the cloves and pepper and I used a whole egg instead of just an egg white (it accidentally fell in so we went with it!) and they were so moist and yummy!

I liked them cut closer to the 1/4" thickness better than the 1/8"...a bit more cakey and just plain yummy!

My husband says "we never have to buy them at the store ever again.

The first batch I made was not chilled and even though it was a bit sticky to work with (added flour) they turned out just as well as the chilled dough batch. What I found helpful when rolling was to have a bit of flour on the wax paper and then put another piece of wax paper over the dough to roll....first time trying that too!

The ginger flavor was just right!! It was just so much better without the cloves.

Thanks for the recipe!

Posted by: Tawney Warren on December 18, 2009 9:51 PM

This recipe is so good that I decided to keep my first batch for myself and make a second round for presents. The cookies are full of flavor, very savory. However, I can see where people who are expecting *cookie-sweet* might be disappointed. This is definitely a ginger-spice flavored cookie that kicks you in the mouth. And writing about it makes me want to go have another one.

Posted by: cristey on December 20, 2009 9:50 AM

Thanks for wonderful Christmas recipe! Very tasty! Greetings from Latvia and mery Christmas!!!

Posted by: Anete on December 23, 2009 1:19 PM

Black pepper in gingerbread men? o.o
Why is black pepper needed for this recipie? What does it do?
And what about unsulfured molasses? Is that the same as the molasses I can find at the store?

I cook a lot but am new to some things, I'm just trying to learn. : )

A small amount of finely ground black pepper will give the cookies a slightly spicy kick. Unsulfured molasses is molasses made from ripe sugar cane that does not require sulfur as a preservative. ~Elise

Posted by: Anne on December 23, 2009 11:32 PM

Hey, Elise! I started baking these on Christmas Eve and my baby three-year-old sister had SO MUCH fun cutting shapes with cookie cutters (we had no humans, just trees and stars...). Then we pressed shiny candy decorations into them and after they were baked, her and my cousin squeezed coloured frosting all over them. They had SO MUCH fun, I cannot explain. And for the first time, my sister actually ate the cookies I baked. She adored them.

Merry Christmas to you and your family! Blessed holidays to you!

PS. In my country, we do not have liquid molasses so I tried caramelizing the molasses sugar. The cookies turned out fine, but I heard honey is a better substitute for molasses. In case anybody suffers from the problem I encountered.

Posted by: Ana on December 27, 2009 7:19 AM

I tasted the cookie dough and I thought it was gross. I was pretty sure the cookies would be gross, too. I was wrong. They are lovely. Thanks so much, Elise, for working so hard to bring the world a lovely gingerbread man recipe.

Posted by: Dorothy on December 8, 2010 5:26 PM

you rule i love these cookies

Posted by: harry on December 12, 2010 3:19 PM

Thank you so much for posting this recipe! I have searched a long time for a good gingerbread cookie recipe and this one is the BEST! The cookies were easy to make and turned out soft but firm. Both my husband and my father in law were eating them faster than I could pull them out of the oven - and they never eat cookies! Great recipe, I will recommend it to anyone :)

Posted by: Kristan on December 12, 2010 7:51 PM

To keep your gingerbread soft, put an apple in the plastic bag with them. I make Lebkuchen (King Arthur Flour recipe) and it calls for NO FAT and they are absolutely addictive. I used the lemon & orange peel in them and for a change, I shaped them by hand into two big gingerbread men. I didn't use a cookie cutter...I made them the old fashioned way, like the old woman in the story would have made. I put raisins for the eyes and dried cranberries for the buttons. They have honey in them and it makes them sweet enough that you don't need to frost them.
I did NOT chill the dough...I justs shaped them on lightly greased parchment paper. After baking, store them with the apple in the bag and enjoy! You don't need ANY butter in the recipe at all.

Posted by: Sherrie on December 14, 2010 7:54 AM

This was the perfect amount for a small gingerbread house. I found the icing too thick to pipe, but it was perfect to roll by hand and stick the house together. I made the recipe a second time for gingerbread men and only used 1.5 cups icing sugar in the icing and it was perfect. What to do with the leftover icing? My husband decided it would make great meringue. He put spoonfuls on a tray and baked in the oven at 100 degrees celsius for half and hour - they made "meringue biscuits" and were delicious!

Posted by: Pippa on December 15, 2010 2:29 AM

Great recipe!

I like that you increased the ginger and cinnamon. We like whole-grain and used half whole wheat pastry flour.

For my famous icing (that hardens!) I use a 1/2 teaspoon of almond and bit of corn syrup.

Posted by: www.bakedinmaine.com on December 18, 2010 9:40 PM

My daughter and I traditionally bake sugar cookies, spritz cookies, and russian teacakes for sharing and gift-giving during the holidays. This year my daughter urged me to include gingerbread cookies in the mix. After much online searching, I decided to attempt your recipe. I am thrilled to report that these cookies will now and forever be included in our treasured recipes. We were unable to figure out how to manipulate rolled out dough to 'Refrigerate again for 5-10 minutes to make it easier to cut out the cookies', but they turned out beyond perfect anyway. I can't begin to tell you how yummy they made our house smell. We doubled this recipe. After packaging several tins for gifts, and 'testing' many ourselves, there are less than a third of the cookies left. I highly recommend tripling this recipe if you plan to share. Have many Blessed Holidays! Thank you!

Posted by: Cindy Oakley from Indy on December 21, 2010 11:00 AM

Delicious. Made exactly as listed. The dough was a pleasure to work with and my house smells amazing.

Posted by: JB on December 24, 2010 8:38 PM

My husband and I made these today for Christmas and they came out perfectly! I added a touch more of the spices and left out the pepper. I also cooked them for the least amount of time (8 minutes) and they came out nice and soft! LOVE this recipe!!!

Posted by: Kayla on December 25, 2010 4:25 PM

Made these (along with the 1st recipe of sugar cookies...delicious!)and we all loved them! I used a little buttercream icing to lightly decorate some of them and left some undecorated. My family's biggest complaint with desserts is that they are just too sweet. These were perfect!

Everything I've made from this site has always been delicious and has gotten many compliments.

Posted by: Kay on December 29, 2010 10:20 AM

I made these cookies on Thanksgiving last year and the smell was absolutely delicious! My kids loved them and now the want me to make them for every holiday. Make them on the same day as they holiday and when you eat then nice, warm, and soft, no that is a flavorable dessert.

Posted by: Denise on November 21, 2011 3:26 PM

Great recipe. My only thought would be that they could be a bit sweeter.
If I made them again, I would use 3/4 cup brown sugar.
But, they were very good.

Posted by: Bryan on December 4, 2011 10:39 PM

Hi Elise, we like to hang our gingerbread cookies on the Christmas tree. Have always used a Southern Living recipe but was never fully happy with it because the cookies are so fragile. Any suggestions for more durable cookies? Anything in particular I should look for in trying new recipes for this purpose? Many thanks for this wonderful site! Andrea

I think there is a trade-off between durability and edibility. The first time I made gingerbread cookies from a 1972 Joy of Cooking recipe, they were tough as drywall. To make those you just need a higher ratio of flour to butter and less sugar. ~Elise

Posted by: Andrea Kearney on December 8, 2011 5:08 AM

im 13 & i want to be a baker, so i try to make cookies and stuff. I just tried to make these i thought they were good but my mom didn't think they were cooked all the way. the icing recipe you have is to make gingerbread houses thats why it hardens so fast. Can you put the gingerbread man and woman on the same page so i can print them at the same time? Thank you!o_O

Posted by: Sheyanne 13 o_O on December 10, 2011 7:02 AM

Last Christmas, I made several of Elise's Gingerbread Houses and they were a big hit. This year, I made these Gingerbread People Cookies, and they are just delightful! It's very warm where I live, and even though my granite countertop is relatively cool, I always seem to have an issue with rolled doughs getting too soft so I have to use a lot of flour to roll them, and I worry that they'll end up getting tough. These didn't. They tasted really good and were not dry, even with the extra flour they must have absorbed during rolling. Thanks Elise! You are my go-to gal! :)

Posted by: Jackie on December 13, 2011 9:07 AM

This was my first time making Gingerbread cookies, so I was hopeful that it would turn out tasting as good as the ones I buy at the store. I live in the mountains, so high altitude was definitly a concern to me. The smell of the molasses was not my favorite and was making me a little nervous as my oldest made faces while we stirred the batter. Rolling the dough was easy (used wax paper underneath)and used a big Gingerbread boy cookie cutter. Very fun! We followed the directions exactly and they are really tasty and smell wonderful. After they came out of the oven they had puffed up slightly, but held their shape perfectly. We cant wait to decorate after they cool. Will definitly use this recipe again as I think we will make this a yearly tradition. My children loved doing this, as did I. Thank you so much!!!

Posted by: Crystal on December 13, 2011 7:25 PM

Thank you, thank you for not including rediculous metric measurements in your recipes. I live in Canada, I use metric for cooking and baking and don't understand the confusion that most recipe sites have with metric. 1 cup of anything is 250 ml of anything. Units of volume need to convert to units of volume. 1 cup of flour should never be converted to 125 grams. And there is no way I can weigh 1/2 gram of nutmeg, 1/4 teaspoon or 2ml yes.

Thanks a metric tonne.

Well, when it comes to baking, weighing is actually much more accurate, especially when it comes to flour. So, when I think of it, and I don't think of it nearly enough, I do like to weigh the ingredients. Have you ever compared measuring cups? Even in the U.S. different brands of measuring cups can have wildly different volumes. Drives me nuts. ~Elise

Posted by: Terry McGuire on December 14, 2011 2:55 PM

Hi, I live in Italy and I would like to make gingerbread men for my little girls for Christmas but I cannot find molasses nor brown sugar. No treacle either. I don't know what to replace the molasses with - honey? Can I use non processed sugar instead of brown sugar?

This gingerbread man cookie recipe requires molasses. I would look for another recipe, or make sugar cookies in a gingerbread man cut-out shape. ~Elise

Posted by: Raphaella on December 15, 2011 1:31 PM

Hi, your cookies are awesome I can't wait to start eating them!!!!!!

Posted by: Abbey on December 17, 2011 9:42 PM

i a sm sorry but this was so crumbly it was very very hard to roll it :( cookies are very dry in taste . very dissapointed :(

Posted by: HANNA on December 18, 2011 6:45 AM

Thanks for the lovely cookies! I made these with my 3-year-old son today. It was the first time making gingerbread men (for both of us) and we had a blast. I ended up not using the icing and just using dried fruit for eyes/buttons.

I made four batches out of the dough. The first two batches turned out to be too crispy because I kept them in the oven too long. I had followed the recipe's advice about keeping them in the oven until they were crispy and that resulted in the cookies being a little bit too crispy after they had cooled down. So, for the last two batches, I took them out after 10 minutes no matter how soft they were. That worked perfectly. They hardened a little bit during the cooling process, so they were crispy but not too hard. Overall, a great recipe and one that is sure to be a Christmas staple in our family. Thanks Elise!

Posted by: Anju on December 19, 2011 7:37 PM

good coookies:)

Posted by: hailey on December 20, 2011 11:33 AM

Thank you for a wonderful recipe. I agree - I made the Joy of Cooking Gingerbread men a few years ago and they were inedible! (And I have the newer edition.) Though I do a lot of baking I have had a disproportionate number of gingerbread disasters. These however, were a big success! I made a double batch for my daughter's Christmas program because she really had her heart set on gingerbread men. We decorated them together with royal icing and all the kids loved them. The smell alone I think qualifies as aromatherapy.

I had the best luck rolling the dough on waxed paper, and baking them on parchment paper.

Thanks for the recipe, it's in my file now!

(PS- I found my gingerbread man cutter at a flea market. He stands a little shorter than the template, and I got about 3.5 dozen from a single recipe).

Posted by: Jorie on December 21, 2011 7:34 AM

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