Gingerbread Christmas Tree

"Adapted from the December 2005 volume of Notebook"
 
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photo by Izy Hossack photo by Izy Hossack
photo by Izy Hossack
photo by Izy Hossack photo by Izy Hossack
photo by Izy Hossack photo by Izy Hossack
photo by Thorsten photo by Thorsten
photo by Thorsten photo by Thorsten
Ready In:
55mins
Ingredients:
13
Yields:
1 tree
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ingredients

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directions

  • Preheat the oven to 180 deg Celsius.
  • sift flour, baking powder and soda, spices and a pinch of salt into a bowl.
  • Using an electric mixer, beat butter and brown sugar until fluffy. Add honey and egg. Beat until combined.
  • On low speed, beat in sifted dry ingredients until mixture comes together.
  • Divide the dough in half. Wrap separately in plastic. Refrigerate for 30 minutes.
  • Trace 19 cm, 15 cm, 10 cm, 7.5 cm and 4.5 cm stars on to cardboard and cut out. For the 2 smaller sizes cutters may able to used.
  • Roll out dough halves until 4 mm thick. Using star templates and 7.5 cm cutter, cut out 3 stars of each size from dough. Using the 4.5 cm star, cut out as many stars as possible from the remaining dough.
  • Place same sized stars together, 3 cm apart, on baking paper-lined oven trays. Bake larger stars for 8-10 minutes; smaller stars for 5-7 minutes or until deep golden. Stand biscuits for 5 minutes. Transfer to wire racks to cool.
  • Place eggwhite in a bowl. Stir in icing sugar, 2 tablespoons at a time, until combined.
  • Stack the largest stars at offset angles, placing 2-3, 4.5 cm stars in between. Glue each layer with icing.
  • Continue stacking in decreasing size until all 7.5 cm stars are used. Finish with one 4.5 cm star flat and a second one upright. Use icing as 'glue' to decorate tree with cachous.
  • Tie up remaining small stars to look like gifts. Leave tree to set for one hour. Serve dusted with icing sugar.

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Reviews

  1. I love this gingerbread especially for the cardamom in it. It gives the cookies a very special flabour. I used fresh cardomom, cruched it in a mortar and sieved it to get grounded cardamom. Fresh cardamom has such a fresh taste, great. The ginger in here is not too overhelming, spicy, but well balanced. The combination of honey and dark sugar give the gingerbread a delicate sweet note, malty and smooth. I followed the recipe and didn't change a thing (except that I used fresh cardamom). The cutting need some time and if you don't want to make a tree I would suggest to use a cutter. The handling of the dough was easy, baking too. The cookies came out great. The taste was better next day, when all the different flavours have had time to melt. A wonderful - different - gingerbread recipe. Thanks for sharing.
     
  2. I make this every year and I get rave reviews compared to the "other trees" at the office. I have 15 different sized star cookie cutters and I double the recipe to make a tree about a foot high. I use fresh ground cardamom as well.
     
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

I'm an ex-pat NZer living in the tropical Top End of Australia. Which makes it a perfect place to make homemade bread and summer recipes all year around. I experiment on my 3 kids who have grown up trying new Zaar recipes every other day and they are thriving. I'm the lacto-ovo vegetarian in the family and somehow I got roped in to become a Forum Host here at Zaar. So check out the Vegetarian and Vegan Forum http://www.recipezaar.com/bb/viewforum.zsp?f=43 and feel free to join in whether you are a fully fledged vegan or someone who needs to cater for a vegetarian and has no idea where to start. Every year I try to do something a bit different to push the envelope a little bit. In 2005 I learned how to sail a dinghy; 2006's grand passion is mosaics. Check out my blog! Between raising three children, working almost fulltime and trying to pursue my hobbies...let's say that my time management skills have greatly improved over the years! I am also very interested in living a sustainable lifestyle. Essentially I'm finding that I'm getting back to the country lifestyle I enjoyed in my childhood even though these days I live in themiddle of suburbia. To this end I have started gardening although I am a total gardening virgin when it comes to gardening in a tropical climate. I also have a cookbook with a number of recipes you can make from scratch. Living clean and green is good for you AND cheaper!
 
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