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Christmas Gingerbread Castles
| Article
# : |
13857 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
Date : |
12 / 1988 |
1,284 Words |
| Author
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Kathleen Prentice Kathleen Prentice is a free-lance writer whose articles appear
in the Detroit Free Press. |
Whether from grandma's kitchen or the neighborhood bakery, a candy-studded gingerbread house is the quintessential holiday tradition. It can take the shape of a cabin drizzled with softly glistening icing-snow to a turreted castle bedecked with glittering hard-candy jewels. The smell of the dough baking or even a lingering whiff of cold gingerbread is enough to warm us all.
In Shakespeare's day this sweet was truly a bread, baked to stay crisp through damp weather. According to a 1904 volume by John Ashton entitled The History of Bread, vending gingerbread in the shapes of men and women and animals was popular at early fairs.
Throughout European and American history, cookbooks have carried not one, but usually several gingerbread recipes, including hard and soft as well as "quick" gingerbread cookies and cakes. They vary from Dutch gingerbread, a 1739 recipe calling for caraway seeds, treacle (molasses), and candied citron added to the butter and ginger mix to Williamburg Ginger Cakes, a 1937 recipe similar to ginger cookies found in today's cookbooks. Early recipes called for bread crumbs; later ones for flour.
Gingerbread was popular at teatime in England and in Colonial America in the form of cakes and cookies. Although it was also enjoyed year-round, this spicy bread became part of traditional holiday fare along with goose and plum cake.
Joe Gerlach, pastry chef at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Dearborn, Michigan, remembers from his childhood "a lot of gingerbread eating in my mom's kitchen." Gerlach brought his family tradition to work at the
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