Also, just because Scandinavian food, here are a couple of recipes for traditional Swedish gingerbread cookies (
pepparkakor), the first one from a classic cake cook book called
Sju sorters kakor (Seven Kinds of Cookies/Cakes) and the second one from my personal collection of family-and-friends recipes. Be aware that there are TONS of variations on this recipe! These are eaten all year round, but mostly around Christmas, and people really only bake them up themselves at Christmas.
Tools required: A large work surface or clean table, rolling pin, baking sheets, baking paper, and cookie cutters.
Kryddpepparkakor (Spicy Gingerbread Cookies) from
Sju sorters kakorMakes ca. 100 cookies100 gr butter
200 gr brown sugar (or muscovado)
100 ml suryp
100 ml fresh cream
2 tsp ground ginger
2 tsp ground cassia cinnamon
2 tsp ground cloves
ca. 850 ml plain wheat flour
2 tsp bicarbonate of soda (baking soda)
Stir butter, sugar and suryp until mixed together.
Add cream and spices.
Mix the soda with the flour and work that into the mixture until it forms a dough. Let it rest in a cool place overnight.
Roll out the dough thinly (2-3 millimetres thick) on a lightly flour-dusted surface.
Cut out shapes with cookie cutters and transfer to a lined and
cold (not hot from the oven) baking sheet. They do expand a little during baking, so not too close to each other.
Bake for ca. 5 mins at 225ºC until evenly brown.
K's Great-Great-Grandmother's Gingerbread Cookies (from a friend of mine)
(I've halved it - probably makes 100)100 gr butter
250 g granulated (white) sugar
150 ml dark syrup
2 tsp ground cloves
4 tsp ground ginger
4 tsp ground cassia cinnamon
150 ml fresh whipping/heavy cream
550 gr plain wheat flour
1 tsp bicarbonate of soda (baking soda)
Put butter, sugar, suryp and spices in a large pot and bring to the boil, while stirring.
Add the cream.
Mix the flour with the baking soda and work into the hot mixture until it forms a dough.
Chill and place in the fridge at least overnight.
Dust the work surface with flour, roll out the dough thinly and cut shapes with cookie cutters, transfer to cold, lined baking sheets, and bake at 175ºC until they are an even brown colour (5-7 mins.).
A few notes: Some of the ingredients are typically Swedish/Scandinavian, like
farinsocker, which is a local variant of a really dark, moist, brown sugar, but is actually made from beet sugar and (I think) dark syrup (or molasses). Real muscovado sugar will probably do just as well.
Typical traditional Swedish gingerbread cookie cutters depict stylized men and women (but different from the American ones), pigs, billygoats and hearts. These days there are all kinds of shapes. Moomins! Moose! Squirrels!
Let them cool on the baking sheet for a few minutes before transferring them, since they are soft when just out of the oven but turn hard when they've cooled down.
When cooled, they are often decorated with piped icing. This is made from an egg white, mixed with icing/confectioner's/powdered sugar until it forms a paste, and a drop of acetic acid (lemon juice will also do). Food colouring is not used traditionally.
Here are a few (non-traditional) examples that I made a few years back.
The dough can be kept for a very long time in the fridge if you don't have the time to bake it all up in one go. It is also very yummy to eat as it is. I know people who make (or buy) gingerbread dough and then never get to actually make any cookies from it because they have nibbled it all up little by little.
Also, American teaspoons and tablespoons are apparently slightly smaller than metric ones, but the difference is very small, so I don't think it will matter.