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Home Christmas

Gingerbread Men

By Nagi Maehashi
239 Comments
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Published27 Nov '20 Updated18 Jun '25
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Gingerbread Men! The ultimate Christmas cookie, is it not??

Gingerbread Men propped up on a mini Christmas tree

Gingerbread Men

Is it too early to get into Christmas baking? I think not.

And is there any cookie more Christmas-y than Gingerbread Men? I KNOW not! Smells like Christmas, tastes like Christmas, looks like Christmas!

You’ll love these Gingerbread Men. You can actually really taste the ginger and spice flavour. They are lovely and moist inside, and you can make the dough months in advance – super handy to bake up fresh when the necessity arises!

Pile of Gingerbread Men
Cutting out Gingerbread Men

What you need for Gingerbread Men

Here’s what you need to make these little Christmas Gingerbread Men!

Ingredients in Gingerbread Men

Just some notes on a few of the ingredients:

  • Molasses – Essential for that deep, rich, caramel-like gingerbread flavour! It also helps hold the dough’s shape. Golden syrup makes a great sub, or treacle. Honey will also work, but the cookies will spread out a touch more and not have the same deep flavour (but still very, very good!). Maple syrup is no good, it’s too thin.

  • Brown sugar – I’ve used ordinary brown sugar here. Light brown sugar results in a slightly lighter colour gingerbread and dark brown sugar can also be used which yields a richer, deeper brown colour. All are tasty!

  • Softened butter – If you want specifics: 17°C/63°F is ideal. It should be malleable but should not make your fingers shiny with grease when you poke it. Your finger should basically be clean. The texture is important: If it’s too soft, this will compromise your cookie dough!

  • Large egg – This is an egg that is 55-60g / 2oz, labelled as “large eggs” on the carton (it’s standardised). Make sure it’s at room temperature. Fridge cold eggs won’t blend in well (and also could cool the butter).

  • Spices:

    • Ground ginger, of course. We are making GINGERbread men, after all!

    • Mixed Spice is a store bought blend of spices used holiday dishes that gives Gingerbread Men more layers of flavour. Using just ginger and cinnamon as many recipes do is just too one dimensional! Smells of Christmas, hails from Britain, common in Australia but if you can’t find it where you are, don’t worry – it’s easy to make up your own using standard spices: cinnamon, all spice, nutmeg, cloves, ginger and coriander (in recipe notes, and don’t worry if you’re missing one or two); and

    • Cloves are optional but add a nice hit of spice and warmth to the dough.


How to make Gingerbread Men

Gingerbread Men are made using a soft, generously-spiced cookie dough. It’s rolled out then a Gingerbread Men cookie cutter is used to cut the shapes out. Of course, it doesn’t have to be a Gingerbread Man – you can make any shape you want!

Making the Gingerbread Cookie Dough

How to make Gingerbread Men
  1. Cream the butter and sugar, then add egg and vanilla. You can use a stand mixer or a handheld beater, as I have done;

  2. Beat in the molasses – it will change the colour to a deep golden brown colour;

  3. Beat in the dry ingredients in 4 equal batches. Adding them gradually helps them incorporate more easily; and

  4. The dough will be soft and sticky – kind of like clay – and should stick together when you press it together.

Cutting Gingerbread Men Shapes

How to make Gingerbread Men
  1. The dough is quite soft and sticky so refrigerate it to firm it up. Do so for at least 2 hours, but you can leave it in the fridge for up to 5 days, or even freeze it for 3 months!

  2. Cut the dough in half so you have one half to work with while you return the other half to the fridge to keep it cold.

  3. Roll the dough out between two sheets of baking paper / parchment paper;

  4. Cut out Gingerbread Men shapes. My cutter is 11cm/4.5″ long. Press down firmly to cut all the way through so they lift out cleanly (though if you have scrappy edges, you can just tidy them up easily on the baking tray).

Gingerbread Dough Rolling Tips

Gingerbread dough is quite soft and sticky which is what makes the cookies moist instead of dry inside. Refrigeration makes the dough easier to work with. At any point during the roll/cutting process, you can stop and refrigerate it to make it easier to work with (be sure to cover dough with cling wrap).

Rolling out between paper is easiest. Try to minimise use of dusting flour otherwise you will have white dust on the cooked gingerbread.

When rolling, paper on underside tends to wrinkle as dough spreads out (which blemishes dough surface), so flip dough, peel off wrinkled paper then put it back on, smoothing out wrinkles.

Transferring and Baking

How to make Gingerbread Men
  1. Peel off excess dough from around the Gingerbread Men;

  2. Transfer shapes to a baking tray using a palette knife or large kitchen knife. Something long and thin is best to minimise ruining the shape!

  3. Place on a baking paper/parchment-lined tray, adjust the shapes and tidy up the edges if needed (I use a butter knife – just press on the scruffy edges to make them neat); and

  4. Bake for 12 minutes for light golden and mostly soft (though slightly crisp on edges), or 14 minutes for deeper golden and crisp. The gingerbread men will be soft out of the oven but will firm up as they cool. Note however even crisp gingerbread men soften the next day. I’m yet to discover the secret to keep Gingerbread Men crispy (other than using a drier dough but that just makes dry Gingerbread Men!).

Freshly cooked Gingerbread Men ready to be decorated

Crispy vs Soft?

If you want a softer cookie with the signature golden colour (pictured – my pick!), stick to 12 minutes bake time. For a crispy cookie with more colour, bake 14 minutes. For the latter, the cookies will be soft straight from the oven, but will harden upon cooling. Note however, even crispy cookies go soft the next day. They just won’t stay firm, sadly!

This recipe makes 20 Gingerbread Men using a cutter that’s 11cm / 4.5″ tall. I use 3 baking trays because the flow of this recipe works nicely to fill and bake one tray at a time.

3 trays of freshly cooked Gingerbread Men

Decorating the Gingerbread Men

The best icing to use to decorating Gingerbread Men is Royal Icing. It’s suitable for piping intricate designs which means it’s perfect for putting smiley faces on our Gingerbread Men, giving them decorative pants / skirts / shorts and gluing on belly buttons etc.

Also, this icing sets hard and so won’t soften the Gingerbread Men.

How to decorate Gingerbread Men
Hand holding Gingerbread Men

You can get as fancy as you want with your decorations! The way I’ve piped the icing across the arms and waist in a zig-zag is a pretty classic way of decorating Gingerbread Men.

I use mini M&M’s and silver balls for the buttons.

And yes, I did give him a smiley face. Nobody wants to eat a grumpy Gingerbread Man! 😂 And even through this toughest of years we can all find some reason to smile, right? – Nagi x


Watch how to make it

This goes down as the cutest recipe video I’ve made all year!!!

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Gingerbread Men propped up on a mini Christmas tree

Gingerbread Men

Author: Nagi
Prep: 30 minutes mins
Cook: 40 minutes mins
Dough chilling: 2 hours hrs
Christmas, Cookies
Western
4.70 from 43 votes
Servings18 – 20 gingerbread (depending on cutter size)
Tap or hover to scale
Print
Recipe video above. Classic gingerbread men! I love these because you can actually taste the spices. Smells like Christmas when they're baking!
TOP TIP: The dough is quite sticky to work with (but sticky dough = moist cookie!). The trick is to make sure it's cold – so if it gets too sticky, return to refrigerator for a bit at anytime during roll out/cutting process.

Ingredients

Dry Ingredients:

  • 3 cups flour , plain/all purpose
  • 3 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tbsp ground ginger
  • 2 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1 tsp mixed spice (Note 1)
  • 1/4 tsp ground cloves (Note 2)

Wet Ingredients:

  • 85g / 5 1/2 tbsp unsalted butter , softened (Note 3)
  • 3/4 cup brown sugar (Note 4 re: light or dark brown)
  • 1 large egg , at room temperature (Note 5)
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1/2 cup molasses, light / true (NOT blackstrap)(Note 6)
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

  • Whisk Dry Ingredients on one bowl.
  • Cream butter & sugar – In a separate bowl, cream the butter and sugar together using a stand mixer or electric beater on speed 7 for 2 minutes, or until light and fluffy.
  • Egg & vanilla – Add the egg and vanilla, then mix on speed 5 until combined (~30 sec).
  • Molasses – Add the molasses, mix for 1 minute using speed 2.
  • Gradually add dry ingredients – Add 1/4 of the Dry ingredients, then mix until you can't see flour (start on speed 1 to stop flour flying everywhere!). Repeat until all Dry ingredients are mixed in, then mix for further 15 seconds. Dough should be soft and a bit sticky – see video for texture.
  • Refrigerate – Pat dough into a disc shape, wrap in the cling wrap and refrigerate for at least 2 hours or until firm. (Can refrigerate 5 days or freeze 3 months).
  • Preheat the oven to 375°F/190°C (170°C fan) and set a shelf in the middle. Line 3 x baking trays with parchment/baking paper.
  • Take the dough out of the refrigerator and cut into half. Wrap half and return to the fridge.
  • Roll out (Note 7)- Sprinkle a sheet of baking paper very lightly with flour. Place dough on top, sprinkle surface very lightly with flour. Place another sheet of baking paper on top. Roll dough out until 4mm / 1/6" thick using a rolling pin. As you work, flip and if paper is wrinkling, peel it off then put if back on, smoothing out wrinkles.
  • Cut out shapes (Note 8) – Use a gingerbread cookie cutter to cut out gingerbread men shapes, firmly pressing to cut all the way through. If the dough sticks to the cutter, dip it into flour.
  • Transfer – Use a palette knife (or large knife) to transfer shapes onto baking sheet. Place 6 on the first sheet. Tidy edges if necessary using a butter knife.
  • Bake Tray 1 – Bake for 12 minutes (for classic light golden) or 14 minutes (dark golden and crisp). Then remove and cool fully on tray.
  • Repeat – Meanwhile, gather scraps of dough, press together then roll out again. If dough is sticky, return to refrigerator and work on the other half of the dough instead. Repeat rolling out and cutting out. You should have 18 to 20 gingerbread men in total (depending on cutter size)
  • Trays 2 & 3 – Fill and bake 2nd and 3rd tray with gingerbread men, 6 to 8 on each tray. I find the workflow that works best is baking one tray at a time ie. roll/cut-out/fill/bake one tray while you prepare the next.
  • Decorate – Fully cool on trays, then decorate! Use a half batch of this Royal Icing recipe to pipe and stick on decorations (sets hard and doesn't soak into cookies). The recipe makes more than you need, but it's impractical to make less. So freeze leftovers in fully sealed piping bag for future use.

Recipe Notes:

Speeds are for handheld beater or stand mixer ranging from 1 to 10. Low = speed 2; Medium = speed 5; Medium-high = speed 7; High = speed 9 to 10.
1. Mixed Spice is a store-bought blend of spices used in a lot of holiday dishes, and it gives Gingerbread Men that really amazing special Christmas touch. Smells of Christmas! Standard spice in the UK and Australia, but if you can’t find it, here’s how to make it:
  • 1/4 tsp each cinnamon and all spice
  • 1/8 tsp each nutmeg, cloves, ginger and coriander
If you’re missing one or two of the above, don’t fret, just skip it and replace with the same amount of ginger powder. So many spices going on in these cookies anyway, you won’t miss it! 
2. Cloves are optional but add a nice hit of spice and warmth to the dough.
3. Softened butter – Technically 17C/63F. It should be malleable but should not make your fingers shiny with grease when you touch it. If it’s too soft, this will compromise your cookie dough results!
4. Brown sugar – I’ve used ordinary brown sugar here. Light brown sugar results in a slightly lighter colour gingerbread and dark brown sugar can also be used which yields a richer, deeper brown colour.
5. Large egg – This is a 55-60g / 2oz egg, labelled as “large eggs” on the carton. Make sure it’s at room temperature – fridge cold eggs won’t blend in well (and might cool the butter – not good).
6. Molasses – Essential for that rich, caramel gingerbread flavour! Golden syrup makes a great sub, or treacle. Honey will also work, but cookie will spread a touch more, not be quite the same deep golden colour and not have the same rich flavour (still very, very good!).
Maple syrup is too thin and will lose its flavour. Molasses sugar cannot be substituted either.
7. Rolling tips – Gingerbread dough is quite soft and sticky, which is what makes the cookies moist instead of dry inside. Refrigeration makes the dough easier to work with. So at any point during roll/cutting process, you can stop and refrigerate to make it easier to work with (be sure to cover dough with cling wrap).
Rolling out between baking/parchment paper is easiest. Do not use too much flour otherwise you will have white dust on the cooked gingerbread.
When rolling, paper on the underside wrinkles as dough spreads out (which blemishes dough surface), so flip dough, peel off wrinkled paper then put it back on, smoothing out wrinkles.
8. Gingerbread man cutter I used is 11cm / 4.5″ long. My favourite shape which I only have is plastic which unfortunately doesn’t cut as well. Metal ones I’ve found may cut better but the shape isn’t as nice!
9. Crunchy vs soft – If you want a softer cookie with the signature golden colour (pictured), stick to 12 minutes cook time. For a crunchier cookie with more colour, bake 14 minutes. The cookies will be soft straight from the oven, but will harden upon cooling. Note however, crispy cookies go soft the next day. They just won’t stay firm!
10. Different measures in different countries – Tablespoon and cup sizes differ slightly from country to country. In most recipes, the difference is not enough to affect the outcome of the recipe, but for baking recipes, you do need to be more exact.
This cookie recipe as written works no matter what country you are in EXCEPT Japan (please use weights provided if you’re in Japan!). I’ve made it mixing up US and Australian cups (between which you see the greatest common size variance) and it came out the same. In fact, that is why the butter is 5.5 tbsp instead of 6 tbsp which 85g concisely converts to!
11. Storage – These cookies last for 1 week in a tightly-sealed airtight container.  Actually, I just ate one that was two weeks old and it was a bit dry but still delicious – no one would complain! The recommended icing for Gingerbread Men will not soften cookies.
Dough – You can refrigerate the dough for up to 5 days or even freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw in fridge then use per recipe.
12. Nutrition per Gingerbread Man, assuming 20 (excluding icing).

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 181cal (9%)Carbohydrates: 33g (11%)Protein: 3g (6%)Fat: 5g (8%)Saturated Fat: 3g (19%)Cholesterol: 20mg (7%)Sodium: 11mgPotassium: 263mg (8%)Fiber: 1g (4%)Sugar: 16g (18%)Vitamin A: 139IU (3%)Calcium: 72mg (7%)Iron: 2mg (11%)
Keywords: gingerbread cookies, gingerbread men
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

Life of Dozer

You wear an elf hat for a photo, I’ll give you a Gingerbread doughnut …. pretty good deal, if you ask me!

Dozer gingerbread men doughnuts
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239 Comments

  1. Katy says

    December 18, 2021 at 12:22 pm

    Hi Nagi! Silly question I’m sure, but I’m wondering about the salt. I took all of my ingredients out based off the image on the top but then I followed the recipe and after I put my dough in the refrigerator I realized I hadn’t put any salt in it. Think it’ll be ok? X

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      December 19, 2021 at 6:00 pm

      Hi Katy – that will affect the flavour a bit but they will still be tasty – I always suggest you jump to the written recipe at the bottom and read it all the way through before starting to cook so as not to miss anything! N x

      Reply
      • Amy says

        December 22, 2023 at 3:57 am

        How much salt? It is not in the written recipe.

        Reply
      • Lucinda says

        December 9, 2022 at 7:16 am

        Hi Nagi, thank you for this recipe. I can’t see any info about how much salt to include, grateful if you could share here, hoping to make today! Thank you 🙏🏼

        Reply
      • Kate says

        December 23, 2021 at 10:57 am

        I can’t see any notes about salt at all in the recipe..may be missing something here 🤔

        Reply
        • Daisy says

          December 1, 2022 at 9:55 pm

          I can’t see the salt in the written recipe too, how much salt are you suppose to put in?

          Reply
      • Katy says

        December 19, 2021 at 11:05 pm

        I didn’t add it since it wasn’t in the written instruction. They turned out okay!

        Reply
  2. Elisa says

    December 5, 2021 at 11:11 pm

    Hi Nagi, I wonder if there is a mistake with the metric conversion for flour? I think 1 Australian cup of flour is 125g rather than 150g. I’m in Japan so I always use the metric system.
    Thank you for your recipes by the way!

    Reply
  3. Jan says

    December 4, 2021 at 10:01 am

    Hi Nagi, The feet and hands burnt a little but ok for me to eat. My oven runs very hot so will try a lower heat.

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      December 4, 2021 at 12:17 pm

      I freaked out at this message thinking it was YOUR hands and feet that got burnt, but then I realised you were talking about her gingerbread men! Phew!! 😂

      Reply
  4. Bets says

    November 29, 2021 at 7:54 pm

    5 stars
    Just tried this recipe today, used a smaller cutter because it’s so hard to find cookie cutters here, ended up being a bit dry and crispy. Will lessen my cook time by a little more next time with my leftover dough. Really yummy though! Can’t stop with just one. Thanks, perfect for the holidays!

    Reply
  5. Kim says

    November 28, 2021 at 7:59 am

    I purchased Blue Label Molasses to make these today but in fine print on the side I’ve now found it says black strap 😫
    Do you think if I mix half of this with golden syrup to kinda even it out? 😅😅

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      November 29, 2021 at 8:42 am

      Hi Kim! Yes that sounds like a solution, I would do that myself (if I thought of it!) N x

      Reply
  6. Nat says

    November 18, 2021 at 2:54 pm

    5 stars
    So yummy that I can’t stop eating 😆 I ended up resting the dough for 3 days as I got busy but it turned out great. Only used half of it and froze the rest. I found it easier to use a silicon sheet on the bottom instead of baking sheet to roll the dough as it keeps sliding. I tried your icing as well and it yielded enough for many batches so I packed them in the small Glad bags and froze them too! Your idea of using a sandwich bag as a piping bag was excellent!! Thanks Nagi😘

    Reply
  7. Deniz says

    October 25, 2021 at 6:58 pm

    Why can’t we use blackstrap molasses?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      October 26, 2021 at 11:07 am

      Hi Deniz. Blackstrap has a really strong flavour that dominates everything else in the cookie and which many people find unpleasant. Treacle or molasses are better options. But if you really love the taste of blackstrap then it will work! N x

      Reply
      • Deniz says

        October 27, 2021 at 11:35 pm

        Hi Nagi, all I had was blackstrap, carob extract and maple syrup. I ended up mixing 3/4 carob extract with 1/4 maple syrup. Thankfully, it turned out beautifully. Another perfect recipe, thank you!

        Reply
        • Arina says

          December 19, 2022 at 2:00 pm

          5 stars
          Well, maybe it was a bit my fault. The cookies were done with the help of my daughter and some of them were too thin. Just have measured the burnt once now and they were only 2-3 mm once baked…She probably went too hard on them with the rolling pin! 😀 P.S.: love the idea of rolling the dough on the baking paper. I didn’t need to transfer them to the tray one by one but put the entire baking paper with rolled cookies on it straight to the tray 😉

          Reply
  8. El says

    September 30, 2021 at 7:49 am

    Which brand molasses and where can I buy it? Where can I buy the man mold?

    Reply
  9. EMILIO says

    June 29, 2021 at 2:04 am

    Hello Nagi

    Can this dough work for a gingerbread house?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      June 29, 2021 at 7:55 pm

      Hi Emilio, you can use it for a gingerbread house, I like to make it slightly thinner and cook a further 3 minutes to dry it out and make it crunchy. N x

      Reply
  10. Caitlin says

    May 3, 2021 at 11:34 am

    What do I do if my dough is super sticky?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      May 3, 2021 at 7:15 pm

      Hi Caitlin, yes gingerbread dough is notoriously sticky – that’s why it needs to be refrigerated before use 🙂 N x

      Reply
      • Sali says

        October 12, 2021 at 10:08 am

        5 stars
        Great recipe Nagi, just made these yesterday and they’re delicious
        I baked my cookies for 10mins, I think my oven runs a bit warmer as some were burnt in the first batch haha
        Thank you for sharing x

        Reply
  11. Cushla says

    February 1, 2021 at 10:44 am

    Hi Nagi. Love your recipes, my children Thank You.
    My elderly neighbour taught me how to crisp up my ginger bread men. When you have finished baking and the oven has cooled a little bit – pop them back in – leaving the door open. Works a charm.

    Reply
    • EH says

      June 29, 2021 at 1:25 am

      Hi Navi question can you make these cookies into a gingerbread house dough?

      Reply
      • ur mum says

        November 25, 2021 at 9:45 am

        its 1.25am why are you looking a gingerbread

        Reply
  12. Michelle says

    January 10, 2021 at 4:22 pm

    Hi! Just following some of the other comments, made these yesterday and my dough came out dry as well (but tasted fine). I used the metric/weight conversion and only conclusion is this website says 450g flour and I cross-checked with your Instagram post that says 300g?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      January 11, 2021 at 2:00 pm

      Hi Michelle, 450g as per the recipe is correct – 150g per cup ( x 3 cups). What type of flour were you using? Did it resemble the texture like in the video? N x

      Reply
      • Michelle says

        January 11, 2021 at 9:29 pm

        Hi Nagi, thanks for your reply!
        I’m not living in Aus at the moment.. I use the British brand “Homepride” all-purpose flour. Wouldn’t have thought it would affect as not had issues with anything else?
        My dough was not like the video, was dry and could still see white flour. I handled it (to maybe melt the butter/sugar) and got it to just stick together. Was fine though, no complaints from the guinea pigs!

        Reply
  13. Thays says

    December 29, 2020 at 4:17 pm

    5 stars
    These cookies are AMAZING. So tasty and easy to make!! Thanks for sharing!

    Reply
  14. Mary says

    December 27, 2020 at 3:46 am

    3 stars
    First I want to say that your site is the first I go to for recipes. I’ve made many of them with outstanding success.
    Which is why I tried your gingerbread men. I followed the recipe completely. My men were not very tasty, so I decided to check out other gingerbread recipes and found that of the ten or so I looked at, none had baking powder in them — only baking soda. Did you intend to include baking powder in your recipe? 😞

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      January 10, 2021 at 8:12 pm

      Hi Mary! I’m sorry you didn’t think they were tasty, I would have thought all those spices and the molasses packs them full of Christmassy flavour! The baking powder is the rising agent, it works just like baking soda but it’s not as strong so I find it makes the cookies rise more evenly. 🙂 So it would not have affected flavour. Is there a chance you were using old spices? The flavour of spices fades with time 🙂 N x

      Reply
  15. Sumi Shan says

    December 25, 2020 at 9:12 pm

    Thank you for sharing your recipe. It turned out good. Tastes good too❤

    Reply
  16. Cheryl says

    December 25, 2020 at 6:48 am

    5 stars
    Kids absolutely loved these cookies. We are getting ready to icing them.

    Reply
  17. Lemon says

    December 24, 2020 at 11:20 pm

    These are delicious 🤤

    Reply
  18. Mardi C says

    December 24, 2020 at 2:41 pm

    5 stars
    Yum yum and yum
    So easy and tastes exactly like Christmas
    I’ve made 3 batches of these little tasty biscuits and they go quicker than I can make them
    Definitely a winner

    Reply
  19. Lauren says

    December 23, 2020 at 9:23 pm

    Another winner of a recipe! I’m an avid baker, but first time I’ve done gingerbread and it turned out really well! Just curious about the icing. I did mine exactly like yours, so very little icing on each cookie. Just curious about the raw egg white and hot Brisbane weather! I ended up putting them in a container in the fridge (which is obviously not ideal, but also don’t need food poisoning for Christmas lol). Thoughts?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      December 24, 2020 at 12:15 pm

      I don’t know anyone that got sick from a gingerbread cookie Lauren! But you’re right – there may be a small risk (but not from storage, it would be form eating the egg white whether is was stored in the fridge or not). You want to keep cookies in an airtight container on the bench and always use pasteurised eggs to avoid any risk of salmonella 🙂 N x

      Reply
  20. Claudia says

    December 23, 2020 at 9:55 am

    Hi! My dough came out crumbly…can it be fixed or should u start over?

    Reply
    • Delphy says

      December 16, 2023 at 1:30 pm

      Hi I melted two thin slices of butter in the microwave with a little molasses and mixed the crumbly dough by hand. They worked out fine as long as the texture is sticky like clay instead of sand , they were perfect. In total more like 115 g of butter.

      Reply
    • Nagi says

      December 23, 2020 at 2:52 pm

      Hi Claudia, it should actually be quite sticky! Is there a chance you mismeasured something? N x

      Reply
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Hi, I'm Nagi!

I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative! Read More

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