Round up family and friends! It’s December and the time for the (almost) mandatory baking of ginger thins is here.

Gingerbread

A tradition starting at an early age

It’s the quintessential flavor of the winter holidays to many Scandinavians. Gingerbread dates centuries back and the traditions surrounding it today are firmly established. Mostly eaten in the form of thin, brittle cookies, they’re often made at home and baking them involves everyone in the family. To many children, the yearly gingerbread sessions are their first experiences of kitchen collaboration (including liberal sampling of the dough).

Roller

Gingerbread in all shapes and sizes

Once the dough is rolled into a thin sheet, it’s time for the pastry cutters. (In Swedish, the term for them is gingerbread molds.) Bakers of all ages are welcome. Since the dough is supple and easy to handle, it’s easy to start over.

Cookie Cutters

Building a house of your own

The centerpiece is a given: the gingerbread house. Glued together with melted sugar and decorated with icing, it’s built to stand through the entire holiday season. Being deliciously edible, however, parts of the house are known to go missing. Theme, architecture and level of ambition is up to you. Happy baking!

Gingerbread House
VINTERSAGA Gingerbread house $3.99/0.661 lb

 

We love to see our customers get creative with our products. Go for it! But please note that altering or modifying IKEA products so they can no longer be re-sold or used for their original purpose, means the IKEA limited warranties and your right to return the products will be lost.

Reference: https://www.ikea.com/us/en/ideas/gingerbread-baking-a-first-taste-of-the-holidays-pub89fb03c1