I
had planned to spend much of the year researching gingerbread recipes in
preparation for this year’s Christmas advent project. To that end I have saved
many gingerbread recipes to my Pinterest board. However, after the first few tries,
I lost heart. No matter the recipe, the end product was dry. And I picked up on
silent vibes from Mike that he wasn’t a fan of these experiments.
The
topic still sparks my imagination, though, so I hadn’t quite given up. While
shopping at Walmart recently, I picked up yet another jar of molasses, now available only in smaller quantities, it seems. That’s the way they keep you from realizing
just how very expensive it is, I suspect.
Anyway,
I decided not to check myself out, so I got in line at one of the manned
registers. The cashier was friendly and chatty, and I never complain of a
chatty cashier. I know that when it’s my turn, she’ll chat with me, too.
“What
are you going to do with the molasses,” she asked. (I’m no judge of age, but I
think it’s safe to say she fit my generation.)
“Gingerbread,”
I responded.
“Mine
is hard,” she said, matter-of-factly, and my ears pricked up.
“Hard?
Do you mean dry,” I asked.
“Yes,
dry and hard,” she said.
“I
know what you mean,” I continued, “but I don’t think it’s supposed to be.”
“Oh!
My mother makes wonderful gingerbread,” she said. Oh! Now she’s going to tell
me what her mother says. I love to hear what the older generation has to say,
but you know how it is -- those folks are becoming scarce, and the implication is that I am now the older generation.
“So,
what’s wrong with ours,” I asked. “Are we baking it too long?”
“That’s
what my mother says,” she responded. “She says to cut the heat and take it out
sooner.”
And
remember – this happened at Walmart. You just never know . . .
So,
yesterday afternoon I made gingerbread again using Betty Crocker’s recipe for “Old-fashionedGingerbread.” As per the directions, I set the oven at 325 rather than the usual 350. And
at 50 minutes, I removed it, even though my inclination was to bake that extra
five minutes. This one was nice and moist, and Mike has said several times that
it’s delicious.
The
recipe called for a teaspoon of ginger and a teaspoon of cinnamon. We like it
spicy, so I added a little more ginger and ¼ teaspoon of cloves. I’m a big fan
of cloves. KW
2 comments:
Mmm, gingerbread! You've got me wanting some now. So glad you found a solution for yours!
Maybe a little more raisins would help too.
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