Yuletide Gingerbread

Serving size: 12
Preparation time: 30 Minutes
Cooking time: 10 Minutes
Ingredients:

3 tsp dried ginger
1 tsp ground cloves
2 tsp of cinnamon
1 tsp salt
A dash of vanilla extract
1 tsp of bicarbonate of soda
125g butter
1 free range egg
175g brown sugar
2 tbsp golden syrup
3 tbsp honey
Zest of a clementine
12 oz of plain flour


Featured in:
December 2019

Preheat the oven to 180 degrees centigrade

Cream the butter and sugar until smooth, then add the egg and whisk into the mixture

Add remaining ingredients apart from the flour

Mix well, then slowly add the flour and stir until a soft dough is formed

Place the dough in the fridge until firm

Remove the dough from the fridge and roll it out evenly on a floured surface to about half a centimetre thickness, (it will puff up as it cooks so don’t roll it out too thick)

Cut into desired shapes and place on a greased tray (I use baking paper greased with butter) and place in the oven for around 10 min – keep an eye on it, as it cooks quite quickly!

Once firm and golden take the gingerbread out of the oven and leave to cool then place in an air-tight container

Icing and decorations can be used to adorn your gingerbread to decorate the tree or make a gingerbread house. The mix can also be adapted to be sweet or savoury by adding desired spice or savoury seeds (I love adding a few caraway seeds).

You can go for elegance with these simple classic biscuits and even add some of these lovelies to the cheese board. Ginger goes perfectly with the saltiness and sour tones of good quality local Lincolnshire cheese.

I doubt you will have any left over, but if you do, bash them up to make sticky, golden crumbs for ice cream and dessert toppings – or even a base for cheesecake.

Enjoy!



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Grantham school joins Carol Service in celebration of town’s hospitalPupils from St Mary’s Catholic Voluntary Academy are taking part in the first Carol Service to celebrate the special relationship Grantham and District Hospital has with the town and surrounding communities.The school children will join in the singing of favourite Christmas Carols as well as perform their own set musical piece at the Carol Service on Thursday 11th December at 7pm, in St Wulfram’s church, Grantham.Deputy Head Teacher Olivia Mumford said: “The Carol Service is a fantastic opportunity for our pupils to share the joy of music while showing appreciation for the incredible work done at Grantham and District Hospital. It’s a privilege to support such an important event in our town."The Carol Service has been organised by United Lincolnshire Hospitals Charity, who work closely with staff at Grantham and District Hospital and provides those extras for staff and patients that NHS budgets are unable to fund. Further details on the Grantham NHS Carol Service can be found by visiting www.ulhcharity.org.uk/news/christmas-carols-at-grantham-st-wulfram-church-in-thanks-for-towns-sup... ... See MoreSee Less