by: Mina of Mini Piccolini
Last weekend, to kick-off Christmas, we had a little cookie-decorating party for my sons Alec and Louis and their friends Filip and Ebba. I thought it would be fun for them to do gingerbread houses, but the actual building isn’t really that much fun for such small children. So I prepped mini gingerbread houses for each of the children to decorate. and they were so thrilled when they came into the kitchen and found their own house, icing, and a bowl of candy to decorate with.
The secret to these little houses is that they’re not even made of gingerbread (no-one is going to eat them anyway). I just bought whole wheat biscuits and put them together into little houses. Super easy and super super fun.
Here’s how to make them:
Supplies:
Square biscuits – 6 for each house. I used whole wheat biscuits but graham crackers would work too.
Sugar
Icing – ready-made or homemade
Candy for decorating
1) Melt the sugar in a small sauce pan, stirring constantly. When it’s brown and syrupy, it’s ready. Keep it on really low heat, so it doesn’t harden. And be careful – caramelized sugar is REALLY hot. I would do this when the children are tucked in at night and can’t get anywhere near it.
2) Make right angles out of pairs of biscuits. Take two biscuits, dip one edge of each biscuit in the caramelized sugar and put them together in right angles.
3) When your right angles have hardened (just takes a minute or two), dip the free edges in caramel and put two right angles together to form the walls of the house.
4) When the squares have hardened, dip them in caramel and make the last right angles on like a roof.
5) Decorate the houses with icing, candies, almond slivers – whatever you wish! For small children, it’s best to help them spread some icing on the house, and then let them stick on the candies etc.
A cookie-decorating party is such a fun way to get into the Christmas feeling, especially for children. If you don’t have time to prep little houses, don’t let that stop you! You’ll have just as much fun with store-bought icing and ginger snap cookies. Just put on some Christmas music and hop to it! This is not the season to feel Pinterest pressure; focus on the fun and being together and don’t worry too much about the details.
squash / 13208 posts
Love it – wish I saw this before I bought our kits last weekend!
Another tip if you don’t plan to eat the house – use a hot glue gun to put them together – works so fast!!
hostess / wonderful watermelon / 39513 posts
cute post! @Mamaof2: great tip
wonderful pea / 17279 posts
Super cute! I love how cute & easy to make these no frill houses are!
blogger / pomegranate / 3201 posts
We had a little gingerbread house decorating party this weekend, too. We used graham crackers and made icing with meringue powder, powdered sugar, and water. It was nice and strong and dried quickly. The kids had a lot of fun, as did some of the adults! I actually got the idea from Mrs. Train.
pea / 16 posts
My biggest fail with gingerbread houses is always not being able to get them to stay together. Frosting just doesn’t cut it! I never thought of using homemade caramel. I’ll have to try this next time.
blogger / apricot / 378 posts
We used to do this with graham crackers when I was a kid! Now we do the kits every year with my sister and her family. Such a fun tradition!
@Mamaof2: that’s genius! Why haven’t I thought of that yet??!
pomelo / 5621 posts
I love these little houses.
@Mamaof2: That is such a good idea.
grapefruit / 4923 posts
these are so cute. i might actually try this with my toddler even though he’s going to just eat everything instead of build.
GOLD / apricot / 341 posts
@edelweiss: Our boys are so sugar-deprived (I’m fairly restrictive about sweets) so they too were pretty focused on the eating of gingerbread (we had some cookies to decorate as well as the houses) and smarties, while their friends got more into the decorating…