Traveler Bill’s Test Kitchen: GINGERSNAPS

Whenever you order anything from King Arthur Flour they will always include a card with one of their recipes as well as a discount code for your next order.  Usually I see these and simply think it would be a good idea to make them.  Then I saw GINGERSNAPS!

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The recipe is too good to be true.

  1. Deceptively simple instructions.
  2. The ingredients needed were all in out kitchen. (Except as it turns out Molasses.  A quick trip to the Associated remedied that.)
  3. All the tools necessary were available and functioning.

So here, in photographic (and motion picture) form…

Traveler Bill’s Test Kitchen: King Arthur Flour’s Gingersnap Recipe

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Five ounces of shortening

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Weighed out, of course.

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7 ounces of granulated sugar.
(Also on display, Traveler Nell’s penchant for labeled Tupperware.)

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A half teaspoon of salt.

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Two tablespoons baking soda…

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Oops…that was supposed to be two TEASpoons.
Lets, go back a couple steps.

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Ok, Sugar, Salt and Baking Soda…back to the recipe.

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A large Egg

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A third cup of molasses…aw crap…it’s spilling.  Let me dump it here.

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(Ok this is adding the molasses two steps too early…what harm could come?)

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Nine and 7/8ths oz. of KAF All Purpos Unbleached Flour

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One to two teaspoons of ground ginger.  I opted for about one and a half.

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A half teaspoon of ground glove.

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A teaspoon of ground cinnamon.  Now last Christmas Traveler Nell made an authentic English Christmas pudding that called for what would have been a $100 of ingredients if bought locally.  Luckily I married a savvy shopper.  Sourcing online she found all the necessary items at Nuts.com.  She got a huge bag of cinnamon sticks for a ridiculously low price and we have been searching for recipes to grind our own cinnamon since.

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My former coffee grinder with the broken sticks.

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Give the ground spice a little strain so there are no large pieces in the dough.

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Take a teaspoon of fresh ground cinnamon and add to the other spices.

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Put another teaspoon in a bowl.

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Along with a quarter cup of sugar for the coating.

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Now, in a large bowl beat the shortening, sugar and salt until combined. (Remember, the molasses was added early in error.)

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Then beat in the egg…THEN the molasses.20130106-225220.jpg

Oh yeah, I’m supposed to pre-heat the oven to 375° F

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This (I am assuming) is what the batter should look like at this point.20130106-225234.jpg

 

Add the flour and spices and beat until you get a smooth but fairly stiff dough.20130106-225249.jpg

Scoop a teaspoon of the dough and coat it in the cinnamon sugar.  (My cookie scoop was too large and I ended up using a table teaspoon for portioning.)

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Arrange 1.5 in. (3 cm) apart on a baking sheet that has been greased or covered with parchment paper.Put them into the 375 oven for 11-13 minutes.

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Ginger Snap in a Snap from Traveler Bill on Vimeo.
Here is a time-lapse film of a batch of ginger snaps cooking.

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Slide the parchment out of the pan and cool on a rack. Just try to not eat any of the snaps out of the oven. ( At this I did not succeed.)

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After four and a half dozen I decided I was done rolling dough and made one massive snap.

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Which was delicious!

I would definitely recommend this recipe to anyone who likes a Gingersnap.  Next time I am thinking of using fresh ginger instead of or in addition to the ground stuff.  I think this will give the cookies an authentic kick.  Otherwise this is as foolproof a recipe as you can find (as I have shown with my multiple errors).  Typically I am not that error-prone when baking.

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