Maida Heatter’s English Gingersnaps

Hi there.  It seems I’ve been missing.  The holiday season flew right by me, Thanksgiving was a bust (well, not totally, but there wasn’t any turkey), and I’m not really sure how all of a sudden it’s Christmas next week.  How on earth did that happen?

pile o' cookies

I guess I’ve been preoccupied with client dinners and wedding planning.  And these scallops had clouded all thoughts of other food.  Wednesday, however, I made a batch of Maida Heatter’s English Gingersnaps, so I hope that counts for something.  I’m betting most of you have your cookie-making planned—or executed—by now, but if you’re like me and haven’t gotten that far yet, these are for you.

Spices

They’re gloriously easy, and delicious to boot.  The spices—lots of them—are sifted with flour and added to butter creamed with dark brown sugar and molasses, and then the dough is rolled into balls and tossed in sugar. That crackly sugar crunch is essential to holiday cookies; I couldn’t imagine a Christmas without it (the thought of one is probably what knocked me into the holiday mode at last). The combination of spices, too—of cinnamon and clove and ginger and allspice and black pepper—-is Christmas to a tee. Don’t let the black pepper scare you: all you’ll notice it some gentle heat that, with the right amount of salt, makes this the perfectly seasoned cookie.

dough

It looks like we’re in for a snowstorm this weekend, so I’ll be baking some more cookies. It’s the perfect time, actually, to fall into the holiday spirit. I’m just not sure which cookies to bake. Any suggestions? Preferably the kind that can be pulled off after a few glasses of eggnog, of course.

ginger cookies

English Gingersnaps

These cookies are from Maida Heatter’s Book of Great Cookies, my all-time favorite cookie book, worthy of a spot on any cook’s bookshelf.  Besides having a wide range of recipes, each one I’ve tried has been delicious, with that perfectly seasoned quality I’m so smitten with.

This is a classic recipe for large, dark, semisoft gingersnaps.

2 ¼ cups sifted all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking soda
½ teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon ground ginger
½ teaspoon ground cloves
¼ teaspoon allspice
¼ teaspoon ground black pepper
6 ounces (1½ sticks) butter
1 cup dark brown sugar, firmly packed
1 egg
¼ cup molasses
Granulated sugar (to roll the cookies in)

Sift together the flour, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, ginger, cloves, allspice and black pepper and set aside.  In the large bowl of an electric mixer cream the butter.  Add the brown sugar and beat well.  Add the egg and the molasses and beat for a few minutes until the mixture is light in color.  On low speed gradually add the sifted dry ingredients, scraping the bowl with a rubber spatula and beating only until incorporated.

Refrigerate the dough briefly (in the mixing bowl if you wish) until it can be handled; 10 to 15 minutes might be enough.

Adjust two racks to divide the oven into thirds and preheat to 375 degrees F.

Spread some granulated sugar on a large piece of wax paper.  Use a rounded tablespoonful of dough for each cookie.  Roll it into a ball between your hands (rubbing your hands with a bit of canola oil helps keep the cookies from sticking ), then roll it around in the granulated sugar, and place the balls 2½ to 3 inches apart on cookie sheets.

Bake the cookies for about 13 minutes, reversing the cookie sheets top to bottom and front to back once during the baking to insure even browning.  The cookies are done when they feel semifirm to the touch. (I found that my cookies, in my electric oven, took about 11 minutes.)

With a wide metal spatula transfer the cookies to racks to cool.

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No Responses to “Maida Heatter’s English Gingersnaps”

  1. Emily Says:

    I’ve been obsessed with ginger cookies lately, I posted some on my site last week. Still, my favorite cookies are the classic chocolate chip. My favorite recipe is here if you want to try them http://kitchenbite.com/?p=100

  2. Kristi Rimkus Says:

    I love Gingersnaps. Your pictures are fantastic, and your cookies look delicious!

  3. Julia (Color Me Green) Says:

    ok i just decided i need to make these instead of gingerbread men!

  4. Shannon (The Daily Balance) Says:

    these look fantastic!

    ~new to the blog and wanted to say hi ;)

  5. Lisa@The Cutting Edge of Ordinary Says:

    Yum! I just made some soft molasses cookies today, but these are calling my name now! I just might have to go back in the kitchen and make them.

  6. Julia Says:

    Mmms. Pepper is key!

  7. Crystal Says:

    I live in France and usually have friends bring me ginger cookies from England, but now I’ll be able to make my own – thanks!

  8. robin Says:

    Hi Shannon! Thanks for coming by. :)

  9. robin Says:

    You’re very welcome, Crystal. So glad you found the blog.

  10. robin Says:

    I made some similar chocolate chips on Monday… couldn’t resist!

  11. redmenace Says:

    I’m getting this book! I am a great lover of the gingersnap. Always looking for the perfect recipe. Thanks, Robin!

    xo
    Robin

  12. robin Says:

    Oh, good! I find that reading older cookbooks is really fun, too. Vintage-y. ;)

  13. Carolyn Jung Says:

    Oooh, black pepper would indeed be a great compliment to the lovely heat of the ginger. So I have to ask, since chewy is my fave texture — are these cookies on the chewy side? Or more crispy?

  14. robin Says:

    Hi Carolyn! The cookies are pretty thick, so are chewy on the first day or two, but crisp up after that. (And are rock solid by the fourth or fifth day…)

    Happy New Years!

  15. Talisha Oley Says:

    Hi. Real nice information on Maqui Berry. I discovered your nice blog while searching google. For the preceding few days I have been seeking to learn more. Particularly anything to do with the dieting babble. I’ve heard it all and my neighbor continues advertising her newfound weight loss fad on me. So I am grateful I discovered you. All the best!

  16. Alice - Online Schools Says:

    They look so good! Heavenly treats!

  17. greyhanded Says:

    Wow! It looks&sounds amazing. I’m definitely going to try it out.

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