1. Baba Yaga Gingerbread House
Location: The New York Botanical Garden’s 2009 Gingerbread Adventures (Bronx, NY)
Irina Brandler, a Russian immigrant and owner of Sugar and Spice Bake Shop in Bronx, NY, headed a team of four bakers to make a gingerbread house for Baba Yaga, a witch-like character from Russian folklore who lives in the forest in a hut that stands on chicken legs. Irina’s version of the house stood more than two feet tall and featured a roof covered in shredded wheat cereal and Necco Wafers, pretzel fences and ladder, a trail formed with Boston Baked Beans candy, and Christmas trees made of frosted ice cream cones and pretzel rods. Three domes on the top of the house were all shaped out of fondant—one dome made of a Hershey’s chocolate kiss melted and had to be replaced. Each of these themes and more are represented in this year’s best gingerbread house creations chosen by Food & Wine editors. Bakers and confectionary designers from New York to Hawaii have been hard at work crafting these sweet-scented masterpieces, employing thousands of gallons of icing, as well as thousands of pounds of chocolate, gingerbread dough, fondant, and candy to capture the essence of the holiday season.
The mother-daughter duo behind Ardsley, New York’s Riviera Bake House took inspiration from daughter Liv Hansen’s favorite childhood fairytale to create their 2-foot tall structure. No candy was used to decorate; Liv instead completed detail work using a pipeable, watered-down recipe for gingerbread. She sculpted all of the mice and the Pied Piper from marzipan, and constructed the roof from cereal. The team dedicated five days to the project, using approximately 10 pounds of gingerbread and 2 to 3 gallons of icing.
Carolina Montoya and husband Fernado Puga spent 302 hours over the course of two months to create their gingerbread house. The traditionally designed structure featured President Barack Obama, who appeared to be climbing out the window and up onto the chimney with a bag full of toys. Montoya and Puga’s all-edible entry was constructed of gingerbread, fondant, gum paste, coconut, Rice Krispies cereal, and breath strips for window panes.
Prompted by the theme “Reel Christmas,” a team of Seattle Sheraton culinary staff and area architecture firm DLR Group created this cheeky homage to the 1983 Christmas comedy film classic A Christmas Story. Weighing around 200 pounds, the gingerbread structure featured edible reenactments of memorable movie scenes—including fondant versions of Ralphie and friend Flick by the flagpole in an amazingly detailed gingerbread neighborhood, and a recreation of the film’s iconic leg lamp sporting licorice “fringe.”
Rita and Monte Adams’ scene tells the story of Santa getting ready to ride out of an old western town following dinner at the Jingle Café, gift shopping at the Rocky Mountain toy shop, and a night’s rest at the Holly Tree Hotel. In the scene, Santa has saddled up a solid chocolate horse while elves have loaded his coach with Christmas toys. The couple used 15 pounds of flour, 22 1/2 pounds of fondant, 12 pounds of sugar, and dozens of other ingredients to make this gingerbread tableau.
It took four full days, two bakers (Kate Sullivan of Cake Power and Patti Paige of Baked Ideas) and two interns to complete this theatrical project from beginning to end. Modeled on the stage of the London Coliseum opera house, the structure — measuring 18 inches tall — and characters were all made of gingerbread, while the red curtain above was covered in fondant. Everything except the red-and-white striped mint balls was either baked from scratch or rolled, cut, piped or painted in food color by hand.
Location: The New York Botanical Garden’s 2009 Gingerbread Adventures (Bronx, NY)
Irina Brandler, a Russian immigrant and owner of Sugar and Spice Bake Shop in Bronx, NY, headed a team of four bakers to make a gingerbread house for Baba Yaga, a witch-like character from Russian folklore who lives in the forest in a hut that stands on chicken legs. Irina’s version of the house stood more than two feet tall and featured a roof covered in shredded wheat cereal and Necco Wafers, pretzel fences and ladder, a trail formed with Boston Baked Beans candy, and Christmas trees made of frosted ice cream cones and pretzel rods. Three domes on the top of the house were all shaped out of fondant—one dome made of a Hershey’s chocolate kiss melted and had to be replaced. Each of these themes and more are represented in this year’s best gingerbread house creations chosen by Food & Wine editors. Bakers and confectionary designers from New York to Hawaii have been hard at work crafting these sweet-scented masterpieces, employing thousands of gallons of icing, as well as thousands of pounds of chocolate, gingerbread dough, fondant, and candy to capture the essence of the holiday season.
2. The English Cottage
Location: The Grove Park Inn & Spa’s 2009 Gingerbread Competition (Asheville, NC)
Ten-year-old
Lydia Gentry of Hendersonville, North Carolina, made creative use of
edible materials to construct her prize-winning gingerbread house.
Lydia thatched her cottage’s roof with shredded wheat cereal, used
chocolate rocks on the foundation and chimney, and poured hard candy to
create the cottage windows.
Outside, frosting-covered pasta formed porch supports while a chocolate
candy and tapioca pearl walkway wound its way beneath a vine-covered
trellis (gum paste, pasta and frosting), past rose bushes made of crushed cereal and marshmallow, and through a lawn made of frosting and speckled with coconut “snow.”
3. Santa’s German Gingerbread Village
Location: The Sheraton Princess Ka’iulani Hotel, 2010 (Honolulu, HI)
Hotel
executive chef Ralf Bauer and a team of culinary architects spent over
660 hours designing and constructing a gingerbread village that paid
homage to both Bauer’s native Germany and to old Hawaii. Medieval
churches, bell towers, train stations, a carousel and skating rink
mingled with iconic Hawaiian structures like the Kawaiha’o mission church and
the magnificent Iolani Palace. The winter wonderland stood more than
14 1/2 feet high and 24 feet wide and was made with 200 gallons of
icing, 100 pounds of dark chocolate, 30 pounds of white chocolate, and
60 sheets of gingerbread.
4. Pied Piper Gingerbread House
Location: The New York Botanical Garden’s 2009 Gingerbread Adventures (Bronx, NY)The mother-daughter duo behind Ardsley, New York’s Riviera Bake House took inspiration from daughter Liv Hansen’s favorite childhood fairytale to create their 2-foot tall structure. No candy was used to decorate; Liv instead completed detail work using a pipeable, watered-down recipe for gingerbread. She sculpted all of the mice and the Pied Piper from marzipan, and constructed the roof from cereal. The team dedicated five days to the project, using approximately 10 pounds of gingerbread and 2 to 3 gallons of icing.
5. First Family Holiday House
Location: The Grove Park Inn & Spa’s 2009 Gingerbread Competition (Asheville, NC)Carolina Montoya and husband Fernado Puga spent 302 hours over the course of two months to create their gingerbread house. The traditionally designed structure featured President Barack Obama, who appeared to be climbing out the window and up onto the chimney with a bag full of toys. Montoya and Puga’s all-edible entry was constructed of gingerbread, fondant, gum paste, coconut, Rice Krispies cereal, and breath strips for window panes.
6. A Christmas Story
Location: The Seattle Sheraton’s 2009 Gingerbread Village (Seattle, WA)Prompted by the theme “Reel Christmas,” a team of Seattle Sheraton culinary staff and area architecture firm DLR Group created this cheeky homage to the 1983 Christmas comedy film classic A Christmas Story. Weighing around 200 pounds, the gingerbread structure featured edible reenactments of memorable movie scenes—including fondant versions of Ralphie and friend Flick by the flagpole in an amazingly detailed gingerbread neighborhood, and a recreation of the film’s iconic leg lamp sporting licorice “fringe.”
7. Gingerbread Ranch
Location: The Grove Park Inn & Spa’s 2009 Gingerbread Competition (Asheville, NC)Rita and Monte Adams’ scene tells the story of Santa getting ready to ride out of an old western town following dinner at the Jingle Café, gift shopping at the Rocky Mountain toy shop, and a night’s rest at the Holly Tree Hotel. In the scene, Santa has saddled up a solid chocolate horse while elves have loaded his coach with Christmas toys. The couple used 15 pounds of flour, 22 1/2 pounds of fondant, 12 pounds of sugar, and dozens of other ingredients to make this gingerbread tableau.
8. Three Little Pigs Gingerbread House
Location: The New York Botanical Garden’s 2009 Gingerbread Adventures (Bronx, NY)
For
her fairy-tale-themed confection, Cake Power’s Kate Sullivan
constructed an 18-inch-tall gingerbread house featuring three little
pigs and a wolf all made of fondant (the original versions, made of
modeling chocolate, melted in the Botanical Garden’s greenhouse).
The house itself, constructed of embossed gingerbread, featured such
incredible tiny details as a jellybean-covered fireplace, string
licorice rag rug, gumball lamp and vase, windows made of poured blue-tinted hard sugar, and a whimsical hanging portrait of a Star Wars clone trooper drawn in food marker.
9. London Theatre: The Gingerbread Nutcracker
Location: The New York Botanical Garden’s 2010 Gingerbread Adventures (Bronx, NY)It took four full days, two bakers (Kate Sullivan of Cake Power and Patti Paige of Baked Ideas) and two interns to complete this theatrical project from beginning to end. Modeled on the stage of the London Coliseum opera house, the structure — measuring 18 inches tall — and characters were all made of gingerbread, while the red curtain above was covered in fondant. Everything except the red-and-white striped mint balls was either baked from scratch or rolled, cut, piped or painted in food color by hand.
10. Cathedral of the Angels
Location: The Grove Park Inn & Spa’s 2009 Gingerbread Competition (Asheville, NC)
Inspired
by the way light illuminates the Bernini sculpture, “Ecstasy of Saint
Teresa,” in Rome, Billie Mochow set out to construct a gingerbread recreation
that also appeared to have light coming from it. She began her
building from the inside out, forming the mother and child figures from
gingerbread and “dressing” them in gumpaste. The faceless people
surrounding were similarly constructed from hand-cut gingerbread
cookies dressed to appear dimensional. Outside the architectural
cathedral, Mochow stacked ice cream cones to form the snow-covered evergreen trees.
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