Gluten Free Gingerbread House Recipe (2024)

A gluten free gingerbread house recipe that really works, plus a royal icing recipe and tips to make sure it turns out. Celiac disease and gluten intolerance doesn’t mean you can’t keep this fun holiday tradition!

Tips and Decorating Gingerbread Houses with Kids

Gluten Free Gingerbread House Recipe (1)

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How to Bake a GF Gingerbread House from Scratch

What You'll Find on This Page

My family had to go gluten free for health reasons several years ago, and when we did, we lost our annual gingerbread house baking tradition. The kids really missed this part of our holiday winter celebrations, so this year we decided to try baking a gluten free gingerbread house. We were able to make it work!

Gluten Free Gingerbread House Recipe (2)

Can I Just Buy a Gluten Free Gingerbread House Kit?

There are gluten free gingerbread house kits, but they are few and far between. They also tend to be extremely expensive! So I was super relieved when we found a way to make them gluten free. You could also try making this peppermint house alternative.

Gluten Free Gingerbread House Recipe

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We tested the recipe out with three different houses. My kids also made all sorts of things with the scraps. Days later, the houses are still standing!

Yield: 1 Gingerbread House

Gluten Free Gingerbread House Dough

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Recipe for gluten free gingerbread dough to turn into a gingerbread house that stays together!

Ingredients

  • 1 cup butter
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 cup molasses
  • 2 egg yolks
  • 4 cups GF flour (we used Bob's Red Mill)
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 2 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 2 tsp ground ginger
  • 1 tsp ground nutmeg

Instructions

  1. Cream the butter and sugar until smooth.
  2. Stir in molasses and egg yolks.
  3. Mix the dry ingredients in a separate bowl: gf flour, salt, baking soda, baking powder, cinnamon, ginger, and nutmeg.
  4. Mix the dry ingredients into the wet ingredients. Stir until smooth. You will have a nice, thick dough.
  5. Cover and chill for at least an hour (longer is better).
  6. Preheat oven to 350 degrees while you roll out the dough. We rolled ours out right on the cookie sheet, using a silicon mat to keep the rolling pin from sticking to the GF flour so that we would not have to add too much extra flour.
  7. Bake for 20 minutes, then remove from the oven. Cut out your house shapes, then return to the oven to finish backing (up to 20 more minutes, although this depends on the thickness). We cut ours with gingerbread house cookie cutters. You can also find printable templates online. This recipe was enough to make one 6-inch tall house (could have been more if we had rolled the dough out thinner). Cranial Hiccups has a printable template for smaller house that you can cut out of a single pan of gingerbread. You can make two houses out of this recipe if you use that template.
  8. Cool completely before removing from pan to decorate.

Notes

We used Bob's Red Mill 1-to-1 flour for this recipe.

Nutrition Information:

Yield:

6

Serving Size:

1

Amount Per Serving:Calories: 891Total Fat: 33gSaturated Fat: 20gTrans Fat: 1gUnsaturated Fat: 10gCholesterol: 143mgSodium: 948mgCarbohydrates: 141gFiber: 3gSugar: 76gProtein: 10g

A couple important tips: chilling your dough is really important! So is making sure that you cut the pieces out while the dough is still warm. Some people cut the pieces out before baking, but we found that gluten free dough doesn’t have enough integrity for that to work consistently. Cutting them out while the dough was still warm and then baking a little more if needed was a nice compromise.

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Royal Icing Recipe

Growing up, we used the egg whites from the gingerbread recipe to make royal icing, but these days I worry about food poisoning. So we used this meringue powder royal icing recipe instead, which I’ve used ever since I made my first from scratch gingerbread house with my kids (back before we were all gluten free). This is the recipe I recommend:

Yield: Enough to decorate 1 house

Meringue Powder Royal Icing

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Our favorite royal icing for decorating gingerbread houses.

Prep Time 15 minutes

Total Time 15 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 Tbsp meringue powder
  • 2 Tbps + 1 tsp warm water
  • 1 1/3 cups powdered sugar

Instructions

Mix the meringue powder and water; gradually add in powdered sugar. Beat until the icing forms peaks.

Nutrition Information:

Yield:

6

Serving Size:

1

Amount Per Serving:Calories: 102Total Fat: 0gSaturated Fat: 0gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 0gCholesterol: 0mgSodium: 2mgCarbohydrates: 26gFiber: 0gSugar: 25gProtein: 0g

How to Make a Gluten Free Gingerbread House

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Make sure all of your gingerbread is thoroughly cooked and cooled before building.

You need a solid building platform. We used sheets of cardboard covered with aluminum foil.

Gluten Free Gingerbread House Recipe (8)

How to Build Your House

Here are a few tips to help with gingerbread house building:

  • Consider adding any piped on details, like windows, doors, and roof tiles BEFORE building the house. We didn’t to do this, and it would have been easier if we had.
  • Use a generous amount of royal icing to attach one end piece, then a wall, then the other wall and end piece.
  • Add the roof pieces last.
  • Give a little bit of time for the frosting to set after each piece.

If you get unlucky and a piece cracks, use a little royal icing to put it back together. Let that sit, and then move on.

Some people bake their houses for another twenty minutes or so after building them, to add even more integrity. We didn’t do that, and ours held together pretty well, but if you have the patience it will make your house a little bit stronger!

Gluten Free Candy for a Gingerbread House

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The kids LOVED selecting candy for their gingerbread houses! Here is that they picked out:

They added a few other candies that they had saved. My kids are amazing at saving candy.

Getting to choose your own candy is one of the best things about making a gingerbread house from scratch! I loved seeing all of the creative ways the kids used their candy to decorate.

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If you are working with gluten intolerances or allergies like us, be sure to check packaging to make sure that your candy is safe to eat!

Gingerbread House Decorating Ideas

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Both Emma and Lily used royal icing to scallop on roof tiles:

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Johnny tiled his roof with squares of Hershey’s chocolate:

Gluten Free Gingerbread House Recipe (13)

The white Christmas tree above has a gingerbread scrap center surrounded by fondant and mini starbursts. Careful trips of royal icing were used to create icicles on the edges of the roof. The kids also piped on windows and doors. We probably should have added those before building, though!

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The joy of gingerbread building is all in the details, from this little bear date…

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To a present on a sled. I love the creativity that comes of mixing gingerbread scraps and candy!

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Have you ever made a gluten free gingerbread house? How did it turn out? Please share photos if you try our recipe!

Gluten Free Gingerbread House Recipe (17)

Share comments and feedback below, onmy Facebook page, or bytagging me on Instagram.Sign up for my newsletterto receive book recommendations, crafts, activities,and parenting tips in your inbox every week.

MaryAnne Kochenderfer

Website

MaryAnne is a craft loving educator, musician, photographer, and writer who lives in Silicon Valley with her husband Mike and their four children.

Gluten Free Gingerbread House Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the trick to baking with gluten free flour? ›

Use xanthan gum or guar gum: Gluten-free flours lack the elasticity and structure that gluten provides, so adding a binder like xanthan or guar gum can help to hold the ingredients together and give your baked goods a better texture.

What is the trick to putting gingerbread house together? ›

Fit Everything Together with Melted Sugar or Royal Icing

The second way is to use burnt sugar as your glue. Just melt C&H® Pure Granulated Cane Sugar in a pan on the stove, dip the gingerbread parts in and hold them together for a few seconds. Then, presto! You've created a solid house.

How to make gluten-free dough stick together? ›

If your blend doesn't have a binder a good rule of thumb is to add ¼ teaspoon of xanthan gum for every 1 cup of gluten free flour. This changes depending on the type of recipe you're making so it's simply a guide.

How much baking powder for gluten free flour? ›

2 teaspoons of baking powder per cup of gluten-free flour is necessary to ensure proper leavening. Baking soda and buttermilk can be used to leaven instead of baking powder, but 1-1/8 teaspoon of cream of tartar should be added for each 1/2 teaspoon baking soda used.

Do you have to add anything to gluten free flour when baking? ›

Gluten-free flours often contain fine starches, so they absorb more liquid than conventional flour. To address this, gluten-free recipes usually call for more liquid and produce looser batters. They may also call for a larger quantity of leavening, like baking powder, to help add volume and lighten the texture.

What flour is best for gluten free baking? ›

Sorghum Flour

It's great in pie crusts, cakes, muffins, breads like our Best No-Knead GF Bread and Fluffy Gluten-Free Focaccia, and cookies like our Cranberry Macadamia Nut Cookies.

How do you make the strongest gingerbread house? ›

Once the gingerbread has cooled, start spooning dollops of melted white chocolate onto the edges of the walls, roof, and sides, working bit-by-bit. Assemble one corner, put it in the fridge to set, then add another wall, and so on.

What is the best ingredient to keep gingerbread houses from falling apart? ›

Royal icing is the edible "glue" or mortar that holds a gingerbread house together and can be used to make fancy sugar decorations. It's the best option for projects like gingerbread houses since, unlike buttercream frosting, royal icing will harden once dry and keep your gingerbread house from falling apart.

How do you keep gluten free dough from falling apart? ›

To successfully make a gluten-free pie crust that won't fall apart, add one egg to your dry ingredients before adding any water. Fully combine the egg and then add only the amount of water you need to form the dough.

How to make gluten free dough bind? ›

For extra binding (since gluten is not present) a pinch of xanthan gum can be added, depending on the recipe, though I don't find it absolutely necessary. *This blend has worked wonders for me in muffins, cakes, quick breads, cornbread, waffles, gluten-free crêpes, and more.

How do you keep gluten-free cookies from falling apart? ›

Chilling helps the flours and xanthan gum absorb liquid, which makes the dough sturdier and easier to handle. Without a proper rest, your cookies are likely to crumble. Think of mix-ins as the Spanx of the cookie world. They are a sly way to ensure that your cookies look like cookies, not misshapen gluten-free blobs.

How do you adjust for gluten free baking? ›

Gluten-free baked goods often benefit from extra liquid to hydrate the flour blends, eliminate grittiness, and achieve a less dense or dry texture. However, it's very important to drive off this extra moisture during baking, or you'll wind up with a gummy texture. The best way to do this? Longer baking times.

What happens if you bake without gluten? ›

Gluten-free baking is a lot harder than traditional baking because gluten protein is what gives baked goods their structure. Bread without gluten or any gluten substitute will be thick and crumbly when it comes out of the oven.

Does gluten-free take longer to bake? ›

Bake longer.

Gluten-free baked goods often take longer to bake than their wheat-based cousins. This is because they have more moisture. Gluten-free flours are typically thirstier and need more hydration.

How do you get gluten free flour to bind? ›

Xanthan Gum

It serves many roles in gluten-free baking. Because gluten-free flours have less protein than wheat flours and are not capable of forming the same network required to stretch and surround starch granules, they need reinforcement. Xanthan gum strengthens these networks and also makes them more elastic.

How to make gluten free baked goods less crumbly? ›

One of the most common gluten-free baking tips is “let your batter rest”. Letting the batter rest gives the gluten-free flours and starches more time to absorb the moisture. In theory, it will turn your dry, crumbly cakes into delicious, moist masterpieces.

What to avoid for gluten free baking? ›

All of the following flours have gluten:
  • Enriched flour with added vitamins and minerals.
  • Farina, milled wheat usually used in hot cereals.
  • Graham flour, a course whole-wheat flour.
  • Self-rising flour, also called phosphate flour.
  • Semolina, the part of milled wheat used in pasta and couscous.

How do you make gluten free flour stretchy? ›

Psyllium husk holds moisture well and thus, when added to a gluten free flour mix, will add shelf-life and stretch, as well as supporting structure. Psyllium Husk helps to mimic gluten and works particularly well when added to recipes for yeasted and dough-bakes and pasta.

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