Gluten-Free Chocolate Gingerbread Recipe (2024)

Gluten-Free Chocolate Gingerbread Recipe (1)


Chocolate Gingerbread, Gluten-Free Goddess Style

The wind is roaring through the forest next door today. The wood stove is lit, warming our bodies and our spirits. I put on my holiday playlist and stir cocoa-laced batter with a wooden spoon, imagining my fellow gluten-free bakers- all of you- out there- standing in your own humble kitchens, beating strange flours and non-traditional ingredients with a hefty dash of hope.


By Winter Solstice I will celebrate another gluten-free anniversary. NUMBER 21!

December 19, 2001 was the day I decided to shun gluten forever. What timing. Right before Christmas. I could have waited until December 26th (Christmas cookies!). Or even the New Year (Trifle!). But I didn't. I couldn't.

As soon as I connected the dots- from my plague of symptoms to their instigator gluten- I couldn't wait to begin my new life. If I had eaten my very last buttery croissant, so be it. If I had unknowingly crunched my last Milano cookie, so what. I was done.

Few of us have to make such choices.

Millions of Americans can eat pizza and bagels and Fruit Loops till the cows come home. Donuts and Ding Dongs and frozen pie crusts? No problem. Gluten isn't on their radar, never mind in their daily nomenclature. It's a "Eww yuck" punch line in a TV sit com. Something chefs and foodies either kvetch about or flirt with, eyeing the growing gluten-free awareness trend as a dietary bandwagon. Or maybe an opportunity to garner a little extra revenue. They're mildly interested, but non-committal.


And those of us with celiac-prone genes and blunted villi, and itchy wheat-induced rashes will still be here. Living gluten-free. Baking gluten-free. Wheat-free. Day after day. Wrestling with creative ingredients and conjuring kitchen magic for our kids, our families, or ourselves, or our newly diagnosed best friend.

We'll survive.

Keeping the faith, one recipe at a time. So Here's to You, Dear Reader.

Stay safe this holiday season. Take care of each other.

Love + peace,

Karina xo


Gluten-Free Chocolate Gingerbread Recipe (2)

Note from Karina (originally posted 12 years ago):

December is more than a winter holiday month, for me. It is the month I went 100% gluten-free. And changed my life (no more misery!). The year was 2001. Time, indeed, does fly...

On my tenth gluten-free anniversary I salute YOU- dear reader. The home cook. The intrepid baker. The mother of a celiac child. The loving parent of an ASD angel. The undiagnosed but obviously sensitive to gluten cake maker. The wheat intolerant cupcake lover. The brother, the sister, the Dad, the grandmother looking for a way to include your celiac loved one in on the festivities, welcoming everyone to your table.

This anniversary recipe is for you.

A rich dark gingerbread infused with cocoa.

Karina xo

Gluten-Free Chocolate Gingerbread Recipe (3)

Karina's Gluten-Free Chocolate Gingerbread Recipe

Recipe originally published December 2011 by Karina Allrich.

The taste of this dense and lovely gingerbread smacks delightfully of cocoa and ginger spice. The texture is akin to pound cake. This is a perfect not-too-sweet cake for afternoon tea with your best friend, or an edible sigh-inducing respite from wrapping gifts. Nibble it playing Scrabble by a crackling fire.

Ingredients:

1 cup sorghum flour
3/4 cup almond meal
1/2 cup cornstarch, sweet rice flour, or potato starch- not potato flour
1 cup packed light brown sugar
1/3 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
2 teaspoons baking powder
3/4 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon xanthan gum
2 teaspoons ground ginger
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
3/4 teaspoon fine sea salt
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg or cardamon
2 large organic free-range eggs, beaten
1/2 cup molasses
1/4 cup organic coconut oil
4 tablespoons non-dairy milk
2 teaspoons bourbon vanilla extract

Instructions:

Preheat the oven to 350ºF. Line a 9-inch ceramic loaf pan with a piece of parchment paper that rises up the long sides of the pan.

In a mixing bowl, whisk together the dry ingredients- flours/starches through nutmeg.

Add in the eggs, molasses, coconut oil, non-dairy milk and vanilla extract and beat well, until the batter is smooth. A standing mixer will handle this task best.

Scoop the gingerbread batter into the prepared loaf pan and bake in the center of the oven for roughly an hour. The top will crack a bit. A cake tester inserted into the center should emerge clean.

Allow the loaf to cool in the pan until it is cooled enough to handle. Gently remove it from the pan (this is where the parchment paper lining comes in handy) and continue to cool on a wire rack.

Slice with a sharp bread knife.

Wrap the loaf well for storing overnight. For longer storage, slice and wrap pieces in foil, bag, and freeze.

Cook time: About 1 hour

Makes one dark and divine gingerbread loaf.


Recipe Source: glutenfreegoddess.blogspot.com

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Gluten-Free Chocolate Gingerbread Recipe (4)

Karina's Recipe Notes:

The first notation I would like to mention is your choice of loaf pan. When it comes to gluten-free baking, not all loaf pans are created equal. A thin metallic pan just won't do. The outside batter, you see, bakes too rapidly, leaving the center to wallow in gooey, gluten-free stubbornness. If your tea loaves and cakes consistently turn out dampish in the middle- it may be your pan choice. A sturdy ceramic loaf pan heats slowly, evenly, allowing the center of the batter the time it needs to play catch up. Here's the ceramic loaf pan I use.

Another alternative is to try baking tea loaf recipes in mini-loaves. Follow the manufacturer's instruction for baking times.

Now for subbing. If you prefer dairy- use butter and milk. For vegan, use Ener-G Egg Replacer in place of eggs (this particular egg replacer has never let me down; use as instructed on the package).

I am finding coconut oil to be the best butter substitute for baking cakes and muffins and brownies- it gives these gluten-free dairy-free baked goods a rich, lovely texture. If you use another oil, the result may be less rich. We ran out of coconut oil last week and I subbed organic Canola oil in a brownie recipe and it just wasn't the same. It was drier and less fudgy.

And as for flours- I understand some of you cannot use almond meal. I would choose a sweet, medium weight alternative. Perhaps certified gluten-free oat flour or millet flour. Or sorghum flour. Please no white rice flour. It really brings nada to gluten-free recipes.

And as always- use fresh, pungent spices. Not last year's dregs.
For substitutions, please see my guide to baking with substitutions here.



PS: We enjoy sugary treats in moderation, don't we darling? Gluten-Free Goddess advises consuming no more than 2 tablespoons of sugar a day.

Gluten-Free Chocolate Gingerbread Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why does my gingerbread fall? ›

Bicarbonate of soda is an extremely active raising agent and if you add too much then the gingerbread will rise up a lot during baking, then sink back fairly dramatically. If the surface of the gingerbread is wrinkled then this is also a sign that there was too much bicarbonate of soda.

Why is my gingerbread dense? ›

Under-baking can cause a sunken cake and over-baking can cause a dry one, so making sure your gingerbread is properly baked is critical! Gingerbread is inherently slightly dense and heavy in texture, but each bite is perfectly flavored and moist and just melts in your mouth.

What is the best ingredient to keep a gingerbread house from falling? ›

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 gingerbread from falling down? ›

Just melt the sugar in a pan over low heat. You want to allow it to turn brown, but make sure not to burn it (otherwise it won't taste so great). Then take your gingerbread house pieces, dip the edges in melted sugar and hold them together for a few seconds. That's it!

Can you overmix gingerbread? ›

Over mixing the dough can lead to a tough textured cookie that doesn't hold its shape as well. Mix on low speed each time while slowly scraping down the sides of the bowl mixing just until everything is combined.

Should gingerbread dough be dry? ›

Dough should be soft (not dry or crumbly) but not sticky. If sticky, add a few tablespoons of flour until desired consistency is achieved.

What are the three types of gingerbread? ›

The three distinct types of gingerbread are brown gingerbread, wafer-based gingerbread and honey gingerbread.
  • BROWN GINGERBREAD.
  • WAFER GINGERBREAD.
  • HONEY GINGERBREAD.

How do you make a gingerbread house more stable? ›

So to make sure our walls could stand strong, we sandwiched melted marshmallow cement between two graham crackers. The marshmallow adds weight, which helps stabilize the structure. It also acts as a sealant, ensuring that the cracker won't crumble.

Why won t my gingerbread house stay up? ›

Pay Attention To Icing Consistency

You'll want a thicker consistency for "gluing" the sides together, and a slightly thinner consistency for piping details. It will also give better results to be mindful about the size of your piping tip (or the size of hole you cut from a tipless piping bag).

Why does my cake fall flat after rising? ›

Incorporate too little air and your cake won't rise enough. Too much air and your cake will collapse because it simply can't hold onto all that air. Overbeating can add too much additional air and/or large air bubbles which the cake can't support, causing it to collapse in the oven.

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