My mother always baked gingerbread cookies for Christmas. It was her thing. Even after I started baking my own, using her recipe, she’d mail me a small box of hers. “It’s what mother’s do,” she said.
Last year she was ill, weary and getting weaker by the day. My father was beside himself with worry. Neither of them had the will or energy to even decorate for Christmas … and my dad always put up a tree. That was his thing.
My heart ached for the two of them. I live 660 miles and a Rocky Mountain range away.
I decided to change my kitchen into a testing facility. I was determined to come up with a batch of gingerbread cookies my mother’s drug battered stomach could tolerate. That meant I couldn’t use wheat flour, golden syrup or molasses, any dairy including butter, or eggs. Was there anything left? My first four tries ended up in the compost. The fifth try finally produced a relatively tasty batch which I promptly overnight couriered to my parents.
I also found a local florist in their city that put together an arrangement in the shape of a Christmas tree for me. They decorated it and delivered it to my parents.
My mother called me, in tears. I’d given her Christmas! I can only imagine what this meant to both my parents. It was her last Christmas with us; she passed away shortly thereafter.
This year I’m baking an extra batch of gingerbread cookies and mailing them to my father – a taste of years gone by, just like my mother had done for me.
Here is my gift to you – my mother’s original recipe.
Ingredients
3/4 cup – regular sugar or brown sugar
½ cup – sugar syrup (Golden Syrup)
¾ cup butter, softened
1/2 tsp ginger
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp cloves
1 tsp cardamom
½ cup whipping cream
3 1/2 cups flour
1/2 tsp baking soda
Directions:
Preheat oven to 350F.
Prepare cookie sheets.
Mix dry ingredients: flour, spices and baking soda.
Beat the butter, sugar, syrup, cream.
Stir in the flour mixture. I adjust the spices through taste and add extra sprinkles of whatever I think it needs. Finish stirring the mixture.
Press dough into a thick flat disk. Wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate a minimum of 4 hours or overnight.
Roll out the dough to ¼ inch thickness, cut with cookie cutters. For the size of cookies I make, this works perfectly. Keep extra dough chilled until you’re ready to use it.
Bake 12 minutes. (Baking time will vary based on your oven and thickness of the dough.)
Let them cool and start tasting. I do.



I pinned this to my baking Pinterest board as I am on a mission to find a good gingerbread recipe.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you for this recipe. I have never made them, but plan to now for next Christmas. 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
What a beautiful gift shared between you and your mother!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you Charli! Have a wonderful day. 🙂
LikeLike
Absolutely beautiful! These are the things that make holiday memories so special. I can remember very few gifts that I’ve received over the years but I’ll never forget the loving traditions and memories made.
Thank you for sharing this – and the “magic” recipe!
LikeLiked by 1 person
A beautiful post – “You gave me Christmas Kate” bought tears to my eyes.
Thank you for the recipe, I shall be giving it a go, and raising a glass this Christmas to your mum.
Wishing you a lovely Christmas, Kimmie x
LikeLiked by 1 person
I’m so glad you took the time to read the piece Kimmie. Yes, my eyes teared as well when I wrote the words. I could hear her voice saying them. May those you love be with you in the next few weeks. ~Kate.
LikeLike
Very generous. Sorry about your mom.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Your kind response is most appreciated. Thank you.
LikeLike