


#Recipes using ginger snap cookies movie#
Gingersnaps, ginger snaps, gingernuts, ginger nuts, or ginger biscuits (no relation to the Ginger Snaps horror movie franchise) are one of those cookies I find to be the perfect companion to a cup of hot tea or coffee. Cookies will keep, stored at room temperature in an airtight container, for up to 2 weeks.If there is a cookie that I love a lot more than the other holiday cookies, it’s got to be gingersnaps. Transfer to wire rack and cool completely before serving.

It’s soft and chewy, not hard and dry like the stuff that comes in spice jars. I also have to say that I LOVE Trader Joe’s crystallized ginger. You’ll find it’s much less tedious than trying to grate it fresh. Peel first, then freeze the whole ginger root for a few hours, then grate it with a microplane. Tip: grating ginger is MUCH easier when the root is frozen.
#Recipes using ginger snap cookies full#
I’m dead serious in saying this recipe calls for 2 tablespoons each of ground AND fresh ginger, and a full 1/3 cup of crystallized ginger. There’s no mistaking these for an everyday spice cookie they are ginger, through and through. That’s why these gingersnaps (inspired by Trader Joe’s Triple Ginger Cookies) satisfy all my desires: light and crispy, with three spicy kinds of ginger: fresh, ground, and chunks of crystallized ginger speckled throughout. Much like my ginger beer obsession, if I can’t taste the ginger, they’re not even worth eating. The other thing about gingersnaps is they must taste like ginger the more the better. If you want soft, why not try these soft Molasses Snickerdoodles instead? They are called gingerSNAPS, not gingerCHEWS, and it follows that they should be snappy. Soft gingersnaps? That’s just an oxymoron. Normally I am wholeheartedly against crispy cookies.
