Last Christmas I made a Gingerbread House for the first time, well, a Fair Isle knitting patterned Shetland Pepperkakehus to be specific. It was a massive thing which sat on the kitchen counter top for two weeks before the children gleefully smashed it to smithereens while eating bits and pieces off it on Christmas Day. I detest food waste and there was just no way we were going to be able to eat our way through such a large gingerbread house before it went stale, so I finished what the children started and ground the gingerbread house down to crumbs in my food processor. I popped them in the freezer for use at a later date as a dessert base and shared the idea in December’s No Waste Food Challenge, which was all about Christmas leftovers.
Last month Helen from Fuss Free Flavours and Camilla from Fab Food 4 All launched their Credit Crunch Munch food bloggers challenge, challenging us to share our frugal food recipes. Despite a massive number of entries there was not one single pudding recipe! So this month Camilla has asked us to share our frugal pudding recipes. I immediately thought of my gingerbread crumbs in the freezer. That’s pretty frugal, isn’t it? How many uneaten gingerbread houses ended up being dumped after Christmas? I had idea to adapt one of my favourite childhood puddings: the pineapple square. The original recipe has a buttery graham cracker crumb base, a layer of buttercream and it is topped with a layer of whipped cream to which crushed pineapple has been added. Surely this could be adapted to use a ginger base?
I initially wasn’t going to blog this recipe as I wasn’t particularly fond of the result. I ate quite a few (most!) of the squares, mind, but it’s not something I’ll make again. Saying that, I think I overcooked the base so it was too crunchy, like a gingersnap. I added an extra five minutes cooking time as the base didn’t look ready after 15 minutes – it likely was, but being such a dark brown it was hard to tell. It had a slight burnt sugar taste to it too, which I didn’t care for. I think perhaps my particular gingerbread recipe, with its copius quantity of treacle, doesn’t make a good base. I’m also thinking that this recipe might work well with crushed gingernut biscuits instead, should you want to recreate it.
Like I said, I wasn’t going to blog this recipe, but then I saw another new food bloggers challenge by Bake Happy for Kids and My Little Favourite DIY called Little Thumbs Up which aims to get families cooking together. My children were very much involved in the preparation of this dish, and they very much enjoyed the eating of it, so even though I wasn’t that keen on it my children certainly were. When it comes to cooking for a family the ultimate test is whether the children will actually eat it or not, and they did, happily, so it must be a winner! This month’s Little Thumbs Up theme is pineapple, so that made my decision for me. I’ve blogged the recipe and have submitted it, an adaptation of my grandmother’s pineapple square recipe, to this new challenge as it certainly did get little thumbs up!
This pudding was my entry to our own family Come Dine with Me competition – this is something we do as a family each month to help get the children involved more in cooking. We each take turns preparing a meal (the little ones sometimes help out too, with much guidance). A starter, main course and pudding is prepared and served and then we rate each other, secretly, out of 10 on flavour and presentation. The winner at the end of the month wins the coveted Golden Spaghetti & Meatballs trophy for the month. I think I may have scored highly with the children with this dish!
Incidentally, my gingerbread house won The Daily Dish First Annual Gingerbread House Competition over in America! They interviewed me, featured me in their Spotlight Interview and sent me an awesome embroidered chef’s apron made by the talented Cynthia Landrie from Feeding Big as my prize. Please do go and read what they wrote (and comment so I don’t feel so silly for sharing so much about myself!).
- 200 grams gingerbread house crumbs or ginger nut biscuits, crushed
- 220 grams icing sugar
- 234 grams butter, divided
- 1 432 gram tin of crushed pineapple
- 1/2 mango, finely chopped
- 300 ml whipping cream
- 1 heaped tbsp coconut, lightly toasted
Prep time: Cook time: Total time: Yield: 16 squares
I have also entered this recipe into another food bloggers challenge: A Taste of the Tropics by Chef Mireille’s Global Creations. This month the theme is pineapple.
Chef Mireille
what a wonderful looking treat – thanks for submitting it to my event!
Elizabeth
Thank you 🙂
Fuss Free Helen
I am fairly sure that once in my freezer ginger bread house crumbs would remain there for a good 12 months, so am dead impressed you have used them up!
Many thanks for sending this to Credit Crunch Munch, and sorry for taking forever to get around to commenting!
Elizabeth
I’m glad you’re impressed 🙂 I suspect the remaining crumbs will stay in my freezer for a considerable length of time, unless inspiration strikes again!
Zoe
Hi Elizabeth,
I remember baking gingerbread houses for kids and Christmas before but never want to bake anything that is too big to avoid any unnecessary leftover… You are so clever using your demolished gingerbread house as part of the ingredients for your slices. What a brilliant transformation! Thumbs up for sure!
Nice to know you via “Little Thumbs up” event! You have a wonderful blog with lots of fantastic recipes and great cooking/baking tips… here I am being your latest follower 😀
Zoe
Elizabeth
Hi Zoe, thank you for your kind comments 🙂 Pleased to ‘meet’ you too through Little Thumbs Up – what a fantastic challenge idea!
JoZart
Just read your interview and it’s quite a read. Could and should be made into a film! Really enjoyed it all and love your recipes, well almost all… love the gingerbread in this one but don’t fancy the topping. That’s a first as I’ve craved all the others but that’s personal taste, I suppose and we can’t like everything.
Jo x
Elizabeth
Oh goodness, thank you for reading it and thank you for your kind comments! I’m pretty sure I attract adventure – nothing has ever really been straightforward for me, haha! I wasn’t too fond of this sweet either, but I only blogged it because the children liked it (although the eldest complained about the mango!)
Camilla @Fabfood4all
I love that you have your own Come Dine with Me challenge in your family, what a great way to inspire your children to enjoy cooking! This recipe sounds delicious and I love the flavour combination of tropial fruit and ginger. I’m sure that ginger biscuits would be perfect for the base as not many of us have an old ginger bread house to hand:-) Thank you for entering your fab recipe to Credit Crunch Munch.
Elizabeth
I’m glad you like it, and I’m glad I blogged the recipe after all! 🙂