RECIPE | Pepparkakor Or Swedish Ginger Snaps Cookies (2024)

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Last Updated on November 28, 2017 by Leyla Kazim

RECIPE | Pepparkakor Or Swedish Ginger Snaps Cookies (1)

Pepparkakor: the irresistible Swedish ginger snaps

If you’ve ever stepped into a supermarket in Sweden (the food section in your local Ikea will provide the next best alternative) you may know about pepparkakor. They’re a much loved Christmas cookie, but I like to enjoy them all year.

If the name doesn’t ring a bell, the description will – very thin and very crisp dark spiced ginger biscuits, also known as ginger thins or ginger snaps. I picked up a couple of boxes when visiting Stockholm over Easter, one for home and one for a gift. Turns out I ate most of both boxes as it’s almost impossible to ignore their unique texture and mildly fiery flavour.

They’re not like any other cookie I’ve encountered – incredibly light and completely void of moisture lending to their unmistakable crispness. And those who did get a chance to dip in a paw before I managed to scoff the contents of both boxes thoroughly enjoyed them for the same reasons.

Short of having to drive to Ikea every time I want to re-stock, I soon realised the only solution would be to find a recipe and make them (regularly) myself.

The elusive pepparkakor ‘snap’

After quite a bit of research, it turns out achieving the signature snap in this Christmas cookie favourite is a challenge. There are online stories of bakers making dozens of batches with varying degrees of ingredients, still unable to claimvictoryover the elusive and unique texture.

Suggestions involve excluding any fat whatsoever in order to remove all moisture. Others say bake the ginger biscuits for longer at a lower temperature. Further advice speaks of using very strong and unfamiliar raising agents for the tough dough.

Well, I found a recipe and a process that read right to me. I tried it, and I nailed it first time. If you want to achieve the same texture and flavour as those boxed Swedish ginger thins, use thisrecipe.

Check Out:Recipe For Gluten-Free Hazelnut And Coffee Cookies, With No Butter!

RECIPE | Pepparkakor Or Swedish Ginger Snaps Cookies (2)

This recipe is fromCook’s Illustrated Magazine (November 2011) and is an absolute corker. It is also incredibly quick and easy to make the dough – the majority of your time will be spent rolling and cutting out the individual ginger biscuits.

The recipe suggests this makes about 80 biscuits but I end up with double – I suspect I roll the dough half as thin as the recipe has. So if you do in fact want 80, I would half the below ingredients. Or you’ll end up with 160 biscuits filling up two largeTupperwareboxes. Not a bad situation to be in, in my opinion. Keep them airtight and they’ll last you for as long as two people with an average biscuit intake would need to eat them.

A Recipe For Pepparkakor, Or Swedish Ginger Snaps Cookies

Makes 80 (or around 160 very thin ones as in the pictures)

  • 2 1/2 cups plain flour
  • 2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 170g unsalted butter
  • 4 tbsp ground ginger
  • 2 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp ground cloves
  • 1/4 tsp pepper
  • Pinch cayenne
  • 1 1/4 cups packed dark brown soft sugar
  • 1/4 cup molasses or black treacle
  • 1 large egg plus 1 large yolk

How to make pepparkakor dough, the perfect Christmas cookie

RECIPE | Pepparkakor Or Swedish Ginger Snaps Cookies (3)

Mix the flour, bicarbonate of soda and salt together in bowl. In the meantime, heat the butter in a pan over a medium heat until melted.

Lower the heat to medium-low and continue to cook, swirling the pan frequently, until the foaming subsides and the butter is just beginning to brown. Turn off the heat.

Whisk in all the spices and then add the brown sugar and molasses to the butter mixture. Whisk to combine until the sugar has melted and you have a smooth mixture. Add the egg and yolk and mix again with the whisk to combine. You should have a dark, sticky, smooth and glossy mixture.

Pour this mixture into your bowl of flour and combine with a spatula until you have a dough – don’t over work it. Cover the bowl with cling film and keep in the fridge for the butter to firm, at least an hour.

Rolling out pepparkakor ginger snaps – why not make gingerbread men!

RECIPE | Pepparkakor Or Swedish Ginger Snaps Cookies (4)Adjust your oven racks to upper-middle and lower-middle positions and heat the oven to 130C (fan). Line two baking trays with non-stick baking paper or silicone paper.

Break off a portion of the dough and with your hands mound into a round and squash down. Take a rolling pin and slowly roll it out – if the edges are dry and crack, smooth them out with your fingers and continue rolling slowly.

If any of the dough sticks to your rolling pin, just reverse the roll to remove it and join it back to the main mass.

Roll them about as thin as 1mm – don’t worry, they do rise a little in the oven. Use a small cookie cutter to cut out your shapes. You can choose whatever you want – simple circles, stars, or even gingerbread men.

Carefully lift each biscuit and place on your baking trays – leave a slight gap between each as they do expand slightly. You will fit about twenty per baking tray. Gather up the remaining dough and join with the rest of the mass. Break off another portion and repeat the process until all your dough is used up.

RECIPE | Pepparkakor Or Swedish Ginger Snaps Cookies (5)

Baking pepparkakor Swedish ginger biscuits

Place one tray on the upper rack and while it’s baking, roll out and fill up your next tray. After 15 minutes or so, transfer the partially baked top tray to the lower rack and rotate 180 degrees.

Place your second tray of biscuits on the upper rack. When your first tray is done, remove from the oven and transfer each biscuit to a cooling rack. Bring the top tray down to the bottom shelf, and continue this rotation until you’ve cooked all your biscuits. The ginger snaps are done when they are hard to touch and just darkening around the edges – around 15-20 minutes.

Tip
The dough can be refrigerated for up to two days or frozen for up to one month if you want to get ahead. Let the dough stand at room temperature for 30 minutes before shaping. Let frozen dough thaw overnight before proceeding with the recipe.

Settle down on a comfy arm chair in the evening with half a dozen pepparkakor, a glass of cold milk and a good read. I’m sold.

Have you ever madepepparkakor and if so, how did it go? What’s your favourite type of Christmas cookie? Would you use gingerbread men cutters for this, or another shape? If you’ve tried making these ginger things, let me know in the comments below!

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RECIPE | Pepparkakor Or Swedish Ginger Snaps Cookies (6)

Leyla Kazim

Spending most of my time either eating or travelling. Constantly in awe of nature and on a mission to seek the joy in every moment. Please feel free to leave a comment below, I love hearing from you all!

Find me on: Web | Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

RECIPE | Pepparkakor Or Swedish Ginger Snaps Cookies (2024)

FAQs

Why won t my ginger cookies crack? ›

Molasses cookie dough won't have those signature cracks on top if the dough is too wet. The cracks happen when the surface of the dough dries up. Rolling in sugar really helps this because the sugar binds the moisture and dries out the dough.

What are the ingredients in Ikea ginger cookies? ›

Ingredients (March 2023): Wheat flour, sugar, margarine (vegetable fats and oils [palm, shea, palm kernel, rapeseed, coconut], water, salt, emulsifier [E471], natural flavouring, acid [E330]), invert sugar syrup, raising agent (E500), cinnamon, ginger (0.3%), cloves, natural flavouring. May contain eggs and almonds.

Are ginger snap cookies good for inflammation? ›

Snappy Ginger Cookies employ the healing power of ginger to reduce inflammation and settle digestive distress. If you are interested in learning more about nutrition for digestion and inflammation, check out The Digestive Tune Up™ Program.

Are ginger snaps healthier than other cookies? ›

The smaller, crispy gingersnaps are a plain, round cookie and a healthier choice when compared to other cookies because they are usually lower in calories. Ginger not only adds delicious flavor to food, but it's also full of nutrients. There are lots of different vitamins and minerals in ginger.

How to avoid cracks in cookies? ›

For this to happen, you need to dry the surface of the cookie by coating them in sugar, use sufficient leavening for the cookie to rise, and bake in a hot oven. Issues with cracking usually derive from the sugar coating, not enough or expired baking powder or baking soda, or the oven temperature isn't hot enough.

How to get cracks on ginger biscuits? ›

Facebook
  1. Don't overmix the dough otherwise gluten will. ...
  2. The oven should be hot enough. ...
  3. Use both baking powder and bicarbonate of soda. ...
  4. Avoid opening the oven before the biscuits are well. ...
  5. There has to be corn or golden syrup added to the. ...
  6. If you want the biscuits to be soft instead of.
Oct 29, 2021

What is the difference between ginger snaps and ginger biscuits? ›

The basic difference between two is that the Gingerbread cookies have comparatively soft texture than the ginger snaps. The ginger snaps are dry and hard, so they 'snap'. This is due to longer time for baking and use of molasses instead of sugar.

What are the ingredients in Aldi ginger biscuits? ›

Specifications. 𝐖𝐡𝐞𝐚𝐭 𝐅𝐥𝐨𝐮𝐫 (𝐖𝐡𝐞𝐚𝐭 𝐅𝐥𝐨𝐮𝐫, Calcium Carbonate, Iron, Niacin, Thiamin), Sugar, Palm Oil, Invert Sugar Syrup, Ground Ginger, Raising Agents: Ammonium Carbonates, Sodium Carbonates, Diphosphates; Salt, Flavouring.

Why are ginger cookies called snaps? ›

These early ginger cookies originated in Europe and came with the German, Dutch, and English settlers to America. Gingersnaps were named from the German or Middle Dutch word snappen, meaning "to seize quickly."

Can you eat too many ginger snaps? ›

Ginger is safe to eat daily, but experts recommend limiting yourself to 3 to 4 grams a day — stick to 1 gram daily if you're pregnant. Taking more than 6 grams of ginger a day has been proven to cause gastrointestinal issues such as reflux, heartburn and diarrhea.

What are the side effects of ginger snap cookies? ›

Added Sugar

Eating 2 ounces of gingersnaps boosts your sugar intake by 11.3 grams, while gingerbread cookies contain 10.9 grams of sugar per serving. This sugar increases the level of acidity in your mouth, which dissolves the enamel covering your teeth and contributes to tooth decay.

Are ginger cookies good for arthritis? ›

In theory, ginger can reduce the activity of several chemical substances that promote joint inflammation. Results from RCTs assessing its role in treating participants with osteoarthritis found that it has a high safety profile and can have moderately beneficial effects in reducing pain and disability.

What are the healthiest cookies to eat? ›

Hu. Hu's whole line of cookies is squeaky clean–the ingredients include organic coconut oil, organic cocoa butter, cassava flour, cashew flour, free-range eggs, and flax seeds. The thing that makes Hu's cookies the best of the Best Stuff is that they are sweetened with dates rather than any sugar at all.

What is another name for ginger snap cookies? ›

A gingersnap, ginger snap, ginger nut, or ginger biscuit is a biscuit flavored with ginger. Ginger snaps are flavored with powdered ginger and a variety of other spices, most commonly cinnamon, molasses and clove.

Why didn't my crinkle cookies crack? ›

Why didn't my chocolate crinkle cookies crack? The most common reason for cookies that don't crack is either that the oven was not hot enough or the baking powder was expired.

What makes gingerbread cookies crack? ›

The experts at King Arthur Baking also advise not using very much additional flour for rolling, as this can dry out the dough and lead to cracking.

Why are my crinkle cookies not crinkling? ›

The signature crinkle effect happens when the cookies spread and crack as they bake. If your cookies aren't crinkling, it might be because the dough is too warm (try chilling it for longer before baking), or the oven temperature might be too low (ensure your oven is correctly preheated).

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