Geodesic Gingerbread House Template For the Holidays 61
An anonymous reader writes "Buckminster Fuller eat your heart out — LA-based design firm Scout Regalia has created a mail-order template for a geodesic gingerbread house that you can make at home. When you order a Gingerbread Geodesic Dome, you will receive a cardboard template that is very simple to put together. You then bake the gingerbread and cut it into little hexagons that are then 'glued' to the dome shell with icing."
Re:Yawn (Score:3, Informative)
Pretty sure the template is for ease of construction, not a how-to-make-sides-that-fit-together.
Re:I weep for the nerd community I once knew (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.geo-dome.co.uk/article.asp?uname=modelbuild [geo-dome.co.uk]
Re:I weep for the nerd community I once knew (Score:5, Informative)
All you need are hexagons and pentagons with equal length faces. Automatically assemble into a closed, regular shell.
(Looks exactly like a soccer ball.) No leet geometry skillz required.
A sheet of fresh gingerbread, some cookie cutters, and a pastry bag full of stiff ftosting, and off you go.
(Personally, I would use gingersnap cookie dough, as ginger snaps are sturdier than ginger bread. This would negate most of the need for a cardboard support.)
If you're going to do this you need "royal icing" (Score:5, Informative)
Here's a decent recipe: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/royal-icing-recipe/index.html [foodnetwork.com] . The reason it calls for pasturized egg whites is there's no cooking involved and raw eggs are risky. We have used powdered egg whites http://www.google.com/search?q=powdered+egg+whites&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8 [google.com] (reconstituted according to directions) to good effect.
Re:architectural gingerbread (Score:5, Informative)
You should use gingersnap dough instead of gingerbread.
Gingersnaps are usually baked as a drop or ball cookie, like a peanut butter cookie is.
If you instead roll the dough out flat and even on the cookie sheet, and bake a little bit slower to avoid being burned on the outside and raw in the middle (drop baking temp down to something like 250 or 275F, instead of 350F, and bake a little longer) then when you remove the "super cookie" from the oven you can cut it with cookie cutters while it is still hot.
When it cools, it will be quite firm, and perfectly edible. Crispy and hard, actually, hence the name "ginger snap".
You have to cut on removal from the oven, and not before baking, because they are a drop cookie and expand while baking.