The church biscuit: 27. Gingerbread with chocolate icing and marzipan bishop’s mitres

Gingerbread decorated with marzipan Bishop's mitres and icing crosses

Gingerbread decorated with marzipan Bishop’s mitres and icing crosses

This has been a trying week for so many people living near rivers. The college archivist has hardly lived in her house in Oxford since Christmas as the rising water makes the drains unusable. She and her cat are fortunate to have found a home in a friend’s house; her neighbours have portaloos in the street outside. Ugh. In comparison my complaint that bus journeys take longer than usual pales into an insignificance that makes me ashamed to write it. More inconvenient, but once again not very in comparison to having your house flooded, the vicarage telephone line and all internet access was down for 5 days, returning shortly before BT  was due to come. Fortunately, the BT man was something of genius who tracked down the problem at a time when it wasn’t actually being a problem and promptly repaired it (mouse-eaten cable which shorted out when it rained). Hoorah, I am once again able to communicate.

Gingerbread biscuit with marzipan bishop's mitre

Gingerbread biscuit with marzipan bishop’s mitre

These biscuits were made for last Sunday’s confirmation service in North Stoke church, an event which the Bishop of Dorchester, the Right Reverend Colin Fletcher,  kindly shoe horned into his already full schedule for the convenience of those being confirmed. It seemed a good idea to make biscuits (gingerbread) decorated with a bishop’s mitre (marzipan) to mark the occasion and as I only made 60 these were offered to those confirmed and their families first after the service. (Hot drinks and more biscuits were on tap in the village hall as in the toss up between a bubbling tea urn or  half a dozen clergy, robing and disrobing, the latter won.)

Gingerbread biscuits with marzipan mitres and chocolate icing crosses

Gingerbread biscuits with marzipan mitres and chocolate icing crosses

Gingerbread Shapes

(This is the recipe I blogged about at Christmas)

I employ Delia’s flapjack principle here, adding more Golden Syrup and cutting down on the sugar to produce a much softer gingerbread. I also replace part of the flour with wholemeal flour.

Ingredients:

200g plain flour

150g wholemeal flour

1 tbsp ground ginger

1/2 tsp bicarbonate of soda

1 teasp ground cinnamon

175g unsalted butter

100g light muscovado sugar

6 tbsp Golden Syrup

Sift four, ginger, bicarb and cinnamon into a bowl.

Put butter, sugar and golden syrup into a pan over a low heat and melt gently. Take the pan off the heat and add the dry ingredients. Mix thoroughly with a wooden spoon – you may need to borrow someone to do this as it can get very stiff – until the mixture starts to adhere together into a ball. When cool enough to handle make it into a nice round ball, cover in cling film and leave in the fridge for about 20 mins.

When cool, cut mitre shapes out of marzipan and stick them to the  gingerbread with the chocolate icing used to add decorative crosses, etc. (Most supermarkets have little packs of 4 different flavoured chocolate tubes of icing for writing and these are perfect for this.)

 

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Response

Patchwork: slipcase for scrapbook and needlecase

Patchwork slipcase cover for scrapbook and patchwork needecase

Patchwork slipcase cover for scrapbook and patchwork needecase

During long winter evenings I always have several different projects on the go. I now find I can’t embroider white on white under artificial light and have recently given up using a lamp that simulates daylight as it stops me from going to sleep, however tired I may be. (Immediately I stopped using it, I slept more – nuff said as Nigel Molesworth might say.) 

Patchwork slipcase for scrapbook and needle case

Patchwork slipcase for scrapbook and needle case

Patchwork projects are ideal for these dark nights as I sit cosy on the sofa beside a comforting if not really necessary log fire. As well as piles of diamond patches (for the ongoing altar frontal project), I also have had stacks of little squares. Sewing the little squares  progressed rapidly and last week I decided it would be good to make them up into a cover for another cuttings scrap book. For the scrapbook I lined the patchwork with calico and quilted the two layers together. For the little needle case I sandwiched the patchwork and lining with wadding and added a couple of leaves of woollen felt, Now I can leave the formerly tatty scrapbook around without it looking an eyesore and the needle case is  usefully visible  when I’m desperate to find a needle, as I so often am. Now, as the daylight of Thursday morning beckons I can look forward to going back to sewing  a whitework monogram.

Patchwork needle case

Patchwork needle case

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Responses
  • May 2025
    M T W T F S S
    « Jul    
     1234
    567891011
    12131415161718
    19202122232425
    262728293031  
  • Photographs & Media

    Please attribute any re-uploaded images to Addison Embroidery at the Vicarage or Mary Addison and link back to this website. And please do not hot-link images!