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Pumpkin Gingerbread

I have a serious problem not buying anything with the word fall on it. Honestly, if Tampax had a fall variety pack I’d buy enough to last me a year a pack or two. That’s how I found myself the proud owner of the Sam Adams Fall Variety Pack.

pumpkin gingerbread sitting on an aged silver cake stand dusted with powdered sugar with a slice sitting on a white plate with a dollop of fresh whipped cream

I’m not an adventurous beer drinking, I pretty much only drink wheat beer. But the case said ‘fall’ and ‘pumpkin’ so I really had no choice and I brought it home.

Knowing full well I won’t drink more than 4 bottles from the entire freaking case!  Well done Sam Adams… My solution was to turn the undrinkable (to me) bottles into something I can enjoy.

First up is my rendition of the Gramercy Tavern Gingerbread recipe made fall appropriate with a few modifications and the addition of pumpkin (of course!) for a spicy, dense pumpkin gingerbread.

I’ve made the original recipe a few times around Christmas and it’s so close to perfect. The only real problem is how sticky it is and how much it sticks in pan.

You can avoid that by skipping the bundt pan and going for a loaf or generic cake pan. I love pumpkin flavor alone but it really shines with the addition of cinnamon, ginger and cardamom.

Luckily those are all found in gingerbread so it seemed like a perfect match. I switched out the stout in the original recipe for a bottle of Black Lager. If like me, you know nothing about beer the Black Lager is a ‘schwarzbiers’ pronounces ‘schw-ba-blah-blah’ (or maybe not).

It’s supposed to be dark and roasted with notes of caramel and chocolate. All things that I would enjoy in my gingerbread so in it goes!

Spicy, sticky and moist, this pumpkin gingerbread is the perfect accompaniment to a hot cup of coffee and a dollop of whipped cream

This batter is sticky thanks to the molasses and you really need to butter the pan well. I set a stick of cold butter on the stove while the oven preheated and used the very soft melted butter to coat the pan.

Use your hands and get into all the creases in the pan. Sprinkle the inside with flour and go back over any spots you missed with more butter and re-flour.

After baking let the gingerbread cool for a few minutes and then gently pull the edges away from the pan. Flip the pan over and give it a quick bang on a wooden cutting board to dislodge the cake. If it doesn’t come out let it sit a while longer and try again.

This is the kind of cake that benefits from a rest before serving. Store it in the fridge and bring it out to warm up a but before serving. Dust with confectioners sugar and top with whipped cream for a real decadent autumn treat.

pumpkin gingerbread, whipped cream, bundt cake, pumpkin, cake, gingerbread

Pumpkin Gingerbread

Spicy, sticky and moist, this pumpkin gingerbread is the perfect accompaniment to a hot cup of coffee and a dollop of whipped cream

Dark and fragrant gingerbread overflowing with spices and flavor

Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 55 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 10 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 C stout beer*
  • 1 C dark baking molasses, NOT blackstrap
  • 1/2 t baking soda
  • 2 C flour, I use King Arthur white whole wheat
  • 1 1/2 t baking powder
  • 2 T ground ginger
  • 1 t ground cinnamon
  • 1/4 t ground cloves
  • 1/4 t ground nutmeg
  • pinch of ground cardamom
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 C pumpkin puree, NOT pumpkin pie mix
  • 1 1/2 brown sugar

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350
  2. Butter, butter, butter a bundt pan. This is a heavy, sticky cake and it will stick if you let it. Dust with flour after thickly applying butter, don't forget to get the spout bit in the center
  3. Combine beer and molasses in a medium sauce pan and bring to a boil. It will foam like crazy so don't use a small pan.
  4. When beer mixture boils remove from heat and stir in the baking soda, again lots of foam. Set aside to cool
  5. Whisk together flour, baking powder and spices set aside
  6. Whisk together eggs and pumpkin, add in sugar and whisk until combined. Scrape down the sides of the bowl to make sure you get all the sugar.
  7. Slowly pour in the beer mixture, whisking while you pour. The original recipe says to wait until the beer mix is cool but I'm impatient. The big thing is don't cook the egg so pour in a little bit, whisk it up and pour some more.
  8. Quickly whisk in the flour mixture just until combined and pour into the bundt pan, smack the pan on the counter to make sure the batter goes into all the recessed area of the pan
  9. Bake for 50 minututes or until a tester comes out with only a few moist crumbs
  10. Allow the pumpkin gingerbread to cool in the pan for 5 minutes
  11. Flip the pan to remove the cake and allow to cool completely

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#Pumpkin #Chocolate Chip Mini-Bundt Cakes
Spicy, sticky and moist, this pumpkin gingerbread is the perfect accompaniment to a hot cup of coffee and a dollop of whipped cream

Dawn Nieves

Tuesday 5th of September 2017

Oh my yum!! This sounds amazing! I love anything pumpkin and gingerbread. You've combined two of my favorites! I cannot wait to try this!

Brandi

Tuesday 5th of September 2017

Yum this looks incredible! Definitely my kind of dessert, one that isn't overly rich. Perfect timing for fall.

Rebecca Bryant

Tuesday 5th of September 2017

OMG, this is my weakness. I love anything Pumpkin. I am so going to make this on Sunday.

Andrea

Tuesday 5th of September 2017

This caught my attention immediately because of the fall feel & it definitely feels fall here, but mostly because if he beer in it. I love cooking with beer.

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