Ginger crinkles DSC5031

Ginger crinkles recipe

My grandma recently told me that she paid a visit to her 95-year-old sister in an assisted living home. “To brighten Aunt Frances’s day,” she said, “I brought her some ginger crinkles.”

Ginger crinkles? I had never heard her mention before this treat so I asked what they were.

She told me that that they’re a cookie that has been made spicy with ginger, cinnamon, and molasses. They’re chewy with a bit of a crunch from being rolled in sugar. And they’re called crinkles since cracks and fissures form on the cookie’s surface.

As a ginger snap tends towards elegance with its smooth surface and crisp texture, a ginger crinkle is more roughhewn and homey—but it’s no less delicious.

Ginger crinkles | Homesick Texan
My grandma also mentioned that she had taken a batch to of the cookies to a church function. And wouldn’t you know it, the ginger crinkles were so popular the plate was empty before she even had a chance to grab one for herself. Well, if they’re a hit with the church ladies, I knew they had to be good!

“I was going to send you some crinkles but got lazy,” said Grandma. “But there will be some at Thanksgiving.”

Now, as is my wont whenever I return to Texas, I eat more meals in a day than is healthy to make up for all those tastes of home that just can’t be found anywhere else. And last Saturday was no exception. In one afternoon I feasted on cheese enchiladas dripping in chile gravy, endless baskets of warm salty chips served with bowls of peppery hot sauce, a Whataburger with cheese and jalapenos, tender carne guisada nestled in a fresh flour tortilla, and a heaping plate of brisket, sausage, pickles, and black-eyed peas.

Ginger crinkles | Homesick Texan

I was stuffed and holiday cookies (even my Aunt Julie’s pumpkin spice recipe) whether they were pumpkin spice cookies, were definitely not on my mind. But as my grandma and I were watching “Book Talk,” she reminded me that she had baked some ginger crinkles for me.

My belly was full, but I knew it would be disrespectful not to try them. So I grabbed one from the freezer (where she keeps everything). It was cold, but it still had a nice chew to it. But what really excited me was the burst of ginger and dark sweetness of the molasses. For such a rustic cookie, there was a real sophistication to its flavor.

Ginger crinkles | Homesick Texan

Holiday baking season has begun and these warm, spicy cookies are a simple way to bring joy into people’s lives. Of course, be sure and save yourself a few as they will go fast.

Print
5 from 3 votes

Aunt Frances’s ginger crinkles

Servings 32 cookies
Author Lisa Fain

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup canola oil
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 large egg
  • 1/4 cup molasses
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1 teaspoon ginger
  • 1/4 cup sugar for dipping

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 350° F.
  • Cream the oil, sugar, egg and molasses. Mix together the flour, soda, salt, cinnamon and ginger and add to the liquid ingredients.
  • Roll dough into walnut size balls (about 1/2 a tablespoon) and dip into sugar.
  • Bake until slightly brown for about 15 min. 

Notes

Note from Aunt Frances: Do not overcook! Note from me: I was out of regular sugar so I used turbinado sugar, which was very tasty.

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5 from 3 votes (2 ratings without comment)

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76 Comments

  1. Oh My! These look gorgeous and make me want to try my very first batch of ginger cookies. Also… I miss Whataburger. Badly. My brain's been full of the smell and taste of a bacon egg cheese taquito ever since I read this post earlier.

    Makes me long for home!

  2. Laine Moore says:

    I'm a homesick Texan about to go home for the first time in TWO YEARS. Do you have any restaurant recs for San Antonio?

    Love your blog xx

  3. I love ginger cookies! I have a recipe, but they're really soft (more like cookie-cake), not crunchy. Could you use fresh grated ginger instead of the powdered stuff?

  4. bananacakes says:

    You and your aunt are my heroes! My house smells great and these came out perfectly. Chewy and the perfect amount of sweetness. Plus, they're GORGEOUS! I like these way better than the Magnolia iced molasses cookies that have been my standby. Thank you so much!! 🙂

  5. yes these are a delicious cookie. My husband makes a batch every year for xmas.

    and omg the load of junk I eat when I go home to Texas. All the mexican food and oscar meyer bologna, it has to be oscar meyer for me, and tons more.

    I'll have to compare this recipe to my husbands. He makes his cookies very large. 🙂