Ugly, Delicious (Perfect) Gingerbread Cookie Bars
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You need this recipe in your repertoire. Soft and chewy and flavored with all of the warm holiday spices we crave around the holidays, these gingerbread cookie bars are irresistible. The batter comes together in seconds, and the recipe yields a ton, making it perfect for gifting, too.
In late October, my friend Julie Majors pleaded with her newsletter readers to make these cookies. They taste like gingerbread, she wrote, but the “texture is chewy like the perfect brownie.”
A photo revealing a cross-section that matched her description sold me, pushing the recipe to the top of my urgent to-make pile. But as things go, weeks passed, and then a month. I had almost forgotten about them, when Julie reminded us.
“Take them to a party,” she dared, “everyone will want the recipe.”
Last weekend I put the cookies to the test, the guinea pigs being my daughter’s hockey team, a mix of mostly teenage boys, a few teenage girls, and their parents and coaches. I was sure, of course, the group would like the bars — I had tested one the day prior, of course, as had my children, whose eyes widened upon first bite, so surprised perhaps that something so unassuming could be so delicious.
Would they love them is what I wondered. As you can see, these bars aren’t winning any beauty contests. In this season of decorated cutouts and jam-filled thumbprints and snow-capped crinkles, would anyone even consider reaching for something so plain?
But Friends, who am I kidding? What teenage kid passes on a cookie? And moreover, what these cookies lack in looks, they make up for in flavor. They are just as Julie describes: like a chewy brownie but spiced with all of those warm, wintry, and especially gingery notes of the season. As soon as I saw kids (and parents and coaches) returning to the plate for seconds (and thirds), I knew they were a winner. Love is an understatement.
Later that evening multiple people texted me asking for the recipe, which I sent along immediately with words of encouragement: make them! they’re so easy! one bowl! ungreased pan! high yield!
I imagine some of you may be holiday-cookied out, and if that is the case, I understand. For those of you who are just getting warmed up, let’s go 🎉
Note: You may be tempted to doll these up with some sort of glaze or frosting or drizzle. And to that I say: don’t you dare. These bars are perfect, inside and out, just the way they are.
Gingerbread Cookie Bars, Step by Step
First, gather your ingredients:
If you wish, measure everything out first:
Place the two sugars and the molasses in a large bowl:
Pour the butter over the top:
Then whisk to combine:
Add the egg and whisk again:
Add the spices, salt, and baking soda, and whisk again:
Finally, add the flour:
Use a spatula to incorporate the flour — the batter will be thick.
Transfer it to an ungreased 9×13-inch pan.
Press it into the pan to fit:
Transfer the pan to the oven and bake for 22 -23 minutes.
Let cool for about an hour before cutting: I like to cut it into 24 squares first; then…
… I cut each square in half to yield 48 little rectangles:
Can you taste the chewiness? You’re going to love them.
PrintUgly, Delicious (Perfect) Gingerbread Cookie Bars
- Total Time: 35 minutes
- Yield: 24 to 48 pieces
Description
Adapted from my friend Julie Majors recipe for Easiest Ever Gingerbread. I’ve made a few small changes: I used melted butter in place of softened, I used a mix of brown and granulated sugar, and I’ve upped the salt. I also use a slightly smaller pan.
Notes:
- Molasses: I’ve used Grandma’s and Crosby’s here. Do not use blackstrap molasses.
- Salt: If you are using Morton Kosher salt or fine sea salt, use half as much by volume: 1/2 teaspoon or the same amount by weight.
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup (150 g) granulated sugar
- 3/4 cup (150 g) light brown sugar
- 1/3 cup (110 g) molasses, see notes
- 2 sticks (227 g) salted butter (unsalted is fine if it’s all you have), melted
- 1 egg
- 1 teaspoon (5 g) baking soda
- 2 teaspoons (5 g) cinnamon
- 2 teaspoons (4 g) ginger
- 1/4 teaspoon (o.25 g) freshly grated or pre-ground nutmeg
- 1 teaspoon (3 g) Diamond Crystal kosher salt, see notes
- 3 cups (384 g) all-purpose flour
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350ºF.
- Place the sugar, brown sugar, and molasses in a large bowl. Pour the melted butter over the top and whisk to combine. Add the egg, and whisk again.
- Add the baking soda, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, and salt, and whisk to incorporate.
- Finally, add the flour and use a spatula to incorporate — the batter will feel more like a thick dough and it will require some elbow grease to incorporate. This is normal.
- Press the dough into an ungreased 9×13-inch glass or metal baking dish.
- Transfer to the oven and bake for 22-24 minutes. The mixture will puff in the oven, but will collapse upon cooling. I like to err on the side of underbaking, and I find these are consistently done at 22-23 minutes. (If you are using a metal pan, start checking even earlier — Julie bakes them for 17-20 minutes, but she is using a larger pan, so her bars are slightly thinner.) Remove the pan from the oven and transfer to a cooling rack. Let cool for roughly 1 hour before cutting.
- Cut into 24 or 48 pieces. I like to make a 6×4 grid of bars; then cut each of those bars in half to make 48 pieces.
- Store at room temperature in an airtight container for up to 3 days (maybe longer, but chances are these bars will never make it that long.)
- Prep Time: 10 minutes
- Cook Time: 25 minutes
- Category: Cookies
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: Amerian
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
125 Comments on “Ugly, Delicious (Perfect) Gingerbread Cookie Bars”
Couldn’t believe how easy this recipe was. Didn’t even have to grease the pan. Just had to try it. Made it as a last minute treat. Wow! Disappeared right away. These are really addictive. Everyone loved them!
Yay! Makes me happy. I love the ease of this one so much.
Can’t believe how wonderful these are and I don’t think they are ugly rather just not pretty. They are like ginger brownies and I added a bit extra ginger as I love the stuff. Will be my go to for holidays!
Great to hear, Patty! Thanks for writing.
Thank you, these were very easy to make. Comments from my dinner guests, “Excellent, Very Good”. They went home with a few. I thought they needed more molasses, and just a tad more cinnamon. Next time I plan on trying dark brown sugar. Thank you!
Delicious, but I found them a bit too sweet. Might be the brand of fancy Molasses I used? Also had a bit of an aftertaste of baking soda, but I’m not sure how substituting baking powder would alter the recipe. Made a whole bunch to share for Xmas baking and they were a hit!
Amazing tasty bars. I couldn’t wait & had to try after 30 minutes while still warm. You are always so on the money…..these won’t last!!! I’ve already eaten an entire row just this evening. I wouldn’t change a thing (I only had dark brown sugar). What a delicious cold weather comforting treat. Thank you for all you make, bake, create ~
Yay! Great to hear, Liane 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks for writing and for your kind words.
This was a simple recipe to make, resulting in deliciousness to the max. It’s a great recipe to make for a crowd and/or to freeze (I hope- I’m going to try freezing them) and pull out for visitors
Great to read this, Sela! They should freeze just fine 🙂
Holy cow, these are so easy to make and so addictively delicious. It took the oven longer to preheat than it did for me to mix together the ingredients! I made a half batch in an 8×8 square baking dish and they came out great. The old-timey molasses and ginger vibe was just the cozy comfort we needed on a cold January day. I’ll definitely be making these again. Thanks again for sharing this, Ali!! 🙂
Great to hear, Diane! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes. It’s helpful to know that a half recipe worked well.
Hello. Can one use margarine instead of butter? Has anyone tried or does it require more flour or the like? Thanks
I think it should be fine!
I have loved your blog for years but wanted to share this. I took this to the Super Bowl last night and it was demolished. I am now know among all the kids as the lady that brought the gingerbread. Thanks for all your great recipes!
What a great thing to be known for!!! Love this 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks for sharing. So glad the bars were a hit.
I had printed this recipe out but never got around to baking them till today’s Snow Day. WOW, perfect. I love the flavor of ginger but had never found a cookie or bar that I loved till today. Just amazing. Love the texture and the ease of a one bowl recipe. Thanks Ali.
So nice to hear this, Julia! Thanks so much for writing and sharing 🙂 🙂 🙂
This is exactly written and pictured and reviewed. I will likely not ever make regular ginger spice cookies again. I used a metal pan and they cooked exactly 19 min and were perfect. I checked from 15. The edges are beautifully chewy the middles are so moist and FLAVORFUL all around! I’m so excited. I did sprinkle top generously with coarse turbinado sugar so that they would be similar to the spice cookies you roll in sugar before hand but this is not necessary. These are epic, wonderful bar cookies and super easy on the cook!
Great to hear, Barbara! Turbinado sugar sounds delicious and pretty. Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes 🙂
I had originally intended to make granola to keep in my backpac while I was out. I found this recipe and needless to say the granola did not get made but these did. They are great to keep in the backpack for a snack. they were easy to make and taste great.
Thanks
Great to hear, Jim! Thanks for writing 🙂
Soooo delicious!
Yay 🙂 🙂 🙂
These cookies are wonderful and really easy to make.
I added 2 tsp. each of ground clove and black pepper along with the listed spices. very spicy and delicious.
The cookies are not ugly, just very plain looking.
Great to hear, Sally! Thanks for writing and sharing these notes 🙂
Very quick and easy to make. Made them last night and added chopped crystallized ginger to the dough. I do not eat a lot of sweets but these did not come out very sweet at all even after adding 1.5 cups of total sugars. I did use a 10×10 baking dish although that cannot be the reason. Great tasting but not as sweet as one may think IMO.
These delicious bars are proof that you can never judge a book by its cover. They’re fantastic, and effortless to make. Because my family loves ginger I added minced fresh ginger as well as chopped candied ginger. I also used dark brown sugar so my bars are a bit darker than the ones pictured. Instead of a 9×13 pan I scaled the recipe to 60% for a 14×4-inch fluted tart pan, which gave the bars a nice scalloped edge on one side. I also added a light dusting of powdered sugar mixed with ginger and nutmeg which made them look a bit festive without distracting from their outstanding texture and flavour. The tart pan yielded 18 bars. They took 16 minutes to bake.
So true, Sadie! Thanks so much for writing and sharing all of these notes. So glad you liked them 💕
Whipped these up at the last minute this afternoon for my little coffee group tomorrow morning. One bowl, one pan. A lot of bang for the buck and really delicious. Thanks.
So nice to hear, Bob! Thanks for writing. You are so right: so much bang for the buck!
I just put these in the oven but I can already tell they’re going to be a permanent part of my holiday/winter cookie rotation. I used all dark brown sugar (I love that molasses flavor) and increased the spices a bit, and added some clove powder to mine as well. After putting the dough in the dish, I pressed minced candied ginger into the top. They’re dangerously close to pretty imo, and an absolute cinch to put together. Honestly, mincing the ginger was the hardest part.
Thanks for the great recipe!
Great to hear, Anna! Love the idea of adding minced ginger here… so pretty and delicious 🙂
Ali. I knew after reading your description and the recipe this was going to be good.
Easy to put together, and delicious. Amazing what a little spice can achieve. While oven preheated and butter melted, weighed and assembled ingredients. By the time the butter was melted it was a matter of minutes to get in the oven.
Found the day after baking they’re not as chewy so will take out of oven bit earlier next time (baked for 23 minutes)
And thinking a scoop of vanilla ice cream would complement for the perfect dessert.
Great to hear, Cindy! I do find with these it’s best to err on the side of underbaking. Thanks for writing and sharing your notes/thoughts 🙂
I only had blackstrap and it so I used that…incredible! Next time I’m upping the spices a bit as well, but these were very easy to assemble, bake, and were thoroughly enjoyed by all!
Great to hear, Susan! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your thoughts 🙂
These bars are delicious. I followed the recipe by weight but was baking for a friend who is dairy intolerant so I subbed Earth Balance for the butter 1:1. The bars came out moist, but the bars in your photo look even more moist—kind of fig newton moist. Do you think it could be because butter has water which would mean that my bars had a lower ratio of liquid than the bars made with butter?
I also thought I could try weighing the flour using the weight (120g/cup) per the bag. I would be cutting down on the flour by 24 grams.
Your thoughts? What would you try first? Thank you.
Hi! I think you could definitely try using less flour — that’s a great idea if you are looking for a moister bar. You could also try reducing the bake time — I find that when I overbake these, they are not as moist/delicious. It’s best to err on the side of under-baking.
Hi Ali! All I want to say is that these gingerbread bars are a gift! So easy to make and so delicious! I love that it makes A LOT! Thank you! I have them all packed up for my son’s school event tomorrow that he just told me about after school today!
Great to hear, Sheri! Thanks so much for writing 🙂 The high yield is indeed a gift… I’m making these tomorrow for my kids’ soccer coaches.
These tasted great but some are quite gooey and seem undercooked. They were puffed up but
I need a better end point. Maybe test it with a toothpick or ???
It’s possible you underbaked them, so you can check with a toothpick next time around… I do advise erring on the side of underbaking — they firm up as they sit.
Made these for the first time today and I can’t stop eating them…delicious and so much easier than cookie cutter gingerbread men….very happy.
Great to hear, Kathy! Thanks for writing 🙂
I made these yesterday. Quote from my 20-year-old daughter, a talented baker, after 2 bites:
“Mom, these ginger bars are fire.”
The best compliment!!! Tell her thank you 🙂 Happy holidays to you and your family 💕💕
Have made this multiple times and it never disappoints. Had some on the counter this morning as I was mixing up my cream cheese frosting for my overnight brioche cinnamon rolls and my husband smeared a little of the frosting on one of the gingerbread squares, and oh, holy happy combo. Highly recommend! Merry Christmas, Ali!
Holy happy combo indeed!! I will try. I have extra cream cheese frosting from the cinnamon rolls yesterday and I’m baking these bars to bring to CT this morning. Can’t wait to share with everyone. Happy holidays!
This looks so good! What a great combination of flavors!
Thanks Suzanne!