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.

Ugly, Delicious (Perfect) Gingerbread Cookie Bars
- Total Time: 35 minutes
- Yield: 24 to 48 pieces 1x
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.
169 Comments on “Ugly, Delicious (Perfect) Gingerbread Cookie Bars”
I just made these. They are delicious however they didn’t puff up. I didn’t really pack my brown sugar and I used dark brown. But they are still good. My house smells like Heaven!
If they taste good, don’t worry about the puff! It’s a subtle puff 🙂
These are one of my go-to desserts now. SO delicious and easy!
Great to hear, Sarah! Thanks for writing 🙂
I want to do this recipe on my half-sheet cookie pan (12″x16″). Do you think if I double it, it would work?
I think if you do 1.5 times the recipe that will be sufficient. Doubling is fine, too, but I think they will be thicker than what you see here.
The weekend following a busy Thanksgiving, and all the hustle and bustle of beginning Christmas preparation, I wanted to bake my family something simple, yet festively fabulous! These bars were IT!!!! Our home smelled heavenly while in the oven, and before they could even cool properly we were already diving into the pan! I will be baking these all of December to share with family and friends, and for ourselves of course! Thank you! 🙂
Great to read all of this! We all need these simple, no-fuss recipes in our lives. Happy holidays to you and your family!
First big snowstorm of the season. I made a batch of these, got them out of the oven, then suited up to go clear snow. — Coming in much later, tuckered out and cold through, oh these were the best. Restored! Which is a good thing, as the snow is still coming down. I’m getting on here just to say thank you.
Awww, Amy, so nice to read this! We baked a lot yesterday during our snow day, too, and I wish we had made these for their ease and deliciousness… my kids found a few complicated recipes to make and they did not deliver. Ugly Delicious for President!!
How do you test the gingerbread for doneness? The recipe includes a range of baking times, and it would be helpful to know this.
Hi Pam. What material pan are you using? I think it’s one of those things you have to make once or twice to know what works best. And I do think it’s best to err on the side of underbaking, so maybe try 22-23 minutes, see how it works, then adjust with more time the next time around depending on how you like them.
Oh my, but did my intuition pay off big time. Baked and devoured these yesterday, only after just seeing this recipe. I could honestly “feel” every reason to bake these, after your descriptive writing. We are a family of 2, although I am always sharing food. I’ve come up with a method of taking a 9 x 13 recipe and turning it into an 8 x 8 situation. It does take math. I divide weights by half, and then add 10% more of that half result. Baking time never changes. Some of my gram weights get a little silly I guess, but rounding to a whole integer is fine.
82.5 g. granulated sugar
82.5 g. light brown sugar
60.5 g. Grandma’s molasses
4.4 oz. melted salted butter
27.3 g beaten egg
1/2 tsp. plus “smidgeon” baking soda
1 tsp. plus “pinch” Cinnamon
1 tsp. plus “pinch” Ginger
1/8 tsp. plus “smidgeon” Nutmeg
1/2 tsp. plus “smidgeon” Diamond Kosher salt
211.2 g. unbleached all-purpose flour
Thank you for sharing this recipe, and the way we ended our evening yesterday.
Jeff, thank you!! This is brilliant. I so often receive questions about scaling recipes back due to having fewer people in the house or to having different pan sizes than the one I suggest. Now I can share a solution! Thank you for sharing the actual quantities here, too. So glad you liked these. They are a fave. Happy holidays!!
Was SO embarrassed after posting….thank you for making me not feel like an idiot 🙂
What?! Stop it. It was so helpful.
These were so great! And so incredibly easy!! Only quibble is that they did stick to the pan a bit – I think I’d put down some parchment next time. I added a few Christmas sprinkles on top before I baked to make them look a bit more festive.
Bummer about the sticking! I’ll have to make a note. What material was the pan that you were using? Love the idea of topping with sprinkles. So festive!
I used my Pyrex 9×13. Which is why I found it super weird since seemingly no one else has had the issue. Other than the sprinkles I did everything as written and measured by weight. Shrug. I had to eat a couple of the uglier ones – tough life.
Tough life indeed! Well, sticking is still a bummer. I will make a note to prevent others from having the same issue.
Just made these in glass dish.
Cooled for one hour.
However upon cutting they didn’t cut clean without breaking.
Hubby and I taste tested and they were delicious!
Any hints on how to get clean cuts like yours?
Interesting! And were you using a sharp knife? Do you happen to have a pizza rocker? Did any of the cooked bars stick to the baking dish?
Used sharp knives. One serrated and the other not.
No I don’t have a pizza rocker just a roller.
No sticking.
Maybe cook a minute longer?
Got it. OK, I would not use serrated. My only thought would be to dip your knife into hot water — fill a pitcher with hot tap water, and dip your knife into it, dry it off, then make swift, firm cuts. But if it seemed as though too much batter was sticking to the knife, then yes, I think you might need to cook it a minute longer.
Thank you! I tried both straight and serrated.
Love your tip!
Will try with hot water.
These still came out delicious!
Everyone loved them!!
A+
Oh, great to hear! Happy Holidays 🎉
The flavor of these bars is to die for! Do you think I could make them as cookies? I actually loved the crispy edges and thought making it into cookies might keep that throughout. If so, how long would you suggest baking them?
Great to hear, Nancy! Regarding making cookies, I think you’d have to chill the dough to make it manageable to work with — maybe once it’s chilled briefly, you could roll it into logs, then slice and bake? I think baking will depend on how big the cookies are, but I think you could rely on the visual cues and start checking after 12-ish minutes? If you give it a go, I’d love to know how they turn out.
I’m not a huge gingerbread fan but these bars are fantastic!
Great to hear, Carmen!
I love this recipe! This is my second year making it for gifts and everyone enjoys them! I’m returning to make my third batch this season! 🙂
Hooray! Great to hear, Samamtha 🙂 Happy holidays!! These are a favorite here.
Thanks Ali, these were really good, buttery and chewy, like a.gingerbread brownie. Hit with the family too. Love your recipes, thank you so much!
Great to hear, Sharon! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this. These are one of my faves 🙂
The flavor of these is amazing!
I want to make them thinner – how large of a pan might work? I have a 11×15” Pyrex or a half sheet pan. Thanks for any thoughts!
Hi! My friend who shared the recipe uses a 10×15-inch pan, so I imagine 11 by 15 will work and will make a gingerbread with the thinness you are going for.
Thanks!