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Washington,
DC – December 2023 / NewsmakerAlert: Historic
Hotels of America® offers travelers memorable ways to experience
holiday traditions, many dating back decades, if not centuries. Gingerbread
houses are a German creation, perhaps inspired by or popularized by the
fairytale “Hansel and Gretel” in the early 1800s. Immigrants to the United
States brought ginger and gingerbread traditions with them. As an art form
for pastry chefs and a sweet treat for children, gingerbread decorating
is a tradition to unite the generations, and gingerbread displays are the
centerpieces of elegant lobbies at the world’s most prestigious hotels.
Year after year, legendary hotels, resorts, and inns create magnificent
gingerbread displays to delight and inspire guests. The
2023 Top 25 Historic Hotels of America Most Magnificent Gingerbread Displays
are the result of thousands of hours of culinary, pastry, confectionary,
engineering, and carpentry teams working for weeks, and even months, to
design, create, mix, bake, build, and, of course, decorate. Collectively,
the ingredients of these displays add up to thousands of pounds of sugar,
eggs, and flour; hundreds of pounds of spices; more than 10,000 individual
candies; and hundreds of gallons of molasses and honey. Feast your eyes
and enjoy!
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The
Omni Homestead Resort (1766)
Hot
Springs, Virginia
The
Omni Homestead Resort, a National Historic Landmark in Hot Springs, Virginia,
is known for its extensive holiday decorations and displays, including
spectacular gingerbread assemblies. Each year, The Omni Homestead Resort’s
executive pastry chef and team imagines and bakes a new dreamy gingerbread
creation to display in the historic resort’s Great Hall. For 2023, the
gingerbread display is a post office, which includes a mailbox to send
letters to Santa. This year’s creation is 9 feet tall and 12 feet long,
weighing hundreds of pounds, and was created using 150 pounds of sugar,
60 pounds of candy, and over 250 pounds of gingerbread. The team—which
included 6 culinary professionals, as well as several carpenters—took two
weeks to build the display. The holiday gingerbread display is a time-honored
tradition at The Omni Homestead Resort, where each executive pastry chef
determines the design. In previous years, the display has been a fireplace,
a gingerbread village representing the resort, and a recreation of the
hotel’s iconic central tower. Guests are invited to decorate their own
gingerbread houses, and can enjoy many other holiday activities, including
s’mores by the fire and bedtime stories with Santa’s elves.
The
Red Lion Inn (1773)
Stockbridge,
Massachusetts?
The
250th Anniversary Holiday Candy House at the Red Lion Inn is an outlier
on the list for containing no baked gingerbread, but it certainly packs
on the candy, and for that it earns its place among other legendary displays.
Measuring 62 inches long, 21.5 inches wide, and 31 inches tall, the candy
house weighs roughly 120 pounds. Transportation of the display from the
staging area to the main dining room required six men, the removal of a
door, an industrial cart, an elevator, and two guides to direct the placement.
But long before then, over 40 team members at The Red Lion Inn spent 40
hours planning, designing, and shopping for ingredients. Construction and
decoration required 128 hours, and it involved the creative minds and time
of over 40 members of the Inn’s team to put on the finishing touches. The
candy house has been a tradition at the Inn, founded in 1773, for many
years, and this particular candy house is a grand tribute to the historic
inn’s 250th holiday season this year. The Red Lion Inn is a Charter Member
of Historic Hotels of America since 1989 and, famously, is featured in
Norman Rockwell’s iconic work Home
For Christmas (1967).
Ingredient
Spotlight:
-
4.75 feet
of Ribbon Candy
-
5 pounds
of Victorian Glass Candies
-
4 pounds
of Licorice Bites
-
3.5 pounds
of Jujyfruits
-
2.8 pounds
of Mike & Ikes
-
2.65 pounds
of Sprinkles
-
1.5 pounds
of Spree Candies
-
1,840
Necco Wafers
-
628 Pez
Candies
-
597 Berry
Gems
-
300 Charms
Squares
-
287 Fruit
Drops
-
245 Pillow
Mints
-
226 Gumdrops
-
202 Peppermint
Candies
-
168 Winter
Mint Candies
-
124 Vanilla
Barrels
-
112 Peppermint
Sticks
-
105 Butterscotch
Drops
-
80 Licorice
Whips
-
2 Chocolate
Lions
Omni
Bedford Springs Resort (1806)
Bedford,
Pennsylvania
When
guests walk into the lobby of the Omni Bedford Springs Resort this December,
they will be greeted by the sweet smell of gingerbread, along with the
resort’s concierge, whose desk is located within the gingerbread display.
Magnificent gingerbread displays are an annual tradition at the historic
Omni Bedford Springs Resort in Bedford Springs, Pennsylvania, but this
year’s display is larger and more impressive than ever before. Chef Harshal
Naik, who has been with the Omni Bedford Springs Resort for several years
and competed on The Food Network’s Holiday Baking Championship in 2022,
is a wiz at gingerbread, and tries to outdo each year’s display the following
season. This year, Chef Harshal collaborated on the project with 45 students
from the Building Construction program at Bedford County Technical Center,
under the instruction of Mr. Steve Sellers, who used Chef Harshal’s plans
to design and construct the framework of the village from wood. Meanwhile,
Chef Harshal and his team of five pastry chefs worked for almost three
weeks preparing the gingerbread bricks (6,800 bricks made from 240 pounds
of gingerbread dough), and another week assembling the gingerbread village.
The display is 34 feet long, 8 feet deep, and 12 feet tall. On top of the
gingerbread—and putting the students’ engineering skills to the test—are
60 pounds of royal icing, 40 pounds of marshmallows, 360 chocolate bars,
100 peppermint chocolate patties, and 1,400 peppermint hard candies. A
National Historic Landmark, Omni Bedford Springs Resort was founded in
1806 and inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2007.
French
Lick Springs Hotel (1845)
French
Lick, Indiana
Made
from sugar (a whopping 673 pounds of regular and powdered sugar) and spice
(eight pounds of ginger, cloves, cinnamon, and nutmeg) and everything nice,
the gingerbread house at French Lick Springs Hotel is a holiday tradition
that guests eagerly anticipate every holiday season. The historic Indiana
resort hotel’s bakery chefs Brittany Fisher, Princess McCallister, and
Chantilly Tuell (plus several “elves”) concoct a fresh gingerbread house
design every holidayseason, and this year, the gingerbread neighborhood
has expanded to include multiple side-by-side houses. The first magnificent
gingerbread display is Santa’s Workshop, with sugar-cookie gears on the
chimney, candy wrenches and tools on the shingles, and Christmas presents
cascading down two chutes on the side of the house. The second house is
Mrs. Claus’s Bakery, with larger-than-life holiday treats, including half-pound
chocolate chip cookies. Creating these 8-foot-tall houses starts nine months
in advance – the first batches of gingerbread were baked in February, and
the bakery staff chips away at this enormous project bit by bit throughout
the year. Visitors smell the gingerbread display before they see it, as
the warm aroma of gingerbread fills the halls of the hotel, inviting guests
to see this culinary masterpiece. The house is on display now through the
first week of January. French Lick Springs Hotel, listed in the National
Register of Historic Places, dates back to 1845, and was inducted into
Historic Hotels of America in 2000.
Grand
Hotel Golf Resort & Spa (1847)
Point
Clear, Alabama
Located
on 550 acres on Mobile Bay in Point Clear, Alabama, the Grand Hotel Golf
Resort & Spa has been known as The Queen of Southern Resorts for over
175 years. In record-time this year—just 23 days—Chef Kimberly Lyons and
her team built the Grand Hotel Golf Resort & Spa, Autograph Collection’s
annual gingerbread display in the historic Alabama resort’s lobby. An annual
Grand Tradition since 2006, the display offers guests a sweet tour of the
Historic Main Building (listed in the National Register of Historic Places)
and the surrounding grounds of the Grand Hotel Golf Resort & Spa through
this larger-than-life gingerbread village. The gingerbread display is a
replica of the resort’s Historic Main Building that was built in the 1940s,
and Bucky’s Lounge, Bayside Grill, the activity lawn, and other features
of the resort, which are made out of delectable icing, candy, and spice
cake. Chef Kimberly and her team used 150 pounds of icing, 75 pounds of
flour, 25 pounds of sugar, 14 pounds of shredded coconut, 1,000 gumdrops,
and 30 different types of candies. The display measures 18 feet long, 7
feet wide, and 3 feet at its tallest point. Making the tradition a game
each year, Chef Kimberly and her team hide nuggets of fun throughout the
display to see if guests can find them.
Some
of the hidden references this year include:
-
A Butterfly
Tree, an homage to the Monarch Butterflies that migrate through the resort
every October
-
Snowman
Chefs, each representing a member of the resort’s culinary team
-
Michael
Herzog, the resort’s General Manager
-
Grand
Hotel Golf Resort & Spa’s friendly ghost, who loved the hotel so much
that they never left
-
3 Beach
Bikes, a great way to get around the resort
-
A Wedding
Cake, a nod to many joyful occasions held at the resort over the past year
-
Nitro,
Chef Kimberly’s pet dog
Mohonk
Mountain House (1869)
New
Paltz, New York
The
annual gngerbread display at Mohonk Mountain House in New Paltz, New York,
consists of a whimsical and delicious collection of displays selected from
the Annual Hudson Valley Gingerbread Competition, hosted by the resort
and in its 9th year in 2023. Displayed pieces are chosen by a panel of
judges, and up to 15 of the entries are displayed throughout the Mohonk
main house during December. Out of 40 submissions the competition accepts
each year, the judges choose first, second, and third place for both adult
and junior categories. Creativity is key, and entries depict everything
from robots, fairy houses, and dinosaurs, to classic cottages. Each entry,
combined with a base, must not be larger than 24 inches high, 24 inches
wide, and 24 inches long. The bakers who submit these works of edible art
begin working months in advance. The historic resort also hosts in-person
voting on competition day for a “people's choice award,” selected by resort
guests and visitors. Visitors who want to attend the competition day but
not stay at the resort can purchase a Gingerbread Pass for $15, fully donated
to The Hudson Valley Food Bank, allowing access to view the winners throughout
the main house. In addition to the competition day, guests can purchase
the Gingerbread Pass for select dates until the end of the year to view
the gingerbread display, self-guided Christmas Tree tour, enjoy the festive
decor, take advantage of sales in the gift shop and spa retail store, and
benefit from special rates for ice skating at the outdoor pavilion. Mohonk
Mountain House was designated a National Historic Landmark in December
1986, and was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 1991.
St.
James Hotel MN (1875)
Red
Wing, Minnesota
For
the past three years, the St. James Hotel’s Pastry Chef, Amy Zerwas, has
introduced a sweet bit of holiday cheer to the hotel’s lobby in the form
of a magnificent gingerbread display. Initially introduced as a pandemic-era
pick-me-up for the staff, designing and building the historic hotel’s holiday
gingerbread display has emerged as a new tradition for the team, and one
that guests can enjoy, too. This year’s magnificent gingerbread display
is a replica of the historic Red Wing Depot, a train station designed by
Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad architect J.U. Nettenstrom.
The Depot opened to the public in 1905, and while it was later replaced
by a modern station, it was restored in 1991, and now serves as a local
art gallery. The sweeter, smaller version of this historic depot can be
found November 24 through January 1 in an alcove in the main lobby of the
St. James Hotel and is complemented by the hotel’s annual display of model
trains. Chef Zerwas oversaw the planning, mixing, construction, and decorating
of the display, which required 22 pounds of flour, 12.5 pounds of molasses,
5.5 pounds of shortening, 4.25 pounds of sugar, and nearly 3 pounds of
spices. The Red Wing Depot replica measures 3 feet long, 1.5 feet wide,
and 2 feet at its tallest point. The St. James Hotel is listed in the National
Register of Historic Places and was inducted into Historic Hotels of America
in 1994.
1886
Crescent Hotel & Spa (1886)
Eureka
Springs, Arkansas
1886
Crescent Hotel & Spa invites guests to participate in a special interactive
holiday gingerbread display this year. Located in the hotel lobby, the
central gingerbread house was baked, built, and decorated by the hotel’s
baker, and serves as the focal point, with many small gingerbread houses
added over the course of the December holidays by guests. Although the
display does not portray a specific real place, the historic hotel’s staff
created a gingerbread display that embodies the spirit of togetherness
and creativity that defines the holiday season at the 1886 Crescent Hotel
& Spa, creating a gingerbread village that reflects the guests who
stayed at the hotel in December. The village grows throughout the holiday
season. In the making of these creations, the hotel estimates they will
use over 100 pounds of gingerbread dough, 30 pounds of royal icing, and
50 pounds of assorted candies. As a resort activity, all guests and visitors
are invited to decorate their own small gingerbread houses and add their
house to the village. The interactive gingerbread display was introduced
in 2021 and began with the hotel staff’s desire to create a unique and
memorable experience for guests during the holiday season. Nestled in the
Ozarks, where local healing waters once attracted health-seeking travelers,
1886 Crescent Hotel & Spa is listed in the National Register of Historic
Places and was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2000.
Wentworth
Mansion (1886)
Charleston,
South Carolina
The
exquisite gingerbread house on display in the lobby of Wentworth Mansion
in Charleston, South Carolina, is a detailed replica of the building itself.
Crafted with care by the hotel’s passionate pastry team, led by Chef Ashley
Cardona, this extraordinary creation captures not just the architectural
splendor of the historic hotel, but also the festive spirit of the holiday
season. The pastry team, comprised of four dedicated artisans, invested
over 100 hours to create this masterpiece. From meticulously designing
to-scale templates, to handcrafting and assembling each component, their
expertise and passion for culinary artistry was evident in every step of
the process. The team adorned the mansion with individually piped royal
icing and hand-cut gingerbread bricks, showcasing exceptional skill and
commitment to bringing this enchanting display to life. The finished display
measures 18 inches by 24 inches, and weighs just under 50 pounds, constructed
entirely from edible materials. The base is comprised of traditional gingerbread,
hand-painted with brick-red hues to mirror the mansion's façade.
Each “glass” window was meticulously cut from gelatin leaves and tailored
to match precise dimensions. Notably, the cupola, a signature architectural
feature, was fashioned from pastillage, a decorative sugar paste traditionally
used for intricate sugar sculptures. Details like stairs, landscaping,
and the roof were sculpted from Rice Krispies Treats and enveloped in fondant,
lending texture and authenticity. Using a palette of edible food colors,
Chef Ashley added depth and detail, especially to areas like the roof and
brick courtyard. To achieve an authentic touch, she applied edible copper
luster dust, imparting a genuine metallic appearance to the roof. This
year marks the inaugural debut of a Wentworth Mansion gingerbread display,
and the team hopes to make it a cherished tradition for guests and staff
alike for years to come. Wentworth Mansion is listed in the National Register
of Historic Places and was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in
2003.
Hotel
Colorado (1893)
Glenwood
Springs, Colorado
The
life-sized, interactive holiday gingerbread display at Hotel Colorado in
Glenwood Springs, Colorado, wraps around the hotel’s Legends Coffee &
Gift Shop, and invites guests to enjoy a seriously sweet shopping experience.
The gingerbread house is 16 ft. high, 12 ft. long, and 14 ft. wide, and
was built using 311 pounds of gingerbread and 8 gallons of frosting. Four
people worked together for over a week to bake, build, and decorate the
sweet and spiced house. The gingerbread display at Hotel Colorado is a
time-honored tradition and has been a major part of the hotel’s holiday
displays for the past 15 years. Although it has moved locations a few times,
it is now a tradition to build the gingerbread display around the exterior
of the Legends Coffee & Gift Shop. Naturally, with over 300 pounds
of gingerbread displayed, the halls of this historic hotel are filled with
the aroma of molasses and ginger. The gingerbread house is on display as
part of the hotel’s large-scale holiday décor. The hotel is open
to anyone to visit, take photos, and enjoy the beautiful display. Located
in the great Rocky Mountains, Hotel Colorado is listed in the National
Register of Historic Places and was inducted into Historic Hotels of America
in 2007.
The
Jefferson Hotel (1895)
Richmond,
Virginia
“What
if Santa Claus enjoyed cookies, candy, and sweet confections not just one
night of the year, but year-round?” This bit of lore-questioning by the
staff at The Jefferson Hotel in Richmond, Virginia, led to the design and
construction of a magnificent gingerbread display in this historic hotel's
Palm Court lobby this December. Santa’s Sweet Shop is a colorful, magical
scene depicting the jolly old elf’s sweet shop, complete with a conveyor
belt of gingerbread cookies, jars filled with candy, and an area for making
and decorating gingerbread cookies. According to the storytellers at the
hotel, Santa built his Sweet Shop to show the hard-working elves how much
he appreciates them. Behind the scenes, however, a team of 10 people—including
current hotel staff and former staff who returned to celebrate the hotel’s
holiday season—worked closely for almost three weeks to complete the project,
led by Executive Pastry Chef Sara Ayyash. The Jefferson Hotel’s Santa’s
Sweet Shop is 10 feet tall, 15 feet long, and 5 feet deep. It required
260 pounds of flour, 86 pounds of shortening, 72 pounds of brown sugar,
10 gallons of molasses, 12 pounds of ginger, and 6 pounds of cinnamon—and
that’s just to make the gingerbread! Adding up the frame, gingerbread,
royal icing, and candy, the magnificent gingerbread display weighs over
3,000 pounds. The gingerbread display is a time-honored tradition at The
Jefferson Hotel, listed in the National Register of Historic Places and
a Charter Member of Historic Hotels of America since 1989.
Candy
Spotlight:
-
100 pounds
of Marshmallows
-
375 ft.
of Nerds Rope
-
20 pounds
of Jellybeans
-
20 pounds
of Chocolate Sixlet Candies
-
15 pounds
of Gumballs
-
10 pounds
of Red Hot Cinnamon Drops
-
10 pounds
of Christmas Candy Corn
-
10 pounds
of Crushed Peppermint
-
15 pounds
of Gummy Candies
-
5 pounds
of Chocolate Mint Drops
-
5 pounds
of Gumdrops
Moana
Surfrider, A Westin Resort & Spa (1901)
Honolulu,
Hawaii
As
the first hotel in Waikiki, the Moana Surfrider, A Westin Resort &
Spa has enchanted guests each holiday season with its joyful ambience and
festivities for 122 years. This holiday season, the historic hotel presents
an enchanting experience: a magnificent life-sized gingerbread house titled
“Christmas in Hawai'i.” This year's display shows off iconic island motifs
like hula skirts, canoes, and palm trees. Adorned with vibrant candy decor,
the hotel's gingerbread house is made up of thousands of gingerbread bricks,
gallons of egg whites, and hundreds of pounds of candy and icing. Construction
of the display required three culinary experts to build, a team led by
Pastry Chef Carmen Montejo. They logged 504 hours to bake this larger-than-life
display, which was unveiled on December 12 and is now open to the public
in the hotel’s main lobby. The decked-out gingerbread display welcomes
guests and visitors to pose for photos and selfies of the awe-inspiring
gingerbread house, as well as take in the scents and sounds of the holiday
season. The impressive gingerbread display is near the dazzling two-story
Christmas tree that greets visitors in the historic lobby. Along with the
decor, the oceanfront resort offers a signature Keiki (child) Christmas
Tea on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays in December for guests under 12.
The keiki tea set includes a gingerbread cookie, milkshake, Santa hat and
the Moana teddy bear. Known as the “First Lady of Waikiki,” the Moana Surfrider,
A Westin Resort & Spa, is listed in the National Register of Historic
Places and is a Charter Member of Historic Hotels of America since 1989.
The
Fairmont Hotel San Francisco (1907)
San
Francisco, California
For
over a century, The Fairmont Hotel San Francisco has enchanted guests with
its joyful holiday festivities and seasonal ambiance in The City by the
Bay. One of the hotel’s most spectacular annual traditions is its stunning
gingerbread house. At the end of November each year, the hotel lobby transforms
into one of the world’s most beloved holiday destinations, where cherished
memories are made by locals and visitors alike. The highlight of this awe-inspiring
exhibit is the glowing, two-story Victorian-style gingerbread house, adorned
in hundreds of pounds of See’s Candies® iconic sweets, located in the
hotel’s grand lobby. The Fairmont Hotel San Francisco’s talented culinary
team, led by Executive Chef Eric Marting, meticulously planned the construction
of this year’s enormous gingerbread house, which is even larger than in
past years. The 2023 gingerbread house stands at more than 22 feet high
and 23 feet wide, and includes thousands of homemade gingerbread bricks,
and more than a ton of royal icing and candy decorations. The hotel partnered
with See's Candies to decorate its gingerbread house and holiday displays
this year. Hundreds of pounds of See’s Candies—including their iconic lollypops,
sour candies, and chocolate confections—were artfully placed on the breathtaking
gingerbread house, creating a true work of art. To get a taste, guests,
San Francisco residents, and visitors to the city are encouraged to stop
by the See’s Candies pop-up location in The Fairmont Hotel San Francisco’s
lobby to purchase an array of sweet offerings. The pop-up shop will be
open during peak periods throughout the holiday season. Guests and visitors
are invited to come experience this year’s gingerbread display between
November 25, 2023, and New Year’s Day 2024. A Beaux-Arts masterpiece designed
by Julia Morgan, The Fairmont Hotel San Francisco was inducted into Historic
Hotels of America in 2001.
The
Otesaga Hotel (1909)
Cooperstown,
New York
Located
within the Cooperstown Historic District in Cooperstown, New York, The
Otesaga Hotel is a historic resort hotel that exudes elegance and authenticity.
The holiday gingerbread display has been a tradition at The Otesaga Hotel
since the early 1990s, and the 2023 gingerbread display is set up in the
main lobby, where guests can enjoy it immediately upon arrival. This year,
the gingerbread village display features an Adirondack Lake & Lodge
theme, celebrating the rustic aesthetic that the Adirondack Mountains are
famous for. The display required a team of four to mix, roll, cut, and
bake over the course of three days. It took an additional 32 hours, spread
out over 2 days, to assemble and decorate the village. The gingerbread
village display is 4.5 feet wide and 7 feet long, and weighs approximately
100 pounds, including 40 pounds of gingerbread dough, 44 pounds of powdered
sugar, 1 gallon of egg whites, and over 800 candies, cookies, and cereal
pieces for decoration. During the holidays, the resort offers gingerbread
house decorating, as well as cookie decorating activities for guests both
young, and young at heart. The gingerbread display brings the history of
the iconic resort to life, offering guests another way to experience the
holiday season with a visit to Cooperstown, home of the National Baseball
Hall of Fame and Museum, and affectionately known as “America’s Most Perfect
Village.”
JW
Marriott Savannah Plant Riverside District (1912)
Savannah,
Georgia
Located
in a fabulously repurposed power plant in Savannah, Georgia, dating back
to 1912, the historic and elegant JW Marriott Savannah Plant Riverside
District is a contemporary riverside retreat. In December, visitors can
get into the holiday spirit while taking in the hotel's magnificent gingerbread
display, as well as its Savannah Christmas Market®, holiday dinners,
and cookie decorating. The hotel’s magnificent gingerbread display is an
annual tradition, with a fresh design selected each year. This year’s display
is a stunning replica of the historic hotel's front entrance, capturing
the essence of its iconic façade, complete with intricate details,
such as windows and brickwork. The gingerbread replica is meticulously
created to scale, highlighting the grandeur of the historic Savannah Power
Plant. This delicious display not only mirrors the exterior—it also showcases
the reimagined interior, adorned with exquisite crystals and geodes that
grace the Generator Hall lobby. Crafting this culinary marvel required
the collaborative efforts of a talented team of ten pastry chefs, who began
work in October. The display, standing over 13 feet long and 10 feet tall,
is composed of over 10,000 gingerbread bricks, 300 pounds of candy, 650
pounds of gingerbread, and 200 pounds of icing. Positioned in the front
lobby Turbine, the seasonal masterpiece offers a captivating photo opportunity
for guests visiting the hotel’s Savannah Christmas Market. The celebration
continues throughout the holiday season with a cookie decorating event
in Turbine—providing a hands-on and delicious experience for guests of
all ages.
Omni
Grove Park Inn (1913)
Asheville,
North Carolina
Omni
Grove Park Inn in Asheville, North Carolina, hosted the 31st Annual National
Gingerbread House Competition™ in November 2023, an annual tradition it
has organized since 1992. The gingerbread competition began with a small
group of gingerbread houses built by Asheville, North Carolina community
members as another way to celebrate the holiday season, with no plans to
continue the following year. There was no possible way to know that over
30 years later, the Omni Grove Park Inn National Gingerbread House Competition™
would be one of the nation's most celebrated and competitive holiday events.
The Omni Grove Park Inn displays every entry throughout the resort beginning
on Monday, November 27, 2023, and continuing through Tuesday, January 2,
2024. Guests not staying at the resort are invited to view the display
after 6 p.m. on Sundays, or any time Monday through Thursday, based on
parking availability and excluding holidays and select dates. Since it
began, the Inn’s gingerbread display of competition entries has become
a true family holiday tradition. This year’s winners were a niece and aunt
baking duo from North Carolina, and it was their third year competing,
and first time winning, the competition. They submitted a display called
“Christmas at the Tongkonan,” a confectionary replica of a traditional
Indonesian house. John Cook, the resort’s Executive Pastry Chef and a Gingerbread
Judge, said of the event, “From the moment you drive on property, you can
feel the energy of every competitor. It has gone from a national competition
to a giant family reunion. There are so many competitors who have come
back year after year, not only to rise in the ranks and possibly win, but
to see their friends grow along the way too. The ambiance of the hotel
and its history, along with the competition, really set the stage for our
competitors to come in and put their best foot forward.” Listed in the
National Register of Historic Places, the Omni Grove Park Inn was inducted
into Historic Hotels of America in 2000.
HOTEL
DU PONT (1913)
Wilmington,
Delaware
This
holiday season, HOTEL DU PONT—a Charter Member of Historic Hotels of America
since 1989—celebrates the magic of winter with a remarkable and meticulously-designed
gingerbread village display, reflecting the architecture of 20th-century
Wilmington. Led by Executive Pastry Chef Leah Ferrera, this confectionery
masterpiece took seven days to mix, bake, assemble, and decorate. The display,
now affectionately known as the Gingerbread Park, spans over 12 feet and
features over 40 individually decorated houses, showcasing over 30 pounds
of gingerbread dough and 20 pounds of royal icing. Located in a dedicated
space just off the hotel’s main lobby, the Gingerbread Park is more than
just a visual treat; it is an immersive holiday experience. Guests are
invited to delight in the historic HOTEL DU PONT’s holiday festivities,
including gingerbread cookie workshops every Saturday in December. HOTEL
DU PONT’s gingerbread tradition is a cherished activity that has delighted
guests for decades. This display, woven into the hotel's festive fabric,
offers both guests and staff a chance to share in the season of joy and
light.
Chatham
Bars Inn (1914)
Chatham,
Massachusetts
The
town of Chatham, Massachusetts, comes to life in the sweetest way through
the Chatham Bars Inn’s gingerbread village this December. The seaside resort’s
gingerbread display is 16 ft. long by 8 ft. wide and features significant
landmark buildings from the town of Chatham, in addition to the historic
hotel, including the Train Museum, Chatham Bars Inn, The Chatham Squire,
Chatham Lighthouse and CoastGuard Station, Orpheum Theater, as well as
the church and fish pier. Molded waves lap sugary sand at the edges of
the gingerbread village, and fondant evergreen trees dot the candy landscape.
There are built-to-scale cars and boats, as well as a working train on
a track, throughout the gingerbread display. The gingerbread village is
displayed in the hotel lobby, directly across from the front desk. The
gingerbread team spends an estimated 250 hours working on the display each
year to mix, bake, and set up the display. During the holiday season, the
Inn hosts several Gingerbread Workshops, where the award-winning pastry
team bakes and assembles gingerbread houses, and guests have the fun part,
decorating them with an array of edible frosting and candy, making the
experience fun, easy, and delicious. Guests also enjoy complimentary cookies,
cocoa, and coffee while creating their masterpieces. Over 20 gallons of
royal icing, 1,000 gingerbread shingles, and 10 pounds of fondant — all
created with over 70 pounds of powdered sugar and more than 100 eggs —
turn a tabletop into an oceanside winter wonderland. The gingerbread display
at Chatham Bars Inn is a beloved, time-honored tradition cherished by all
guests of the Inn and visitors of all ages.
The
Broadmoor (1918)
Colorado
Springs, Colorado
The
Broadmoor’s magnificent gingerbread display has been a grand holiday tradition
at the Colorado Springs, Colorado, resort since 1964. This year, the gingerbread
display is a replica of a Lightning Bug Canopy Boat, in honor of an upcoming
2024 resort amenity. For years, guests of The Broadmoor have enjoyed paddle
boats on the resort’s very own Cheyenne Lake. However, when the hotel opened
in 1918, there were canopy boats that cruised silently across the placid
waters. In the summer of 2024, two beautiful new electric canopy boats
will once again grace the lake, harkening back to the early days of the
resort. The confectionary replica was crafted with over 958 pounds of powdered
sugar, 475 pounds of flour, 1,801 eggs, plus a canopy adorned with candies
and sweet treats, including candy canes, gumdrops, macarons, meringues,
peppermints, and jellybeans. The gingerbread display is on the Mezzanine
level of the main historic building. Previous gingerbread displays have
included the resort’s intricate Pauline Chapel and The Broadmoor Special
– a 1918 Pierce Arrow Touring Car that was converted by Broadmoor Founder,
Spencer Penrose, into an iconic race car. In 2020, Chef Adam Thomas and
his team of chocolatiers and bakers installed a giant train car known as
the “Cog Railway.” Since 2013, the historic resort’s gingerbread creations
have been life-size, and played a vital role in the resort’s holiday celebrations,
going up at Thanksgiving, and remaining on display until the new year.
Last year's creation drew inspiration from The Broadmoor's founder, Spencer
Penrose, and his 1937 Flat Head V-8 Cadillac Touring Car. The gingerbread
designs are always over-the-top and are loved by families who visit the
resort during the holiday season. A National Historic Landmark, The Broadmoor
is a Charter Member of Historic Hotels of America since 1989.
Watch:
Time-lapse
video showing creation of the Lightning Bug Canopy Boat Gingerbread Display
La
Fonda on the Plaza (1922)
Santa
Fe, New Mexico
Every
year in mid-December, the decorating masters at La Fonda on the Plaza roll
out a majestic 2.5 feet by 2.5 feet gingerbread replica of the adobe hotel
to display in the lobby. For decades, the masterpiece was spearheaded by
the Santa Fe, New Mexico, hotel’s former purchasing manager, Gil Mesa.
La Fonda continues the tradition of honoring Mr. Mesa’s legacy during the
holiday season. Now, Chef Lane Warner, and Chef de Cuisine, Rafael Zamora,
carry on Mr. Mesa’s legacy with a decked-out stucco structure, sporting
traditional décor and details inspired by the hotel’s past. With
artistic nods to famous railway hotelier Fred Harvey, pioneering designer
and architect Mary Elizabeth Jane Colter, architect John Gaw Meem, and
the famous Harvey Girls, the sweet scene harkens back to the early era
of La Fonda hospitality. After assembly, the culinary crew spends hours
crafting powdered-sugar-tipped pine trees, glazed sugar-painted windows
(a tribute to artist Ernesto Martinez, best known for his whimsical paintings
on the windowpanes in La Plazuela), and finishing with stiff royal icing,
depicting the frosty high-desert snow of New Mexico. Finally, the display
is complete with traditional farolitos illuminated with LED lights to celebrate
the season. La Fonda debuts the gingerbread hotel every year in mid-December
for both guests and locals to enjoy. La Fonda on the Plaza was inducted
into Historic Hotels of America in 1991.
Hilton
Chicago (1927)
Chicago,
Illinois
The
stylish and stunning Hilton Chicago unveiled its gingerbread display depicting
Chicago’s urban winterscapes on November 15, alongside the hotel’s decorated
Great Hall. The gingerbread display was lovingly crafted by Executive Chef
Mario Garcia, and Pastry Chef Wing Au, and the holiday display pays homage
to the city of Chicago, and incorporates a gingerbread replica of Hilton
Chicago, Soldier Field, and more. Standing over 6 feet tall, it took three
pastry chefs nearly 300 hours to create, and was built from 380 pounds
of flour, 16 pounds of ginger, 16 pounds of cinnamon, and 16,000 gingerbread
bricks. The sweet historic hotel is placed near the lobby’s 24-foot holiday
tree, which is decorated annually with thousands of metallic ornaments,
and together both are the centerpieces of the lobby’s floor-to-ceiling
décor, with 2,000 inches of decorated garland, a 30-inch-tall poinsettia
“kissing ball,” and 60-foot wreaths. The Hilton Chicago welcomes guests
and locals to visit the lobby area and make the gingerbread hotel and Chicago
skyline the ultimate backdrop for seasonal holiday photos and Instagram-worthy
moments. A member of Historic Hotels of America since 2015, Hilton Chicago
is the third-largest hotel in Chicago, and has hosted every United States
president since it opened its doors in 1927.
The
Settlers Inn at Bingham Park (1927)
Hawley,
Pennsylvania
The
holiday gingerbread display tradition at The Settlers Inn at Bingham Park
began over 30 years ago, and today, the edible display is part of a beloved
annual event, Candlelight Christmas. Founder Jeanne Genzlinger and her
friend, Marcia Dunsmore, envisioned a celebration that blended time-honored
holiday traditions, beloved childhood memories, and treasured Christmas
fantasies. Originally known as Victorian Christmas, the event was re-named
Candlelight Christmas to reflect a universal symbol of goodwill, light,
and hope. The event features Sleigh Ride Punch (Syllabub and mulled wine),
horse and carriage rides, and—of course—the gingerbread house display.
This year’s display required three days to bake and assemble. The finished
product is an exact replica of the historic Arts-and-Crafts-style Tudor
lodge. No detail is overlooked in the recreation, from the Inn’s iconic
dormer windows to the vintage Victorian sleigh on the front porch. A chocolate
roof and windows made from poured melted sugar add to its rich appearance.
Victorian-era figurines posed throughout the display, and confectionary
sugar snow help to set the festive scene. It is prominently displayed in
the lobby across from the front desk for the duration of the holiday season,
and guests are invited to take photos with it. This year in December, the
Inn offers a Christmas Tea. Guests visiting on Thursday afternoons this
month can enjoy all the holiday décor, including the gingerbread
display, as they savor freshly brewed teas, finger sandwiches, and decadent
desserts. A charming destination during any season, The Settlers Inn at
Bingham Park sits on six acres of land, surrounded by artfully designed
gardens, and bordered by the Lackawaxen River and woodlands that contain
a portion of the old Delaware & Hudson Canal. This historic inn was
inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2010.
Skytop
Lodge (1928)
Skytop,
Pennsylvania
The
magnificent gingerbread hotel display at Skytop Lodge in Skytop, Pennsylvania,
has been a holiday tradition since 2013, and each year, it is presented
as a replica of the Main Lodge, featuring the porte-cochere. In its tenth
year now, the gingerbread display is located in the main lobby of the Main
Lodge, and measures about 20 feet wide, and is about 12 feet deep, reaching
a height of about 12 feet from its base. Production began in August, when
the staff started baking the gingerbread bricks. The sweet-smelling shell
of the house went up on November 1 around a wood frame, and the staff decorated
the gingerbread display the week of Thanksgiving. Guests who were present
that week were invited to help add candy to the design. The 2023 Skytop
Lodge gingerbread display ingredients added up to 450 pounds of flour,
700 eggs, 13 pounds of gingerbread spices, 150 pounds of honey, 150 pounds
of molasses, 12 pounds of baking soda, 80 pounds of shortening, and 10
pounds of candy decorations. The icing used in the Skytop Lodge gingerbread
display required 500 pounds of powdered sugar, pushing the display’s total
weight to more than 2,300 pounds! This holiday season, Skytop Lodge guests
are invited to join in holiday activities, including gingerbread cookie
decorating. The display will be up through January 8, 2024, and the public
is welcome to stop by to see it. Established in 1928, Skytop Lodge was
inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2000.
Alisal
Ranch (1946)
Solvang,
California
Alisal
Ranch in Solvang, California, partners each year with the Solvang Bakery
to create charming gingerbread replicas of the luxury Dude Ranch’s barn,
front office, library, boathouse, and guest cottage. The gingerbread houses
are each about a foot wide, and they are arranged in a display of fluffy
“snow,” illuminated with fairy lights, and embellished with sparkling baubles
and fir boughs. The houses are accompanied by charming Ranch details, such
as miniature hay bales, horses, friendly golden retrievers, and barn cats.
These ranch-inspired gingerbread houses are on display in the resort’s
dining room from the beginning of December. During the construction, the
Solvang Bakery used approximately 100 pounds of gingerbread dough, and
75 pounds of icing, to produce the display, which involved the labor of
six people, who worked for about three weeks to produce the sweet, miniature
dude ranch. In addition to an eye-catching festive display, each guest
staying at Alisal Ranch over Christmas Eve and Christmas Day will also
be gifted a personalized gingerbread house decorating kit, providing a
fun family activity to do on-site, or to take home as a keepsake of holiday
memories made at Alisal Ranch.
Rancho
Bernardo Inn (1963)
San
Diego, California
This
year marks Rancho Bernardo Inn’s 14th holiday season decked with a magnificent
gingerbread display, and the historic resort is upping its decor game in
2023 with its largest display yet. Complete with a gingerbread village,
the display is more immersive for guests than previously, with intricately
crafted life-sized gingerbread houses and various other whimsical structures.
While it does not portray a real place, the design aims to evoke a festive
and enchanting atmosphere. The inn itself was designed in 1963 in the Mediterranean
Revival-style, but the Neoclassical style-inspired gingerbread house is
complete with two wings attached to the central structure, gable roofs,
and portico—all formed by sweet gingerbread and bright candy décor.
To create Rancho Bernardo Inn’s Gingerbread House Experience, a team of
bakers, pastry cooks, and engineers came together over 4 days to set up
this incredible, edible house of candy. However, the entire process, from
mixing the ingredients to baking and assembling the full display, spans
over a month. The Gingerbread House Experience construction required 1,000
pounds of flour, 1,000 pounds of sugar, 128 pounds of molasses, 240 pounds
of eggs, and 400 pounds of candy. Guests are invited to walk through and
around the display, which is located in the main lobby, and take advantage
of this fantasy background for photo opportunities. Additionally, the resort
offers mini gingerbread houses for sale in Café Granada, for guests
who want to bring home a piece of the experience.
“The
tradition of gingerbread fairy-tale houses reportedly started in the United
States more than 200 years ago with the German immigrants to Pennsylvania.
Today, travelers can view life-size historic hotels, national monuments,
historic buildings, and historic main streets made of gingerbread. A large
party of people can dine in the more-than-life-sized gingerbread house
at the Fairmont San Francisco,” said Lawrence
Horwitz, Executive Vice President, Historic Hotels of America and Historic
Hotels Worldwide. “Congratulations to the hundreds of people that worked
to create the 2023 Top 25 Historic Hotels of America Most Magnificent Gingerbread
Displays. This holiday season, “run, run as fast as you can” and catch
the most magnificent gingerbread houses and displays at many Historic Hotels
of America.”
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About
Historic Hotels of America®
Historic
Hotels of America® is the official program of the National
Trust for Historic Preservation for recognizing, celebrating, and promoting
the finest historic hotels in the United States of America. The National
Trust for Historic Preservation was chartered by U.S. Congress in 1949
and is a private 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. The National Trust for
Historic Preservation is leading the movement to save places where our
history happened. To be nominated and selected for membership in this prestigious
program, a hotel must be at least 50 years old; designated by the U.S.
Secretary of the Interior as a National Historic Landmark or listed in
or eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places; and
recognized as having historical significance. Of the more than 300 historic
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of Columbia, and Puerto Rico, all historic hotels faithfully preserve their
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Release: 2023
Top 25 Historic Hotels Worldwide Culinary Heritage and Traditions List
(11/30/23) |