Wednesday, December 24, 2025

How to Win a Gingerbread House Contest Without Eating the Evidence



Holiday gingerbread contests on a continuum care campus are usually sweet, but this year Jean's entry came with tweezers, birdseed, and a level of precision that borders on becoming an OCD legend. Along the way, this week's post revisits past showstoppers, memorable rivals, and one infamous “protest house,” all leading to a behind‑the‑scenes look at how this year’s  creation came together.  AI….


Since moving to my continuum care campus, I’ve entered the holiday gingerbread house decorating contest three times in the four years they’ve held them. My first house placed second and my second house won first. This year's judging just took place and I took first again (with the house at the top), but when I carried my house down and I saw another house (below) my heart sank. I thought it would beat the crap out of mine and hand me the crumbs in a paper bag. It was made by the kitchen staff, and they took the original kit and added another story using graham crackers. 

The year I took second place, the winner deconstructed the original kit, too, and made a house styled after one built by Frank Lloyd Wright, the most innovative architect in 20th century America. It was so clever. I didn’t mind losing to the couple who made that gingerbread house. They put so many clever details into their houses that it was just plain fun to look at. One year it was a broom with thin spaghetti for bristles that stole the show, and another year they spun sugar to make it look like an icy river. They also put a Christmas tree made out of spearmint candy inside, in front of a window, and the house was wired with lights. 

I sat out the making a house for last year's contest, because I didn’t want to be tempted by all the candy that is left over. For example, I once bought a bag of candy just to get one star out of the bag to top a Christmas tree and I needed just six squares of pretzels out of a bag for window panes and I ate the rest, which a person with high blood pressure shouldn’t be doing. And it cost a fortune to buy everything I used. 

The makers of the Wright-inspired house sat that year out, too, and that was the year the Art Professor caused a huge kerfuffle over a house she made to look like a bombed-out house in the Gaza Strip. She was going to make another protest house this year to resemble a coal-fired power plant but the kits were all gone when she asked for one. The CCC gives them out. First come, first served. This year three kits  wee taken and not returned. I suspect they ended up as gifts for  grandchildren. I know for a fact that happened last year. The guy was open about it and he probably started a trend. I don't get people why do things like that. 

Nor do I understand why someone would tried to sabotage this year's contest. Three days before the votes were to be counted I discovered that someone had crossed off the number on the placecard corresponding with my house and wrote in another number. (Houses are numbered and voters are to write a number on a ballot and put it in a ballot box.) Voting had already been going on a week before my number was changed. No one owned up to the "prank" and no one can figure out why someone would to that other than to try to screw up the contest. I was so mad! I worked a lot of hours on that house and I was sure they'd use that as an excuse not to declare a winner this year. A few people are against having the houses judged. "Can't we just make them for fun?"

Anyway, this year, I decorated the entire gingerbread house and its yard with birdseed and used salt-free peanut butter to ‘glue’ them on. (If you ever make one using birdseed, do some research to learn what is toxic to birds—regular peanut butter, honey, dyes, hard candies are a few things you shouldn't use.) But before I could even start, I spent two nights sorting birdseed from a mixed bag by color and size using a pair of tweezers. I think I have a bit of OCD in me. Sometimes I’ll find myself sorting magazines on the display rack at the grocery store. People pick them up and don’t care where they put them back. What I’m trying to say is I like sorting things. But I was told that I could have found a store that sells bulk seed, and bought what I needed already sorted. Oops. I have a lot of seed left over, but at least I won’t gain ten pounds getting rid of it. We can’t feed birds here, but I can take a walk around the campus and be like Johnny Appleseed spread leftover seeds and house parts alongside our mile-long trail around the lake.

Below are photos of the step-by-step process of making my gingerbread house.


The kit the CCC gave out.


What I used to sift the smaller seeds from the larger ones.

Unpacking the parts in the box.

During the unpacking I dropped the front of the house on the floor and ended up using peanut butter to "glue" the parts to cardboard to reinforce it .

Putting peanuts and seeds on the sides.

The roofs with their layered seeds


I added cardboard hinges to help hold the sides up while the corners dried


The white hinges I made to help give the broken front more support.

The next step was to do the borders around the house while the corners set up for a couple of days. I wanted them solid before the weight of the roof was added.

The finished front


The left side

The back of the house. Those are suet balls holding up the trees branches.


Top down looking at the right side yard


The finished house. The sign says, "for the birds."

I used a pair of tweezers to place every one of those seeds and some are very tiny. It was a labor intense house to make but I enjoyed the process, even the part about figuring out how to fix my boo-boo of breaking the front of the house.

Have a good Christmas, everyone! Thanks for stopping by.  

30 comments:

  1. Congratulations on winning the Gingerbread House Contest, AGAIN! Gosh Jean, I can't even imagine how you were able to work with those tiny seeds to create such a darling "bird house!" All I can say is hats off to you--you are a patient woman with good sight and a steady hand. I could not believe someone messed with your number during the voting process. What is wrong with some people?
    Sounds to me like they need a big dose of Christmas kindness. After another run to the ER last week and an overnight stay at the hospital, I'm back home and could not be happier. After being in the hospital, I appreciate our home so very much. And I'm actually feeling strong enough to have the family in tomorrow for our gift exchange and a meal (my kids will help me with the meal). Very thankful and never want to forget that the true meaning of Christmas centers on loving one another!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. So glad you are back home and able to enjoy Christmas with your family!

      I'm glad I did this labor intense house but I'll never do another one.

      Delete
  2. What a clever idea! Congratulations on your win! I don't have the patience or fine motor skills for tweezer work. LOL We visited our future CCRC last week and there was a display of gingerbread houses created by the staff; none by residents. They didn't appear to be judged -- at least no indication when we were there. I always love to see the creativity that goes into making those. Merry Christmas!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I love looking at them too. They remind me of the days when I remodeled and redecorated my childhood dollhouse, back in the '70s. I had so much fun doing that. It was a fad back then to turn shadow boxes into miniature rooms and you could buy just about anything in miniature to build them. My fine motor skills are not what they used to be and I doubt I'll entry another gingerbread house contest...go out on a high.

      Delete
  3. Congratulations! and Merry Christmas to you!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Merry Christmas back at you! Hope you have a great week ahead.

      Delete
  4. Well first of all, I don’t agree with you on the kitchen staff entry. I think it is a mess. (I am a former high school art teacher. I know my stuff!) Your house is beautiful. Neat. Contrasts in color, shape, and size. Symmetrically balanced. A real winner! Congrats!
    As for the kit thieves and number changers….grow up! Probably offshoots of the new trend in immoral behavior anchored in the Oval Office. “Grab all you can for yourself, the rules are made for suckers.”
    Have a peaceful, happy Christmas, Jean!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you! I think the one the kitchen staff made would have been a top contender if people hadn't known the kitchen staff made it. It was perceived as professionals competing with amateurs.

      Grow up is right! To take a kit worth under $15 dollars is so petty. I suppose someone could have started a house and broke it half way through the process and didn't know how to fix it, but three people do that in the same year? Switching the numbers? I cannot think of a single, logical reason why anyone would do that except maybe cancel the vote counting so next year there would be no judging. I'm looking at the contest as an art project and those who don't want it to be a contest are looking at it as a fun experience to make them. But I have news for them, whether or not there is a prize and voting for the best house...people are still going to judge them.

      Delete
    2. I agree! Jean's is far more eye-pleasing. The staff entry is top heavy, disjointed and sloppy.

      Delete
  5. Congratulations, Jean! What a fabulous and clever idea for a gingerbread house..."For the Birds", indeed! And no danger of ending up on the hips, either. As to the shenanigans regarding the contest going on at your place, I wish I could say I was surprised. People never fail to disappoint, don't they? Ah well, best to highlight the good ones, of which you are one shining star! Merry Christmas to you too, Jean šŸ’•

    Deb

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, Deb. I hope you, Bowser and his "pawrents" have a good Christmas.

      Delete
  6. I have never made a gingerbread house. It looked like so much work but I love your idea of using bird seed, and yes, you definitely should have bought individual bags but, if you enjoyed making it, then it worked out fine. I love the idea of using the bird seed so you don't have extra candy left over to eat. As a diabetic, that is a problem I have with holiday goodies. I can't be trusted not to have a moment of weakness and eat them all. Congrats on the win. A really good job.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks! I gained ten pounds the year I had so much candy left over after making a gingerbread house. It was so cute with a lot of candy from a store that sells retro, specialty candies, but I vowed never again. Even with this 'bird' house I caught myself almost putting a peanut halves in my mouth. I suppose it wouldn't have killed me but they smelled stale.

      Delete
  7. The Frank Lloyd house is nice, but yours is a Masterpiece. I've never seen anything like it. So clever.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It will probably be the last house I decorate so 'go big or go home' seemed like the best approach. Thanks!

      Delete
  8. What a fabulous gingerbread house! You are so creative to come up with this idea! And the time it took to sort all the seeds, amazing. You really have the eye to know what seed to use and where to put it. Wonderful!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I didn't invent the concept of using birdseeds on a gingerbread house but mine is pretty intense---covering everything---compared to others I've seen.

      Delete
  9. I don't like ginger bread, and wouldn't be able to make a gingerbread house if my life depended on it

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If I had to bake a house from scratch I wouldn't have a chance. I do love ginger cookies and ginger bread.

      Delete
  10. If you're OCD because you like to sort then there are a LOT of us out here! I find it soothing to sort. You should have won the contest and you're right - people judge whether a winner is named or not.

    I (and everyone else I'm quite sure) also find misplaced merchandise in various stores and return it to the correct place if I know where that is. I've purchased the wrong thing on numerous occasions because someone put it back in the wrong place. It's maddening! So little concern for others! I too wonder if the lack of a moral compass at the top isn't the true form of 'trickle-down' and I'm anxious to have this era of government over with. I just hope someone with moral courage takes up the mantel.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm glad I'm not the only one who puts things back in order in stores. I often wonder what people looking at me through a security camera would think.

      I think 2026 is going to be the year people in the Republican party start finding their backbones to stand up to the MAGA element that seems to be in control now. That's my Christmas wish!

      Delete
  11. That was so clever! Congratulations! Have a wonderful Christmas. ❤️

    ReplyDelete
  12. Congratulations on your First Place win! That's thinking outside the box (kit). I'm glad you won even though, who knows when the number was changed on your Gingerbread house. Will you be able to set it outside somewhere on campus for the birds or what do you plan to do with it?

    ReplyDelete
  13. What a shitty thing to do changing your Number after a Week of Voting, it sounds like sabotage and not a prank, but even as a prank, NOT Cool. I loved your idea and how the House turned out, I would have Voted it in as a 1st place contender coz it was so different. People giving out the freebie Kits to give as Gifts rather than using to enter the Contest is a cheapskate move, I don't understand people like that either. You actually answered my Question about feeding the Birds your House...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I was being kind to call it a prank. In my heart I think it was probably sabotage but for the life of me I can't figure out why someone would do that other than what I suggested earlier. The number someone changed my house to didn't have a corresponding house. So those votes in theory could have gone to a non-contestant if the issue hadn't been discovered. In the end, both numbers were counted (correctly) to my house.

      Delete
  14. Ohhhh, and a very Merry Christmas my Friend.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Wow! That is really beautiful, Jean. So creative! I’m glad they gave you first prize. Merry Christmas!

    ReplyDelete
  16. Me too. I worked a lot of hours on this house.

    ReplyDelete

Thanks for taking the time to comment. If you are using ANONYMOUS please identify yourself by your first name as you might not be the only one. Comments containing links from spammers will not be published. All comments are moderated which means I might not see yours right away to publish through for public viewing as I don't sit at my computer 24/7.