When that autumn sweet tooth hits, there’s Pumpkin Gingersnap Icebox Cake. This isn’t just any ole icebox cake with cookies and whipped fluffy stuff thrown together (although that is delicious). This icebox cake tastes like the feeling of wearing your favorite cozy sweater on the first brisk evening of fall… mixed with pumpkin spice.
These perfectly gingered molasses cookies bake in four (nine inch) cake pans to make beautifully even and stack-able scratch-made cookie rounds. The whipped filling is lightly sweetened and spiced, featuring an entire can of pumpkin puree. After these flavors and textures mingle overnight, you’ll have a mouthwatering, showstopping Pumpkin Gingersnap Icebox Cake that could summon fall right out of summer in one bite!
The Cookie Rounds – Helpful Tips
- If you don’t have four (nine inch) cake pans, no worries. You can bake two cookie rounds at a time. If you have three cake pans, consider baking your fourth round in your nine inch spring form pan.
- Use parchment paper to line your cake pans (NOT wax paper). The cookies will stick to the wax paper.
- Consider placing a strip of parchment under each parchment round when preparing the cake pans. Tabs of the strip should extend a couple of inches past the round on both sides. Pull gently on those extended tabs to help release the cookie rounds after baking and cooling.
- The cookie dough will be sticky. You’ll be tempted, but DO NOT refrigerate. Just drop little blobs of dough in the pans as show below. The room temperature dough will spread when baking to create a single cookie round in each pan. Refrigerated dough may not create enough spread.
- When the cookie rounds come out of the oven, use a spoon to flatten any of the cookies’ edges that baked a little up the sides of the pan.
- Let’s be real for a sec. Sometimes you’re in a rush to get fall yums on the table. In a dessert emergency, swap out the cookie rounds for (gasp!) store bought gingersnaps. Yes, you’ll lose the pizzazz of the perfectly stack-able rounds and the goodness of homemade. But it’ll do the trick in a pinch!
The Whipped Filling – Helpful Tips
- Add the pumpkin slowly while mixing. Dumping it in quickly could result in little blobs of cream cheese lingering in your mixture.
- Also pour whipping cream in slowly while whipping the mixture (same risk of not getting a silky-smooth texture if the whipping cream is poured quickly).
- Scrape down the sides of the mixer frequently!
The Assembly – Helpful Tips
- Remove the bottom of the nine inch springform pan and place the springform pan on whatever pretty plate you’ll serve your Pumpkin Gingersnap Icebox Cake.
- Open the springform pan and situate your first cookie round in the bottom. Close the springform pan.
- Whipping up a small amount of cream can be a challenge. I use the small whisk attachment on my hand mixer. The attachment is small enough to fit into a drinking glass, so I use the glass as a bowl for whipping the cream and confectioner’s sugar. Hold onto the glass tightly while whipping, lest you have a delicious spray of whipped cream across your kitchen. Not that it’s every happened to me. Ahem.
- If you’re out of pumpkin spice for dusting the top, use cinnamon.
- I used a 1M decorator’s tip to pipe the whipped cream around the edges.
- Refrigerate the icebox cake for several hours or overnight before carefully removing the springform pan. Consider using a knife to assist in freeing the cake from the sides as needed. Smooth the edges of the cake as needed after removing the pan.
And then – just sit back and enjoy the taste of fall. *Best enjoyed while gazing at brightly colored fall leaves, wearing the softest sweater, and daydreaming of how to best arrange your new barrage of fresh pumpkins and gourds.*
Pumpkin Gingersnap Icebox Cake
Ingredients
- ginger cookie rounds (see recipe below)
- 12 ounces cream cheese
- 1 cup sugar
- 1 15 ounce can of pumpkin, not pumpkin pie filling
- 1½ teaspoon pumpkin pie spice, plus extra for dusting
- ½ teaspoon vanilla
- 1½ cups whipping cream
- sweetened whipped cream, optional, for garnish
Ginger Cookie Rounds
- ¾ cup butter, softened
- 1 cup sugar
- ⅓ cup molasses
- 1 egg
- ½ teaspoon salt
- 2 teaspoons baking soda
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1½ teaspoons ginger
- ¼ teaspoon cloves
- 2½ cups flour
Sweetened Whipped Cream
- ⅓ cup whipping cream
- 2 tablespoons confectioner's sugar
Instructions
Ginger Cookie Rounds
- Line four (nine inch) pans with parchment rounds and grease the lower portion of the sides of the pans.
- Using a paddle attachment on an electric mixer, beat butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add the molasses and beat until smooth.
- In a separate bowl, combine salt, baking soda, spices, and flour.
- Gradually add flour mixture to batter while mixing to combine.
- Dough will be sticky. Drop little blobs of dough as evenly as possible across the four (nine inch) cake pans.
- Bake at 350°F for 10 minutes or until well done, being careful not to burn. Allow to cool in pans.
Whipped Pumpkin Filling
- Mix cream cheese and sugar using a whisk attachment on an electric mixer. Scrape down sides of mixer frequently throughout this recipe.
- Slowly add pumpkin a spoonful at a time while continuing to mix. Add spices.
- Very slowly pour whipping cream into mixture, while continuing to whip the mixture. Continue to whip until the mixture thickens to hold soft peaks.
Sweetened Whipped Cream
- Add confectioner's sugar to cream and whip until soft peaks form so that the mixture will hold it's shape for piping (if desired) or dolloping.
Pumpkin Gingersnap Icebox Cake
- In a nine inch springform plan, layer a cookie, ¼th of whipped pumpkin mixture, another cookie, whipped mixture, etc, ending with whipped mixture. Smooth top.
- Refrigerate for several hours or overnight. Carefully remove the springform pan from the cake, using a knife to guide if needed. Smooth edges as needed.
- Dust with additional pumpkin spice on top, if desired.
- Pipe whipped cream decoratively as desired.