She’s giving us a taste of old New York.

An amateur Brooklyn Heights baker has taken home the “fan favorite” prize at a Big Apple baking contest for producing a jaw-dropping — and mouth watering — recreation of one of the city’s most iconic old hotels in gingerbread.

Rosy Teed, an attorney whose hobby is baking, wowed the crowd at the Museum of the City of New York’s event called “Gingerbread NYC: The Great Borough Bake Off” for fabricating a ten-story replica of the Hotel Chelsea that comes complete with gelatin-sheet windows, royal icing balconies and iconic signage.

Brooklyn Heights baker Rosy Teed took home the “fan favorite” prize for her massive replica of a famed New York City hotel at the Museum of the City of New York’s annual contest. Tamara Beckwith

Teed paid tribute to the historic Hotel Chelsea with a ten-story model, complete with gelatin-sheet windows and royal icing balconies. Tamara Beckwith

The entry was a clear favorite among visitors and staff, reps for the museum said. It got nearly 1,700 more votes between Nov. 7 and Monday than other gingerbread recreations of New York landmarks, such as the Staten Island Lighthouse, Christopher Street-Stonewall Station, Statue of Liberty and Chrysler Building.

“I love the railings — I love how big it is — and I think it was an aspirational project,” said Teed, 30, “and I love the history of the Chelsea hotel: it’s an iconic building filled with iconic New York stories.”

The 140-year-old Hotel Chelsea has lodged the likes of Mark Twain, Arthur Miller, Patti Smith, Andy Warhol and Bob Dylan, to name just a few celebrity guests. It’s also inspired songs from Lou Reed, Leonard Cohen and Joni Mitchell, and is where Nancy Spungen infamously died after allegedly being stabbed by Sex Pistols punk rocker Sid Vicious.

Vancouver, Canada native Teed recalled making gingerbread houses with her family from a young age, slowly turning the pastime into a full-fledged passion with each holiday season.

The monthlong, 200-hour process of putting the massive trophy together for the museum contest wasn’t all sugary, Teed said. Tamara Beckwith

But the monthlong, 200-hour process of putting the massive trophy together for the museum contest wasn’t all sugary, she said – and even cost her a visit from the fire department.

“My oven caught on fire” one night, she admitted, adding that she had to finish her entry using a toaster oven and her cousin’s kitchen after the FDNY “condemned” her own oven.

Teed wound up using 28 standard house recipes’ worth of gingerbread for her Hotel Chelsea tribute, plus countless batches of white royal icing to reinforce the project for its four-month tenure at the uptown museum.

“The Hotel Chelsea is not only an architectural landmark, but a symbol of New York’s artistic history,” said Elisabeth Sherman, Robert A. and Elizabeth Rohn Jeffe Deputy Director and Chief Curator of the Museum of the City of New York.

“Rosy Teed’s gingerbread interpretation translates that legacy into an imaginative sculptural form, and it’s no surprise that visitors connected so strongly with it.”

The 140-year-old Hotel Chelsea has lodged the likes of Mark Twain, Arthur Miller, Patti Smith, Andy Warhol and Bob Dylan, to name a few. New York Post

The annual New York-themed gingerbread competition, now in its fourth year, welcomes professional and amateur bakers alike to pay homage to Gotham by celebrating its local treasures under the theme “Iconic New York.”

Museum reps said Gingerbread NYC continues to be a massive crowd pleaser to its locals-oriented crowd — and November and December were its top-attended months in its 102-year history.

“We’re seeing an increased moment of homegrown New York City pride,” Sherman added: “There’s this feeling around the city of a recommitment to who we are and what makes this city this city: not just tourism … but the real grit and everyday life of the average New Yorker.

“This is an experience that one can do at any age that really celebrates the quirkiness and spectacular nature of this vibrant city.”

Aside from Teed’s triumph, other award winners from the display of 21 entrants include Juliet Galea’s “Cawfee and a Bagel” (Most Realistic and Good Enough to Eat); “The Amazing Race” Season 36 winners Cesar Aldrete & Ricky Rotandi’s “Statue of Liberty” (Best Borough Spirit, Manhattan); and Kate Sigrist’s “Newtown Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant” (Best Overall, Most Unique and Best Borough Spirit, Brooklyn). 

“Rosy Teed’s gingerbread interpretation translates that legacy into an imaginative sculptural form, and it’s no surprise that visitors connected so strongly with it,” Sherman said. Tamara Beckwith

This year’s Gingerbread NYC displays include a Statue of Liberty, Governor’s Island and Chrysler Building models, among others. Tamara Beckwith

Nearly 50 creations were entered to participate in the exhibition, in what museum reps called a record-setting application pool.

When the show wraps Jan. 19, bakers will be able to take their confections home – save for the Forest Hills’ Westside Tennis Club and Staten Island Conference House, which will go to their respective tributes for future display.

The Staten Island Range Lighthouse will be going to the National Museum of Lighthouses — and Teed’s creation will also be going back to its New York roots.

“It’s going to the racoons,” she laughed.