Wednesday, August 19, 2009

French Macarons

If you couldn't tell from my profile picture, I really love French macarons. The Pierre Hermes Ispahan macaron is one of my favorites in the world (I've had it in Paris and also in Tokyo). In the US, Thomas Keller's Bouchon in New York City makes excellent macarons.

This recipe, inspired by pastry chef Bonbini, involves three parts: the Almondy Mass, the Italian merigue, and the buttercream frosting.
If you think you can work relatively fast, preheat oven to 320 degrees first. Since this was our first time trying this, we wisely decided to wait until we thought we were close to baking before turning on the oven. Over all, I think the whole process took about 2 hours, start to finish. I can see the whole process taking a lot less time once you are experienced.

Oh, and having a stand mixer and food scale is REALLY helpful.

PART I: the Mass

Ingredients for the Mass
40-45g aged egg whites
100g almond flour
100g powdered sugar
3 drops of food coloring

To make aged egg whites, just set your egg whites out in the fridge the night before. I would also highly recommend using a food scale, as it is much more precise than measuring volume.
Combine all Mass ingredients with a manual whisk.

Add food coloring if desired.

Part II: The Italian Meringue
Ingredients:
57g aged egg whites
160g sugar
75g water

Heat sugar and water in a pot until 230 degrees Fahrenheit. This is just above the boiling point of water, and the solution will turn clear a little before reaching this temperature.
Mix egg whites in a stand mixer until you have soft peaks.
Slowly pour the sugar water into the egg white mixture while continuing to mix!
Beat this mixture until stiff peaks form.
Combine Parts I and II (Colored Mass and the Italian meringue) to form the batter for the macaron cookies!

Pipe out circles onto parchment paper for baking.

Some recipes recommend "whacking" the pan against the counter to flatten out the batter. This aids in the development of "feet", the signature little layer of air-bubbles at the bottom of the macaron. Other recipes recommend letting the macarons sit out for at least 30 minutes so that the tops can dry out a bit, thus developing a "skin" that prevents cracking.

We did not wait 30 minutes before baking our first batch. As a result, the first batch had much more cracking than other batches that did sit out for 30 minutes. Lesson learned. We whacked all of the batches, but I'm not sure if that made any difference or not.
Bake for 9-11 minutes depending on the size of the macaron (just watch carefully!) remembering to rotate the pan halfway through. To further prevent the macarons from cracking, use two pans, one on top of the other to protect the macaron from the high heat.

Yay little feet are forming!

Lay out the cookies, and spread with buttercream frosting (or other fillings, such as nutella). Buttercream frosting recipe and tutorial
Serve immediately!

[Note - I did find that these macarons still taste quite good after being stored in the refrigerator for 1-2 days. The baker at Bouchon bakery had told us that their macarons would last at most 1-2 days after purchase, which is consistent with my experience]
Some sad cracked ones!


Enjoy!

Lessons learned - aka "if I were to do this again"
- I would actually buy almond flour instead of almond meal. Almond meal works fine, but it is less refined and therefore gives the macarons a much more substantial "chew" when you are eating it. Still delicious, but tastes slightly less professional.

- Definitely let the batter sit for at least 30 minutes to form a skin, thus reducing the possibility of cracking.

- Make more cool flavors! The next plan: Ispahan Macaron!

Recipe in English Measurements
for the mass:
- 1-1/4 cups almond flour
- 1 cup powdered sugar
- 1-1/2 egg whites or 3 tbsp. of egg whites

for the meringue:
- 3/4 cup sugar
- 1/3 cup water
- 2 egg whites or 1/4 cup of egg whites

10 comments :

  1. Great job! Especially if this was your first attempt! They turned out great and yes I would definitely try them again using the almond flour. Cheers and I look forward to further blog postings by you!

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  2. wow.. i'd love to try one of those! looks like so much work!

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  3. so cute and great colors. and i'm glad i'm not the only person who uses ziploc bags for piping stuff sometimes.

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  4. Such beautiful pictures of macarons. Felt like I was making them.

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  5. i always tell myself im going to make these but i never do :(

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  6. go to melangesucre.com if you love macarons

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  7. Ooh, can I please, please, please try an ispahan macaron if you make them?

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  8. YAY! I wanted to see how your pictures turned out =)

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  9. Have you tried the French meringue technique, Jen?

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