Showing posts with label macarons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label macarons. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Magical Macarons! Maracons - Part 1...



That’s pronounced, “Mawk-a-rone” ….not “Mack-a-roon” (although lots of people say macaroon anyway) - (and this post will be presented in 4 parts as I found out the HARD way Blogger only accepts so many pics per post!). While a macaroon is a coconut mound of a cookie, a macaron is a delectable, French sandwich cookie that has a light, wafer-crisp shell with a dense, moist and chewy inside and has a creamy filling of salted peanut butter, chocolate ganache, salted caramel or anything else you choose!

Holy cow….if any of you know what macarons are, you know that lots of people avoid attempting them. For having very few ingredients (almond flour, powdered & granulated sugar, cocoa and egg whites), these cookies involve many steps, many particulars and can scare people away. I’ve eaten a macaron only once when a gal at work brought some in that she’d made. I was in love after the first bite and immediately started investigating them. I have to admit, at first I was a little put off – from aging the eggs whites for a few days to possibly having to grind my own nut flour to allowing them to dry before baking not to mention any sort of humidity or missteps could affect their success (or failure) in myraid ways….. Maybe they were too daunting to try – so many blogs described trouble after trouble!

Well, macarons floated in and out of my head over the months since my first tasting and this last week, the ‘floater’ finally stuck. I studied like I never had in school! I read every blog I could find, noting kinks in others attempts. I watched several youtube tutorials – one which was so awesome, featuring a French chef going through the whole process step by step. Now, I don’t speak French, but had read so much about making these little lovelies that it was pretty clear what was being said (special thanks to Javene and friend to translating those couple of key items!). As it turned out – all the things that people are intimidated by can be avoided pretty easily or really aren’t anything worth be scared off by! I can say with surety that I was extremely clear on how to get these beauties to turn out. I was up to the challenge and I had no expectation other than success in mind.

I looked forward to my Sunday baking session like one looks forward to Christmas morning….. I was that excited! So ladies and gents….I present – The Making of Macarons!!
This pic may not be monumental to you – but is was monstrously instrumental to my peace of mind in the initial steps on the macarons and I’m a big ‘prep-girl’ in general. All ingredients (recipe at the very end of this post) in these cookies are measured in grams, not cups and tablespoons etc like here in the good old US of A. So, thanks to my sister who lent me the most awesome digital scale that had metric capabilities, getting exact measurements was a cinch. You can convert the measurements by going to various on-line sites but I was concerned with them being right on since baking is such a science – especially with these babies. Anyway…I did myself the favor of measuring out everything the night before, keeping each group of components stacked together. Oh – the top container closest to the waiter cookie jar has the 7 egg whites in it. I separated the eggs on Friday night (two days prior to baking day). All cold items were kept in the fridge, not on the counter (of course!).
On Sunday (baking day!), I began by combining the almond flour (you can buy it at Fred Meyer in the nutrition center or at Whole Foods – if you don’t buy it, you must grind raw almonds in a blender or food processor until very fine), powdered sugar and cocoa
Once combined, it looks like this – kinda mealy with lotsa lumps.
To get rid of those lumps, sift the mixture into another bowl – about a quarter at a time. I used a bowl scraper to help work it through.
You’ll have little pebbles left over.
Here’s a close-up. You can toss these. I did not try to force them through as they’d have just made tinier lumps – I didn’t want any.
See how fine this looks?! Niiiiice……
Step two….Whip it good! You whip the aged egg whites with granulated sugar – added in two parts.
Whip the whites for 5 full minutes on top speed so they get super high and tight (tightie-whities?!?!)!

Next, fold in the flour mixture – added in three parts – folding until each addition is well incorporated.

Macarons - Part 2.....

After folding in the third installment of the flour mixture, I transferred the whole lot into a large bowl – this is what it looks like after all of the flour mixture has been thoroughly combined with the whipped whites.
Using a bowl scraper (you could use a large wooden spoon), scrape around the sides of the bowl to work the batter into a mound in the middle of the bowl, then smear/swipe the scraper directly through the middle. Repeat this action again and again until it’s smooth and flows off the edge of the scraper like lava. About 10 or 15 passes should do it. Once ‘lava’ has been achieved, fill a large pastry bag fitted with a plain, round tip (a half inch diameter opening is good) with the batter.
Pipe mounds of batter onto silpat and/or double parchment-lined cookies sheets (my silpat was on a sheet pan, parchment on insulated cookie sheets). The mounds should be a little wider than a quarter and about ½ inch high. I’d have taken a picture, but didn’t want to set down my filled pastry bag. The mounds will begin to settle right away, changing to a half-dollar size or so.
Next, hold the baking sheet up with one hand and smack the bottom of it with your other hand – not so hard that you knock the cookies into tomorrow, just gentle-ish smacks to remove any big air bubbles form the cookies. Then set the trays aside for at least ten minutes – this allows the cookies to dry a bit. After ten or fifteen minutes, lightly touch the top of one of the cookies – if it’s dry and your finger comes away clean, they are ready for the oven. I baked one sheet at a time – letting the others sit and simply dry longer. Bake each tray at 300 degrees for 23 minutes. You may investigate other blogs that say 10 minutes or even 15. but here’s what I found…..
I took my first tray out at 10 minutes - the youtube, French chef video that I’d practically memorized had said to bake the cookies 25 minutes, but I have to admit, every other blog/site I’d read had sworn by baking for only 10-15…..so baking 25 scared me. However…I was sorry almost immediately. Within 20 seconds of resting on the cooling rack, the ‘puff’ began to escape my cookies. As you can see above, the very center of each cookie looks a shade darker than the edges. That tells me there is lesser baked batter there. So, even though I’d already put in my second tray, I slid this first batch back in on the upper rack hoping to salvage them.
Well...the came out only okay. Nothing turns out great when you need to put it back in the oven. This first tray resulted in a few great cookies, a few flat cookies and as you can see…a few cracked ones as well. I attribute the cracks to possibly not having dried long enough because as you can see……..
….these next ones came out beautifully!
And so did these! See that crinkly part at the bottom of each cookie? That’s called the ‘foot’ and the foot is a must on macarons! I will tell you that for the parchment-lined sheets of cookies, I did what I’d read on many a site. While the cookies were baking, I took a spare, cool cookie sheet and after wetting a dish towel with water, swiped the wet towel across the cool sheet leaving behind an even coating of ‘droplettes’. They weren’t really ‘drops’ of water as much as just an even smear of water dampness across the entire sheet. Once the hot cookie sheet came out of the oven, I used a pair of tongs to slide the parchment with hot cookies onto the cold, water-dampened sheet. Does that make sense? This helps in removal of the cookies from the parchment (mine did not stick at all. I used my fingers to remove a few, but in general, used a small, off-set spatula.
They were so beautiful I had to get one more shot! Love those pretty feet!

Macarons - Part 3.....

I made a salted caramel sauce for one of the fillings. I began by boiling sugar, corn syrup and water to 330-degrees – added vanilla…..
….then cream and a little salt and once it cooled, whisked in some butter. I will say it never set up enough to fill the cookies with it –
So, after reserving some in a separate mixing bowl, I poured the rest into a plastic container…..
..to save for later. I see vanilla ice cream with caramel topping in someone’s future!
With the sauce that I reserved, I simply whisked in some powdered sugar and made it into more of a creamy frosting. This worked really well. Here are the cookies filled with the salted caramel cream.
I also made salted peanut butter filling. It was super easy and the taste was to die for! There was a little left over and I’m positive it’s a direct match for Reeses peanut butter filling!
Happy, little plops of pb…..
…and ready go to!

Macarons - Part 4....

My last filling was chocolate ganache. I’ve made ganache many times but this seemed thin to me. So, like the caramel sauce, I put some ganache in a bowl and whisked in some powdered sugar and made a creamy icing….(that's the leftover icing in the small container)...
…then filled the cookies…..
…and topped them off!
All three delicate macarons in each flavor - pour picture quality here - they look washed out :-(
After all the cookies had been filled and I'd cleaned up, I just happened to check the ganache and noticed it HAD set up! I couldn’t scrape off the chocolate icing fast enough!
I then put a creamy, chocolaty dollop of ganache on each half……
…and retopped them. SO much better!
Mmmmm…this one is peanut butter. Crisp on the outside, tender, moist and chewy on the inside - and the salted pb….a perfect compliment to the sweet cookie shell.
The final result! Delightful, delectable macarons! I cannot wait to make them again! Scary? Not half as much as blogs can make them seem. Just be prepared, study up and tackle them! They are SO worth it!

Here’s the recipe – all the instructions can be followed as told above. And I’m only giving the peanut butter filling recipe since the ganache and salted caramel didn’t turned out as they should’ve.
Macarons
250 grams of almond powder
450 grams of powdered sugar
40 grams cocoa
200 grams of egg whites
50 grams of white sugar

Salted Peanut Butter Filling
125 grams creamy peanut butter
70 grams powdered sugar
25 grams softened butter
25 grams heavy cream
5 grams vanilla extract
3 grams fine sea salt
Whip all ingredients together and cover (and chill if necessary) till ready to use.