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The perfect macaron recipe


21 June 2011 | 1 Comment

It's hard to escape the macaron phenomenon, but baking them can be tricky and buying them is expensive. With a little patience however, you can learn to make them yourself.

Macarons are the new cupcakes. That's old news, I know. I've been in love with macarons for about a year, culminating in a visit to France where I visited the place that claimed to be the country's number one macaronerie. As you can imagine, the macarons on sale there were pretty damn fine, and ever since then I've been desperate to learn how to make my own.

But it's tricky. Cupcakes are a, ahem, a piece of cake, by comparison. With macarons, there are so many varied recipes, and quite a few opportunities to make mistakes that after only a couple of attempts, I'm ashamed to admit that they got the better of me.

Consigning them to the “impossible” bin and only splashing out on shop-bought ones for the rarest of occasions (Raymond Blanc sells them at a whopping £6.50 for a box of 12 small ones!), it was a chance encounter with a local chef claiming to have a “foolproof” recipe that reignited my fire to try again.

Macaron failure

Before we go any further, I should perhaps explain what had happened before. In my first attempt, which I used a recipe from a magazine, I just couldn't get the mixture to work. It was a gloopy, sticky mess that had less chance of forming a solid structure than a cowboy builder.  

The mixture spread across the baking paper, but I put them in the oven anyway, hoping for some kind of baking miracle to occur. Obviously, it didn't, and what came out was a cooked version of the gloopy mess that had gone in. Not good. And it was made all the more upsetting by the fact that the recipe had claimed to be “easy”.

But, if you do a little Googling, you soon come across plenty of other macaron failures, which is comforting, I suppose.

Determined not to be defeated, I tried another recipe, from a different magazine, also promising to be “easy.” This time, my hopes were raised as the mixture appeared to be working, the little splodges on the baking sheet even looked more or less like the recipe's picture on the sheet.

But after the allotted time in the oven, I took them out and while they didn't look perfect, they looked vaguely passable. Success, I thought. Until I tried to get them off the sheet and that proved impossible. My knife was supposed to slide under the macaron with ease, lifting them effortlessly off the sheet. Instead, I was met by another sticky, gooey mess, and by the time I’d prised them off the sheet of paper, well let’s just say I was hardly going to be able to set up a business to rival Raymond Blanc anytime soon.

A foolproof macaron recipe

Fast forward to a few months when I met Steve Bennett, head chef at Abergavenny’s Llansantffraed Court Hotel. Steve told me he had a “foolproof” macaron recipe that even I, kitchen klutz, couldn’t mess up.

Sceptical but eager, I tried out the recipe, and I have to say I’m impressed. The recipe is for mini macarons, and is incredibly simple to whip up a batch of mixture as it only uses a few ingredients. I’d recommend taking care and patience when weighing out the ingredients, and have them ready before you start, but other than that, this is by far the most fuss-free recipe I’ve come across.

Here it is:

Ingredients for Steve Bennett’s chocolate macarons

Part A ingredients:

450g icing sugar

20g plain flour

250g ground almonds

42g cocoa powder-best quality

Part B ingredients:

248g egg white

Part C ingredients:

50g caster sugar

Instructions

Sieve all (A) ingredients, whip (B) to a light ribbon, then add (C) to (B) gradually as you continue whipping, until a firm shiny meringue is achieved.

Fold (A) into the meringue in stages, then pour into a piping bag fitted with an 8-10mm nozzle. Pipe onto siliconised parchment paper (available from good kitchenware stores, such as Lakeland), into 2cm wide balls. Leave to dry for 10-12 minutes, then bake at 140°c for 5 minutes, turn the tray around and bake for a further 4-6 minutes.

Either remove from the sheet immediately or if cooled completely, warm the bottom of the tray and slide off that way. If you’re having any trouble removing the macarons from the paper, pour a small amount of cold water onto the sheet, creating steam to help loosen them.  

Ganache filling

200g double cream

200g dark chocolate

1 leaf of gelatine, soaked in cold water-part C

Bring the double cream to the boil, and pour over the dark chocolate, stirring until the chocolate is fully melted and smooth. Squeeze excess water from the gelatine and add to the warm chocolate mix, again stir until incorporated. Chill in the fridge for 2 hours, then spread a little on a macaron and top with another, squeezing together to make a sandwich. Refrigerate to allow them to soften slightly, and return to room temperature before serving.

The macarons will keep in a closed dry tin for 3 days. Makes around 50 mini-macarons, the recipe is easily halved.

For plain macarons, use 30g flour, 350g icing sugar, 212g ground almonds as part (A), and 190g egg white as (B) and 90g sugar as part (C). For the filling, use vanilla buttercream mixed with a little raspberry coulis.

The results

While my resulting macarons are far from perfect, in fairness I’ve read it can take years to perfect the art, I’m confident that with a little practice, I will be turning out impressive batches of these for a while yet.

Now, I will experiment with oven temperatures and timings in my quest for perfection, and I recommend you do the same. Don’t be disheartened if your first batch doesn’t turn out like you saw in an expensive patisserie – remember, there’s a reason they’re expensive!

Try out Steve Bennett’s “foolproof” macaron recipe(above)  and visit the Llansantffraed Court Hotel website for more details on his restaurant.

Also worth your attention:

Jacqueline O’Donnell’s puff candy meringue

Lorraine Pascale’s Whoopie Cakes

The next big baking trend

Photo courtesy of Amy Davies

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Comments



  • 31 December 2016

    Oh, no, no, no. Flour has absolutely NO place in a macaron and the ratio of icing sugar to almond flour is way too high. You want more of a 1:1 ratio (by weight) of icing sugar to almond flour. Using flour may be consideted by some to be "fool-proof" (though I don't know why), what you're producing is not a macaron. Try this recipe: 100 grams of icing sugar; 100 grams of finely ground blanched almond flour; 70 grams of egg white and 50 grams of caster sugar. Sift your icing sugar and almond flour together in a fine sieve and toss out any bigger bits that don't easily pass through (it's a good idea to put both in a food processor first and blitz for 30 seconds, scrape down sides, blitz again for another 30 seconds or so. No more or you will release too much almond oil). Set aside. Using a stand mixer or a hand mixer, whipe the eggwhites in a spotless, completely oil-free stainless steel or glass bowl until frothy, then gradually add the caster sugar. Beat to stiff peaks but not past that. The meringue should look glossy and voluminous. You can add colour just before you thing you will finish beating the eggwhites but I would avoid colour for your first few tries. Some colours can caus problems. Then add the dry ingredients into the meringue a 1/3 at a time. Gently fold the dry in. It will look like a thick mass of bumpy, ugly better at first, but after the ingredients are all incorporated, you begin the process of macaronaging and making the batter more fluid, deflating the eggwhites while you mix. You still want to do a folding type motion but every now and then, scrape the batter against the side of the bowl to remove some air. Do this until you have a batter that runs off the rubber spatula in a more fluid way, instead of a semi-solid plopping off the spatula. It should look like lava. I've read rhat it should be ribbon consistency, but true ribbon stage is too far. Watch the batter drape down off the spatula and count in seconds how long it takes for the edges of that batter to lose it's distinct edge. 10 seconds is what you're looking for. Then STOP. Put your batter in a piping bag (I put it in a larger zip bag, cut the corner and drop this corner down into or near the piping bag nozzle. Place parchment paper over a thick baking sheet. If you can pipe well, make 3 centimeter shells, leaving an inch between the next piped shell, and so on. Otherwise, download a handy macaron template. You can find them all over the internet. Use that as a guide underneath your parchment paper. Once all done piping, pick up your baking tray and bang it on a countertop or table 4 times, one for each side (turn the tray for each bang of the tray). Let the piped batter form a skin. It has sufficiently dried when you touch the edge of a piped maxaron and it is not sticky and no batter comes off onto your finger. Preheat your oven to 150°C without the fan setting. Place the shells in onbthe middle rack and watch the magic happen. Bake for 20 minutes or until the shells can be lifted off the parchment paper (they sometimes still need help with a knife or an offset spatula but they shoud come off clean. Remove the tray from the oven and you can place the parchment paper with the shells on it onto a wire cooling rack or if you're like me and need a more gentle cooling to set the insides more (you can sacrifice one and cut into it. If fluffy and full, you're done, if not quite dry and fluffy looking inside, maybe leave on tray for) you can leave on tray for 5 minutes and then place rhe parchment paper on a wire cooling rack. When completely cool, remove the macarons and prepare to fill. I prefer ganache but whatever you like is fine. After filling and toping with another shell, you must then place the macarons in an air-tight container and mature them for at least 24 hours. This is the hardest part but this will make even the most pitiful of macarons turn into delicious melt in your mouth treats. I hope this helps!!!!!

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