Ingredients
1 cup confectioners’ sugar, 4.5 oz
3/4 cup almond flour, 2.5 oz. (I’ve made my own by processing almond slivers, but just buying it is simpler)
2 large egg whites, room temperature (no farm fresh eggs! older eggs hold air better, and take them from the fridge the day before or the morning of and let them sit there happily on the counter and warm to room temp)
Pinch of cream of tartar
1/4 cup superfine sugar, 1.5 oz. (also called baker’s sugar, I’ve read you can make your own by processing granulated sugar, but have never tried it)
3/4 cup seedless raspberry jam, for filling
1 cup confectioners’ sugar, 4.5 oz
3/4 cup almond flour, 2.5 oz. (I’ve made my own by processing almond slivers, but just buying it is simpler)
2 large egg whites, room temperature (no farm fresh eggs! older eggs hold air better, and take them from the fridge the day before or the morning of and let them sit there happily on the counter and warm to room temp)
Pinch of cream of tartar
1/4 cup superfine sugar, 1.5 oz. (also called baker’s sugar, I’ve read you can make your own by processing granulated sugar, but have never tried it)
3/4 cup seedless raspberry jam, for filling
Instructions
1. Pulse confectioners’ sugar and almond flour in a food processor until combined. Sift mixture 2 times. (I found sifting with my usual flour sifter near impossible. The almond flour caked under the sifting hand and balled up over it. Instead I sifted with a simple bowl-shaped sieve.)
1. Pulse confectioners’ sugar and almond flour in a food processor until combined. Sift mixture 2 times. (I found sifting with my usual flour sifter near impossible. The almond flour caked under the sifting hand and balled up over it. Instead I sifted with a simple bowl-shaped sieve.)
2. Whisk whites with a mixer on medium speed until
foamy. Add cream of tartar, and whisk until soft peaks form. Reduce
speed to low, then add superfine sugar. Increase speed to high, and
whisk until stiff peaks form (the recipe suggests 8 minutes, for me it
took only 3 to 4 minutes, take care not to over-whip). If you’re going
to add color, I added food coloring towards the end of whipping my
whites. I found I could use standard, water-based food coloring. Several
of the recipes I saw recommended paste food coloring, but I didn’t have
any at the time, so I went out on a limb! The water-based colors worked
just fine.
3. Sift flour mixture over whites, and fold until
mixture is smooth and shiny. I found the amount of folding to be
crucial. Fold too little, and your macaron shells will have peaks
instead of nice rounded caps. Fold too much, and your meringue will drip
into a mess of wafer-thin blobs. Tartlette
recommends about 50 folds, until your batter has a magma-like flow. For
me about 65 folds was just right. I find the batter has a little of a
soft-toffee like sheen when it is ready. You can test a daub on
a plate, and if a small beak remains, turn the batter a couple times
more. If the batter forms a round cap but doesn’t run, it is just right.
When I spooned my batter into the pastry bag, the perfect batter started to just ooze out of the tip once the bag was full. If it stayed stiff inside the bag it was too stiff, if it dripped out too fast the batter was too runny.
I found that doubling the recipe made this step very difficult for me, I
found I would over fold to incorporate the flour mixture and I would
end up with a runny batter.
4. Transfer batter to a pastry bag fitted with a 1/2-inch plain round tip.
5. Pipe 3/4-inch rounds 1 inch apart on
parchment-lined baking sheets. I put the tip right in the middle of
where I wanted each macaron and let the batter billow up around it, then
I drug the tip to the side of the round. (You can pipe 1-inch to 2-inch
rounds, but you will need to add cooking time). Tap bottom of each
sheet on work surface to release trapped air. Let stand at room
temperature for 30 to 45 minutes. (Different recipes recommend anywhere
from no rest time to 2 hours rest time. I was most happy with 30 to 45
minutes rest time, once the caps looked more dull and had formed a
slight skin, so that during baking the macaron could puff up beneith
that skin and form that pretty “foot” at the bottom.) While they’re
resting, preheat oven to 375 degrees.
6. Reduce oven temperature to 325 degrees. Bake 1
sheet at a time, rotating halfway through, until macarons are crisp and
firm, about 10 minutes. After each batch, increase oven temperature to
375 degrees, heat for 5 minutes, then reduce to 325 degrees. Every oven
is different, so you may need to play with your oven temperature. The
tops of the macaron shells should not brown.
7. Let macarons cool on sheets for 2 to 3 minutes,
then transfer to a wire rack. If macarons stick, spray water underneath
parchment on hot sheet. The steam will help release macarons (if this
doesn’t work, see below, under “troubleshooting”).
8. Sandwich 2 same-size macarons with 1 teaspoon
jam. Serve immediately, or stack between layers of parchment, wrap in
plastic, and freeze for up to 3 months. It takes only 30 minutes out of
the freezer for macarons to be ready to serve.
TROUBLESHOOTING:
If you’re wringing your hands in frustration because you can’t get
these little desserts to come out right, either they are hollow inside
or have no feet or they crack, you are in good company. Me included.
Here are a few things you can try to get that first perfect batch that
will get you addicted to making macarons.
Source:bit.ly/jMND2S
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