making macarons

macaronsMacarons have a sort of wonder reserved for them, a certain high favor that is not usually bestowed upon cookies. Their tricky preparation and  French origins make them seem a little inaccessible to the home cook, a problem compounded by the fact that until recently, nearly all macaron cookbooks were printed solely in French. I had two macarons at a fancy pastry shop in New York a couple years ago, and decided to learn how to make them. There are a lot of resources scattered around online and in books, so I decided to compile all the information I use here, in one place.

ground almondsFirst step: grinding almonds. I had read here that commercial almond flour didn’t turn out the best results, so I have always ground my own. I considered trying a batch with almond flour recently, but since I live in Ohio, The Land Devoid of Specialty Baking Ingredients, I am stuck doing it the old fashioned way. I use a small coffee grinder to break down my almonds, and if you don’t want bits of almond skin marring your finished cookie, use blanched almonds. I sift the flour through a fine mesh sieve, then let it sit for a couple hours in the oven at 150 degrees F, so that it dries out some.

aged egg whitesEverybody says the egg whites you use for the meringue must be at least a day old, presumably because they thicken as they age, but I have used egg whites that were only twelve or so hours old, and noticed no difference. Whatever age your egg whites are, be sure they are completely room temperature before you begin to whip them.

tracing circlesNext, trace some circles onto parchment paper to help guide you as you pipe batter. I use a little piece of pvc Nick cut for me with an interior diameter of 1 3/4″, but you can use any small round thing. It’s best to pipe onto the opposite side you traced on (because the cookies will pick up pencil marks) so take that into account if you have curly parchment paper. Depending on the size of your circles, each batch will produce around 30 to 40 halves of cookies (15 to 20 when they’re sandwiched together), so you may need a few sheets of parchment paper. When you have these things ready, you’re good to go.

Basic Macaron Batter, adapted from this recipe:

1 1/4 cups powdered sugar
1 cup ground almonds
1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons egg whites
pinch of salt
pinch of cream of tartar
1/4 cup granulated white sugar

dry ingredientsFirst, prepare your dry ingredients. If you are flavoring your macarons with a spice, zest, or a powder of any kind, you’ll sift your flavor with the ground almonds and powdered sugar. I usually sift these ingredients into a gallon size plastic bag and put it in the fridge until I need it. For this batch, I used 3 tablespoons of cocoa powder to make chocolate macarons.

Next, you’re ready to make meringue. Put your egg whites, salt, and cream of tartar into the bowl of your stand mixer (or any non-reactive bowl if you’re using a hand-held mixer) and start whipping at a medium-high speed. When your egg whites start to get frothy, gradually add the white sugar. If you are flavoring your macarons with an extract (or other liquid) or adding color with liquid food coloring, you can do so at this point. As air is whipped into the egg whites, they will grow in volume and lighten, so the color you see initially will be darker than the color of your finished meringue. Now, sit back and wait– because you won’t be ready for the next step until you have glossy, gravity defying peaks:

stiff peaksAnd this is very important– your meringue should be completely stiff and resist flopping when you wave it around. Next is the trickiest part of making macarons: mixing together the dry ingredients and meringue.

mixingMixing is tricky because it’s this step that determines if your batter will smooth out and form perfect macarons. Mixing too little produces macarons that bake up exactly as you piped them, with ridges and bumps. Mixing too much produces flat macarons with little to no “feet” (the scrumbly part at the bottom of the cookie). It may take a couple of tries to get the hang of the right consistency, but the upside is that under- or over-mixing has no effect on flavor. You will still have a delicious cookie, it just might not be the prettiest thing.

When you’ve got stiff peaks and you’re ready to add the dry to the wet, take the almond/powdered sugar mixture out of the fridge and add to your meringue in three installments, mixing with a spatula until there are no dry particles left. When your dry ingredients are completely incorporated, you can start the “macaronnage”. This is the french word that describes the specific way to mix your batter. Since I couldn’t take a picture of myself mixing, I took a picture of a picture, from this book:

pictures of "macaronnage"Essentially, you should spread your batter across the side of the bowl, then scrape it from the side of the bowl, folding it back over on itself. This book says to repeat this process more than 10 and less than 20 times. You’ll know that your batter is ready when it begins to flow and flattens out within 30 seconds or so. If you need a better visual, there’s a great youtube video here that shows macaronnage. It’s probably especially helpful if you speak French. When your batter’s ready, scoop it into a piping bag, or if you’re not so lucky, the bag you stored the almond/powdered sugar mix in. Snip off  3/8″ of the corner and start piping.

piping macaronsYou can see in this picture that the cookies piped in the first row have already smoothed out, and the ones more recently piped still have ridges. If your cookies have little imperfections, you can smooth them out with a wet fingertip. After you’ve piped all your cookies, let them sit and dry out for an hour or so. This helps them develop a “shell” or slightly crunchy outer layer. You’ll know when they’re done drying when they no longer look glossy, and when the batter doesn’t stick to your fingers when you lightly touch the cookie.

Bake in a preheated 325 degree oven for 15 or so minutes, turning once halfway through for even baking. Your macarons should begin to develop feet after about five minutes. If the edges begin to brown, remove them immediately. You’ll know that the cookies are done if after cooling for five minutes, you can remove them from the parchment paper without trouble. If you try to remove a cookie and chunks of it stick to the parchment paper, put in back in the oven at 300 degrees, and check every few minutes to be sure they aren’t browning. If you’ve made it this far, the hard part is over! Now you only need to decide what filling you’ll use in your macaron sandwiches.

You can make macarons in conceivably any flavor you can think of, and the same is true for the filling– you can pipe on ganache, jam, lemon curd, frosting– anything you can put between two cookies. Typically macarons are sandwiched with buttercream frosting between them, but I find this too sweet. My favorite frosting to use is one made out of mascarpone that is only slightly sweetened. I don’t usually measure (it’s a very forgiving frosting) but here are some approximations:

2/3 cup heavy cream
3/4 cup mascarpone
3 tbsp powdered sugar
1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract

To make this frosting, pour the cream into a cold bowl and whip until stiff. Whisk in the remaining ingredients. This is easily adaptable, and you can add spices, extracts, or other ingredients to flavor your frosting. I whipped in two tablespoons of caramel sauce to make a caramel frosting for these chocolate macarons.

When you’ve got a frosting ready, match up macarons of similar size and shape, pipe on about a tablespoon of frosting, and put it all together. Macarons are best when they’ve sat overnight in the fridge and the frosting has softened them. Store in an airtight container in the fridge, and they should last about a week.

chocolate macarons

Posted on by Jessica in Food | 17 Comments

one down

hand-knit sockFirst of all, it is not easy to take a picture of your own foot with a 50mm lens on your camera. Second of all, this is the only non-present-related thing I have been working on lately. It’s a practice sock, meant to test my ability to work with impossibly small knitting needles, and in spite of having to backtrack and correct mistakes several times, this knitted up pretty easily. Although I left a few mistakes in (in the interest of finishing it in 2010), I am pretty proud of this sock. It’s the second thing I’ve knitted in my life, and it gets the job done. Sock #2 will have to wait until after Christmas, because I have a lot to make in the meantime.

Other news:

-Sometime soon I will post some tips and tricks for macaron-making, in case anybody is looking for Christmas cookie recipes.

-I found out I have THREE WEEKS of paid vacation time in 2011. Three weeks! Is it sad that most of that time will probably be spent hanging out at home with Nick and my cat?

-I will only have five days in Houston for Christmas this year– how much sushi and Mexican food do you think I can eat in that period of time? Answer: not enough.

Posted on by Jessica in Crafts | 4 Comments

biscuits

Folks, I am on a mission– a mission to make the perfect biscuit. I have made a successful souffle, I have baked 600 macarons in a week, and I have roasted a tasty 16 pound turkey, but I have never made a perfect biscuit. Don’t get me wrong– I’ve made absolutely delicious biscuits, and even fluffy, tall biscuits, but I have never made biscuits with both qualities. As a southern girl, this is particularly embarrassing. In my ongoing quest to perfect biscuits, I picked up an important ingredient:

White Lily FlourI’ve been looking for White Lily flour on and off for years. I am not sure why I was never able to find it in Texas, since after all, it is a southern flour. By some twist of fate, I ran across it at the ghetto Kroger in Columbus, Ohio. Now, I do not need another bag of flour. There are 8 or 9 other varieties of flours taking up valuable cabinet and counter space in my kitchen, and most are not so specialized that their main application is one type of baked good, but again, I am on a mission! I will just have to spend that much more time daydreaming about a walk-in pantry.

risingThis time I tried a biscuit recipe with yeast, hoping that it would contribute some rising capabilities. The result is a airy, light biscuit with a distinct flavor. It also includes the addition of hard boiled egg yolks, which contribute a velvety richness. The recipe is, of course, from this cookbook.

biscuit and jamIn the end, it’s a delightful biscuit, but it’s not the biscuit of my dreams. I’ll keep looking, and in the meantime, I’ll have a tasty treat to eat.

Posted on by Jessica in Food | 7 Comments

new knits

grey merino wool scarfThis year I did the smart thing and started this scarf in September, before it got cold outside. It’s the first thing I’ve knitted, and I didn’t use a pattern– I just knit in 2×2 ribs until I ran out of yarn. It is longer than I am, because I believe length is an important scarf characteristic. I used a merino/nylon blend, so it’s soft and can go in the washer, which is a plus when you cohabitate with a cat that likes to nap on your current knitting project. Also in this picture: my mociun shirt and a giant, red gap cardigan that I thrifted.

I have already started a new knitting project, and depending on how terribly I fail at it, I’ll be knitting a few of the Christmas presents I hand out this year. And eventually, these gloves, except I’ll stop at about an inch from the top of each of my fingers, because having my fingertips covered kind of freaks me out. Is anybody else like this? I mean, you’re really stifling one of your senses every time you wear gloves, if you think about it. There’s something weird about that.

And at some point, I would like to knit a nice thick cardigan, something fancy, with cables. I am hopeful I’ll finish it before winter’s over, but realistic enough to know I probably won’t. I’ll keep you updated.

Posted on by Jessica in Crafts | 2 Comments

stamp, etc.

Sorry about the blog silence, everybody. It has been pretty overcast and dreary here in Ohio, which makes for good knitting weather, but not good photography weather. And not only have I been crafting some secret future Christmas presents, I have been working full time and learning a million new things– apparently they have you go through some pretty intensive training before they let you handle people’s money.

stamp

Anyway, I got a stamp! It’s no secret that I am a big fan of low-tech printing technologies, and stamps are no exception. This time I opted to order one, rather than try and carve tiny letters out of a linoleum block. If you can believe it, I learned that lesson the hard way.

tag

I whipped up a makeshift clothing tag with a little screen printing ink and some twill tape. Next time I will probably just screen print, but it worked pretty well as a quick solution. You wouldn’t believe what clothing tag makers will charge you for a screen-printed bit of twill tape. It’s highway robbery.

So hopefully soon I will have some new crafty things to share. I have about a thousand projects I have to complete in the next couple months, since I’m going for a 100% handmade Christmas this year (I think I only hit 93% last year). If you are one of the people on the receiving end (and odds are, you are), get excited.

Posted on by Jessica in Crafts, Life | 3 Comments

trying to be professional

So, I got the job! I also got an email describing the professional dress code I am expected to uphold, and a brief survey of my closet revealed that I own little to no “professional” clothing. So it looks like I’ll spend this last week of joblessness hunched over my sewing machine.

cropped blue silk shirtThis is the first thing I’ve finished, and I am tempted to make another five of these in different colors of silk– it’s that comfortable. I made up the pattern based on a shirt I own, cropped it just below my bellybutton in the front, and left it a couple inches longer in the back. Apart from the placket, which was a total nightmare, it all came together pretty quickly.

cropped blue silk shirtThis is going to look lovely with a high-waisted pencil skirt and a smart cardigan. I’ll be going thrifting sometime in the next few days and hopefully I’ll find some things to alter. I’ve got my fingers crossed for a power suit.

Posted on by Jessica in Life, Sewing | 4 Comments

rituals: bread

Let me start this one off by saying that this really is not a food blog. Nick has been spreading that rumor around, but it’s just not true! I must just be better at documenting baked goods than crafts. I promise the next post will be something non-food. Anyway, in food related news: in two months I will have gone two years without buying bread.

measuringMaking bread is a mostly weekly ritual around here, which means that sometimes I get busy, so Nick goes the week without sandwiches, and I have to eat something besides buttered toast topped with a poached egg (a staple in my diet). But usually I do alright– I think we lived here a few months before a need for hot dog buns led me to realize I had no idea which aisle the bread was on.

second rise

There are plenty of breads worth buying, and it’s typically not an expensive grocery item, but nothing beats the taste (or the cost) of fresh-baked bread. I can name all the ingredients, and it doesn’t have that sour, been-sitting-on-the-shelf taste. But mostly, I like the challenge.

shaping the loaf

The bread recipes I use are from this book, by Rose Levy Beranbaum (again!). My favorite is her hearth bread, which is perfect for toast or hearty sandwiches. The recipes in the book are pretty in depth, but I found a simplified version of this bread here. Turns out Ms. Beranbaum has a blog! I will definitely be sending some traffic her way.

fresh baked bread + plugra + sea saltThere are likely millions of ways to enjoy this delicious bread, but since I had some Plugra leftover from danish-making, I decided to top a fresh slice with a nice-sized dab and a sprinkle of sea salt. And I may have to go back for seconds…

Posted on by Jessica in Food, Rituals | Leave a comment

homemade danishes

blueberry cream cheese danishAlternate title for this post: how I consumed a quarter pound of butter over a period of two days.

I’ve been wanting to try my hand at laminated dough for quite a while now, and when I got it in my head that I should make some danishes, I cleared my schedule (just kidding, it was already empty!) and devoted a day to it. There are no pictures to document this process, partially because it was a cloudy day and Nick had taken his tripods to work, and also because, oh yeah, it took an entire day.

The recipe is from this book. I own all of Rose Levy Beranbaum’s books, and they are magnificent. It’s rare to find a cookbook that not only offers delicious, foolproof recipes, but also explains the science behind them. This very same book contains the recipe for the apricot pie I wowed an art celebrity with, so you know it must be good.

Apart from a remonce filling whose application seemed (and was) impossible and confusing, these weren’t too difficult to make. It probably would have made a lot more sense to start with a laminated dough recipe that was less complicated, but let’s face it, I am nothing if not an over-complicator. Besides, somewhere back in time I have some Danish ancestors, so it only seemed fitting to go with the danish. I made plain cream cheese and three fruit and cream cheese flavors– blueberry, strawberry, and blackberry. All were delicious.

Next I will try pain au chocolat or some plain croissants. Something hopefully a little less complicated.

Posted on by Jessica in Experiments, Food | Leave a comment

spoiled rotten

Nick took a little work trip to an Amish part of Ohio and brought me back some goodies. I think I only just finished singing his praises, and here he is proving me right again.

texas cookie cutterI am super pumped about this cookie cutter! At first I thought this was an odd thing to find in the middle of Ohio, but Nick explained that they had some for every state. Which is hilarious to me, because that means they must have one for Wyoming. And Colorado! If someone handed you a Colorado-shaped cookie, how would you know it was Colorado?!

baked eggAnother present was this tiny cast iron pan, perfect for holding a single egg. I am a fan of tiny things, and I’ve been making a mental list of all the tiny dishes I could prepare in this pan. Mini Tarte Tatin? Mini Cornbread?

grandma's jam house jamLast of all, this jam. It’s perfect jam. I am pretty particular about jams and jellies, by which I mean I am a jam snob. When I eat jam on toast, I like it to taste like the fruit it’s made of, not just cloyingly sweet. And although I’ve never heard of a black raspberry, Grandma got this one right. And so did Nick.

In other news: I have a couple job interviews lined up, which may mean that soon I will go from a girl that sits at home and talks to her cat all day to a girl that only talks to her cat when she gets off work.

Also: I just started my surface design class, so pretty soon I will have some surface designs to show you. Stay tuned.

Posted on by Jessica in Food, Life | 2 Comments

texas, oh texas!

We just got back from a vacation to our home state. I had half a dozen kolaches, twelve bad hair days (ugh, humidity!), and more sushi in one sitting than I think I’ve ever had before. I ate so much at every meal, in fact, that I didn’t really feel hungry for 6 straight days. Texas food will do that to you.

You don't see clouds like this in Ohio

We brought Nick’s DSLR and two film cameras, and still only managed to take pictures with our cell phones. But really, I couldn’t pass up a shot of that sky.

Houston

Anyone that has spoken to me at all in the past year (especially Nick) has probably heard me complain about the state of Columbus grocery stores, so the trip wouldn’t have been complete without a couple stops at Fiesta, The Best Grocery Store of All Time. I picked up a few things I’ve been doing without in Ohio: muscovado, pearl sugar, grey sea salt, and of course, La Costena Home Style Mexican Salsa. I also scored about a foot and a quarter’s worth of some amazing records, which I safely transported back to Ohio between the layers of clothes in my bulging suitcase (thanks, Lou!). The best acquisition of the trip was probably a present from my sister:

ghostNow I just have to find a frame and a place to hang it!

Posted on by Jessica in Life | 3 Comments