Saturday 10 March 2018

Gingerbread Cocoa Macarons



Ahhh it's been a while since I made macarons. Recently my boyfriend bought me the best gift of a kitchenaid stand mixer and yesterday I thought it was time to try out the beast :) Using a stand mixer saves a lot of effort when it comes to whisking the Italian meringue base of the macaron shells, and seemed to give a much better macaron mixture. That could be also because my handheld electric whisk is probably 10 years old (and was very cheap when I bought it then!).

In any case, I filled some of the chocolate macaron shells with a mocha ganache (as in my previous macaron recipe - see here), the perfect treat for any coffee lover.

However, I was feeling experimental and decided to spice up a buttercream with a blend of spices, predominantly ground ginger. After filling some shells with this filling, I tried one - and WOW, the filling had the essence of gingerbread, with the soft cocoa biscuit encasing the filling beautifully. These are a gift for my mum for mother's day and I just know she's going to love them!

The macaron shells can be frozen (once baked, but not filled), so you can make them in advance, then just defrost and fill them when required :)

Makes around 24 macarons (48 shells)

Ingredients:

For the shells:
  • 150g (1 & 1/4 cups) ground almonds
  • 10g (1 & 1/2 tbsp) cocoa powder (the best quality you can afford)
  • 175g (1 & 1/2 cups) icing sugar
  • 4 (125ml/1/2 cup) medium egg whites
  • 165g (3/4 cup) granulated sugar
  • 50ml (3 tbsp and 1 tsp) water

For the filling:

  • 150g (2/3 cup) softened butter
  • 300g (3 cups) sifted icing sugar
  • 2 tsp ground ginger
  • pinch of cayenne pepper
  • 1/2 tsp ground ginger
  • pinch of salt
  • 1 - 2 tbsp milk

Method:

1. Place the ground almonds, cocoa and icing sugar in a food processor (or high power blender) and blitz for 2-3 second bursts, until the mixture is very fine and the cocoa is evenly distributed. Be careful not to blitz for too long as the almonds can turn to butter!

2. Sieve the almonds/cocoa/icing sugar into a large bowl. Add 2 of the egg whites, and beat until a smooth paste is formed.

3. Heat the granulated sugar and water in a saucepan, stirring occasionally until the sugar has dissolved. Then stop stirring and place a sugar thermometer in the pan. In a grease-free bowl, add the remaining two egg whites. Once the sugar/water has reached 112C, start whisking the egg whites at a medium speed (I used a stand mixer and found this required less of my attention than a hand held).

4. Once the sugar/water syrup has reached 118C, the egg whites should be white and frothy (like shaving foam). Turn the stand mixer down to a low speed, then carefully pour the syrup onto the egg whites, whisking constantly. Be very careful not to touch the syrup as it is super hot! Once all of the syrup has been added, turn up the speed of the mixer to high and keep whisking until the mixture is shiny and forms peaks when the whisk is lifted from the mixture (this should take between 5 and 7 minutes).

5. Use a metal spoon to fold a third of the egg white mixture into the almond/cocoa/sugar paste. Once incorporated, gently fold in the remaining egg whites.

6. Fill a piping bag with the macaron mixture, and cut off 1cm from the end (or use a large round nozzle). Grease and line four baking trays with parchment paper and hold the piping bag vertically above where you want to pipe. Pipe directly down onto the tray until you have a circle 3cm wide (or whatever shape you like - I also like making rectangles so that they look like mini eclairs). Repeat across the trays, leaving about 1&1/2cm gap between each macaron shell.

7. Tap the tray on the surface a few times, then leave at room temperature for 30 minutes to an hour, until a "skin" has formed on the macarons - this means that when you gently touch the macaron, no mixture goes on your finger.

8. Preheat the oven to 170c (150c fan)/ 340F/ gas mark 3. Before you place the baking trays into the oven, tap the trays against the surface again. This gives the perfect "foot" of a macarons. Bake the macarons for 10-12 minutes - keep an eye on them after 8 minutes in case they are browning too much. Remove the macarons from the oven and transfer the macarons (with the baking paper still attached) to a wire rack to cool.

9. To make the filling, cream the butter against the sides of a mixing bowl until it is very soft and spreadable. Add half of the icing sugar and beat in.

10. Add the remaining icing sugar, ground ginger, ground cinnamon, cayenne pepper and salt and start beating in. If the mixture is very stiff, add a splash of milk to loosen the mix. The buttercream needs to be thick enough that it holds it's shape when lifted from the bowl, but not so thick that it requires muscle power to move the buttercream around the bowl.

11. When the macaron shells have completely cooled, flip half of them over. Fill a piping bag with the spiced buttercream and pipe about a teaspoon of buttercream on each flipped shell.

12. Top each covered macaron shell with an uncovered shell and press down lightly.

13. These are best to eat at least 24 hours after sandwiching as the shells go very soft. However, they are still delicious straight after assembly! They should keep in an airtight container for around a week (they will get softer as time progresses).

14. Enjoy!

If you liked these, here are my other macaron recipes :)





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