Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Pao de mel macarons

Pao de mel macarons / Macarons de pão de mel

I think the macaron bug has bitten me. :)

After my passion fruit-scented victory, I desperately felt like making macarons again; inspired by my lovely macaron muses – Julia, Aran, Meeta, Evan, and Your Highness, the Queen – I tried to come up with a different flavor, so I used spices, cocoa and dulce de leche and tried to evoke the flavors of pao de mel, which is something everyone loves here in Brazil.

Well, I guess I’ll have to stock up on almond meal... :)

Pao de mel macarons
adapted from here

Shells:
150g almond meal
150g confectioners’ sugar
120g egg whites (room temperature)
185g granulated sugar
50g water
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
½ teaspoon ground ginger
¼ teaspoon ground cloves
about ½ tablespoon cocoa powder, for sprinkling

Filling:
½ cup firm dulce de leche

You will need 2-3 baking sheets for these , depending on how closely you pipe them; make sure you use good quality aluminum pans – if they’re too thin, the macarons might crack on top. I followed Ms. Humble’s tip and double layered the pans. I also used baking paper, this baking mat and this one and got the best results with the teflon one.

Prep a large pastry bag with a #11 Ateco tip (or a similar medium sized round tip, little under 1cm) – I did not use a tip, I just cut the tip of the pastry bag. Pre-heat your oven to 160-162°C (320-325°F) – I wouldn’t recommend making macarons with an oven thermometer.

You will need a candy thermometer for this method, as it will require bringing the sugar syrup to a precise temperature. Half of the whites I used had been in the fridge for 4 days (and had been previously frozen for 2 weeks) and half was from fresh eggs.

Weigh out your confectioners’ sugar and almond meal and give them a whirl for a minute, pulsing in a food processor. Pour the almond/sugar mixture into a large bowl, mix in the cinnamon, ginger and cloves and set aside.

Weigh out 60g of egg whites into the bowl of your stand mixer (make sure the whites are yolk free and your mixer's bowl and whisk attachment are very clean and free of any traces of oil). Also measure out 35g of granulated sugar into a small bowl and set it near the mixer.
Weigh out another 60g of egg whites into a small bowl and set aside.

Weigh out 150g of the granulated sugar into a small sauce pan. Add 50g of water to the sugar, attach your candy thermometer and place it over medium heat – use a very small saucepan so its tip will be immersed in the syrup.
When the sugar hits 87°C/190°F, start beating the egg whites in your mixer on medium low speed until foamy, while keeping a close eye on the sugar syrup. No need to stir the syrup, just let it come to a boil over medium heat (you're aiming for 110°C/230°F). Once the eggs are foamy, slowly add the 35g of sugar and beat to soft peaks on medium speed.

When your sugar mixture hits 110°C/230°F pull it off the heat, increase the speed of your mixer to medium high, and slowly pour in the syrup. You want to let the mixture trickle down the side of the bowl, so it doesn't splatter and get tossed onto the sides of the bowl. You want the sugar in your meringue, not a candy coated bowl.

Now you can relax, the hard part is over. Allow the mixer to beat the meringue for about 5-8 minutes until cool.

While waiting for your meringue to cool, combine the remaining 60g of egg whites with the sugar/almond mixture and mix until well combined.

Once the meringue is ready, add it to the almond/sugar mixture and quickly fold it together. You should fold until it is just barely uniform, using as few strokes as possible. It is very, very important you don't over mix as the batter will thin considerably with each stroke of the spatula. Your batter is perfect when you lift your spatula and a thick ribbon slowly cascades off, back into the bowl.
Now you're ready to fill your piping bag. If the mixture is just right, it will ooze from the tip slowly under its own weight. (If it oozes out quickly, something went horribly wrong and you'll need to start over.)

Pipe 3cm macarons onto your prepared baking sheets, spacing them a few centimeters apart.

Once you complete a full pan, knock it on the counter gently, to bring up any bubbles and quickly pop them with toothpick (I forgot to do that). Using a small sieve, sprinkle the cocoa powder over the macarons (just a little).

Allow the macarons to rest like this for 15 minutes. (They can sit longer if you want to bake one or two sheets at a time, but will develop slightly thicker shells)

Bake at 160-162°C/320-325°F for 14 minutes (I baked mine for 17).

Once done, remove from the pans using the silicone baking mat and allow to cool completely (about an hour) before carefully attempting to remove them from the mat. If you're having trouble even after an hour, pop the sheet into the freezer for about 5 minutes and they should pop off easily.

Fill a piping bag with the dulce de leche and use to sandwich your macarons.
To store, keep the shells in an air tight container. Fill before serving.

Makes about 50 macarons (already filled)

15 comments:

  1. Those macarons look simply perfect, and I love the stripy cups - beautiful!

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  2. Yes, yes! They look so good. I love the pretty, striped cups. So cute.

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  3. oh i like the spiced flavors of these macarons. simply perfect. they look adorable and very pretty. i am telling you once that bug bites you're going to find it hard to let it go again!!

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  4. Que lindos Patricia!
    Eu morro de vontade de comer essas coisinhas.... Beijos

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  5. I like all the different spices you added, bet it tastes wonderful with the caramel filling

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  6. Beautiful Photos, just stunning. I would love to try these.

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  7. Your macarons look amazing!!! I can't even imagine how delicious they are with dulce de leche (love that you filled them with that!) I would love to try baking macarons but I must admit, I'm intimidated, hahah!

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  8. I love that filling!

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  9. Those are some of the best looking macarons that I've seen - and the tastiest!

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  10. Beautiful and so pro!

    I love, love, love the dulce de leche filling. I'm such a sucker for that stuff. You've inspired me to bake macarons again and to fill them with luscious dulce de leche!

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  11. Wow, you've got skills! These are gorgeous macarons. I wish I could get up the nerve to try making macarons.

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  12. Blue Penguin, thank you!

    Erica Lea, thank you, sweetie!

    Meeta, you are one of my inspirations, sweetie! I agree with you on the bug thing - feeling it already!
    xoxo

    Thássia, obrigada!
    Beijo!

    Katie, the spices go really well with the dulce de leche, you're right!

    Jennifurla, thank you!

    DaniBrava, thank you! I'm a sucker for dulce de leche, too! :)
    Maybe you'll try making them someday. ;)

    Paula, thank you!

    Nic, thank you, darling! You are far too kind. xx

    Lisa, thank you, dear! I'm so glad you like them!
    Dulce de leche is great in just about anything. ;)

    Emily, thank you, sweetie! I'm sure you'll kick ass once you try making macarons!

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  13. They sound as they look - delicious! You are going to make me try macaron adventure again...

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  14. that macaron bug has bitten me as well but....oh, my they are sooooo hard to make.....I'm so envious of yours!!!!
    they're so beautiful, beautiful looking!!!

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  15. I love it! Am suffering a little from macaron fever too. Yours look sooooo lovely with such interesting flavors!

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