Thursday, 7 November 2013

Mont Blanc Macaroons

Thanks Catherine de Medici or her pastry chefs ;)
A bit of history (thanks Wikipedia): The name of the cookie comes from an Italian word meaning paste, maccarone. About the origin, culinary historians claim that macaroons can be traced to an Italian monastery of the 9th century. The monks came to France in 1533, joined by the pastry chefs of Catherine de Medici, wife of King Henri II. Later, two Benedictine nuns, Sister Marguerite and Sister Marie-Elisabeth, came to Nancy seeking asylum during the French Revolution. The two women paid for their housing by baking and selling macaroon cookies, and thus became known as the "Macaroon Sisters". Recipes for macaroons (also spelled "mackaroon," "maccaroon" and "mackaroom") appear in recipe books at least as early as 1725 (Robert Smith's Court Cookery, or the Complete English Cook).
Never tried to make macaroons before but I am quite pleased on how they came out and this is just an indulgent recipe with my favourite autumn treat: chestnuts.
Recipe (x6) large
75g finely ground almonds
100g icing sugar
2 tbsp cocoa powder
2 egg whites
50g caster sugar
Filling:
200ml whipping cream
4 tbsp chestnut puree
2 tbsp plain chocolate shavings

Put finely ground almonds, icing sugar and cocoa powder in a food processor and process for 20 sec or until well mixed/powdery. Sift the mixture into a bowl through a large sieve.
 
Whisk the egg whites (room temperature) in a large bowl until soft peaks then add gradually the caster sugar to make a glossy meringue.

Fold the almond mixture into the meringue one third at a time with a spatula. Fold the mixture until it forms a shiny batter, smooth and glossy that fall slowly from the spatula.

Pour the mixture into a piping bag and pipe 12 large rounds onto a prepared baking sheet. Tap the baking sheet firmly onto a work surface to remove air bubbles. Leave at room temperature for 30 minutes. Preheat the oven to 160oC.

Bake in the preheated oven for 15-20 minutes. The macaroons are ready when they have a crispy shell and the foot at the base does not wobble. If the base is still soft and sticky, return the tray to the oven for few minutes.
Leave the macaroons to cool for 10 minutes then they are ready to be filled.

 
Filling:
Whip the cream and fold into the chestnut puree. Pipe the mixture onto half the macaroon, top with the remaining macaroons shells and serve dusted with icing sugar. Well this time I have just spread the chestnut puree and covered with whipped cream, bliss
Enjoy

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