Three somewhat tragic looking macarons

Patience, Planning, and Mise en Place: a Macaron Adventure (Repost)

Ella, Review

July is a free review month! This post would normally be for Patreon subscribers, but is being reposted for free. If you’re not a Patreon subscriber, this is what the Patreon posts are like. If you are a Patreon subscriber and have been wanting to share this post, now you can! (please do).

Erica is occasionally gripped by the idea that she should be able to cook or bake despite all evidence to the contrary. When in this state, she will not settle for something simple, but often attempts something complex and labor-intensive and often enlists my help. During this particular bout of hubris, or insecurity, the two are often intertwined, she decided to make macarons for an outdoor get together with her college friends.

I don’t know why. I don’t like her college friends. She doesn’t even seem to like her college friends. I must point out before I go any further, I use the term “college friends” to describe a group of five or six highly competitive young women I have nothing in common except that they were all friends in college*. And seem to think that this obliges them to a twice yearly ritual of getting together and catching up. And in this case “catching up” refers to bragging about salaries, vacations, future home purchases, and upcoming weddings.

College friends aside, I thought this adventure provided a good opportunity to teach Erica about the amount of patience in planning that goes into any large scale baking or cooking project. She has attempted to make macarons before, and from what I gather we results were not aesthetically perfect, but were quite tasty. Unfortunately, this time she fell victim to the fallacy that learning from her past mistakes meant she was ready to bake to impress. I did not dissuade her from this notion, but simply tried to guide her through the process as best I could.

We began with a very serious planning effort. She was intent on using a hodgepodge of flavorings and ingredients she had around the house and so basic recipes and other ingredient quantities were determined and supplementary ingredients were purchased. We also planned phases for the actual baking and assembly of the final cookies. Her little get together was planned for brunch time on Saturday morning which meant she would have to cook these during the week. Rather than allow her to exhaust and disappoint herself thinking that she could accomplish this all in one evening, we planned for the three separate tasks of making the fillings, baking the cookies, and the final assembly.

Erica chose to make one butter cream and two custards for her fillings. All three were flavored with puréed, canned fruit she had purchased over a year ago when her anxiety told her an apocalypse was eminent. There are not many published recipes that involve using canned fruit in delicate French pastries. Her emotional investment was high. She needed something more than her entry-level job to show off. I was sure the macarons would taste fine, but was worried about what else might end up in there.

Where Erica went right in this adventure was in her attempt do use the French cooking technique mise en place, which involves preparing ingredients ahead of time so they can simply be added to the recipe. Butter and cream cheese were set on the counter to soften. Eggs were separated. And all the fruit puréed before any mixing of ingredients started.

With the cranberry custard, she tossed the ingredients one by one into a heated saucepan. Unfortunately this meant that the egg yolks cooked immediately, but surprisingly Erica was not deterred. She uttered a few choice words under her breath, then stirred the custard delicately so as not to disturb any of the scrambled egg and strained it when she was satisfied that it was done. For the next custard she mixed all her ingredients before putting them in the saucepan and everything went wonderfully.

She had a slight misadventure with the buttercream, when she realize she had not softened quite enough butter in proportion to the cream cheese. Her attempts to soften the extra butter were not quite sufficient and she ended the night with a somewhat lumpy buttercream frosting. Much to my dismay and anxiety she made no attempt to correct this, but simply scooped it into a container and put it in the refrigerator. I can somewhat understand why as I was already close to 10 PM. Overall, Erica’s outward composure was impressive.

The cookies were another adventure. For her first and largest batch, she simply sifted plain almond flour and sugar into her egg mixture. I know she noticed something amiss when she piped them onto the cookie tray, but it was too late to do anything and she was not going to start over. While those were waiting to go into the oven she surprised me by blending the remaining flour and sugar mixture. At some point that night, she also took the buttercream out of the refrigerator warmed, it up a bit and put that in the blender until it was smooth as well. There were more choice words from her and much hand-wringing from me.

I was not present for the assembly of the cookies. Erica did that on Friday morning before work. Occasionally, her anxiety wakes her up at some ungodly hour and rather than try to get back to sleep, she decides she has to do something. This time is was fill and assemble her macarons. This particular bout of anxiety worried me more than any of the quick, panicked reactions I had seen the night before. I did expressed this to her, but she just smiled and told me it would all be fine.

-Ella

*Erica does have a number of “friends from college,” whom she genuinely likes and with whom she has healthy, fulfilling friendships.

Three somewhat tragic looking macarons

The Simple Macaron Recipe that Will Make You Question Your Life Choices

Ella, Free

As promised, I am providing you the recipe for Erica’s macarons. This post will include the basic recipe for macarons as well as the basic recipe for the cream cheese frosting and fruit curd fillings. These little pastries will be the delight of everyone at your next garden party or brunch, and will surely leave you deep in a state of existential dread.

Which I now understand was Erica’s intention. She is used to an omnipresent anxiety about her life choices. She wakes up every day and goes to a job she does not like, and occasionally must spend her free time with these “friends” who look down on her for it. Why shouldn’t they also feel the crushing weight of the world once in a while? Realistically, they probably feel it to some degree, but are too deep in denial to admit it. Even high-paying jobs can be just as difficult to feel good about in a world where most of what we do is meaningless. But reality is difficult to resist when its dressed up in such an appetizing package. Macarons are still macarons after all.

So, if you want a challenge that will bring you face to face with your own questions about the meaning of life, even if you can’t pass it directly along to those who will eat your creations, try baking macarons. For extra anxiety about your place in the world, you can make these without electric beaters, like Erica did. Nothing will make you question your existence like whipping egg whites to a merengue with a tiny whisk, and only switching to hand beaters when the eggs are substantial enough, or mashing cream cheese, butter, and sugar together with just a fork.

Before I give you the recipe, I will recommend break the process up into three steps: baking the macarons, making the filling, and filling the macarons (especially if you take the hand beater route). There’s plenty of self-doubt to go around. Take it easy.

The Very Basic Cookie Recipe (one batch makes ~2 dozen full macarons (4 dozen cookies))

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup fine almond flour (blend or food process it if you just have regular almond flour)
  • ¾ cup powdered sugar
  • 2 large egg whites
  • ¼ teaspoon cream of tartar
  • ¼ cup granulated sugar
  • ~1-2 teaspoon of the flavoring of your choice (Erica used Almond extract, vanilla extract, and cocoa powder)

Instructions

  1. Line 2 cookie sheets with parchment paper and set aside
  2. Sift almond flour and powdered sugar (and cocoa powder if you’re making chocolate) together into a bowl (discard any pieces of flour that don’t get through the sieve). Sift into another bowl, repeat the process back and forth a few times. Set aside.
  3. Beat the egg whites in a large bowl until foamy, add cream of tartar, continue to beat as you add granulated sugar a bit at a time. (if using a liquid flavor/extract, add it here). Beat until stiff peaks are achieved.
  4. Sift almond flour mixture over egg whites and gently fold into egg whites. Do not over mix. When a small drop of batter disappears back into the rest of the mixture after 10 seconds, the batter is ready.
  5. Transfer batter to a piping bag and pipe ~1 inch circles onto the parchment paper.
  6. Tap the cookie tray on the table or counter to get out the air bubbles.
  7. Preheat the oven to 300 degrees Fahrenheit and let the cookies rest for 15-30 minutes, until you can touch the top of them without any batter sticking to your finger.
  8. Bake on center rack for 18-20 minutes.
  9. Allow to cool on cookie sheet, then transfer to a cooling rack.
  10. Fill (once you’ve made your filling) and refrigerate.

Basic Cream Cheese Filling Recipe

  • ¾ block of cream cheese (room temp) (seriously)
  • 1 stick of butter (room temp) (just as seriously)
  • ½ cup powdered sugar
  • ¼ cup optional flavoring (cocoa powder or fruit puree. Use MUCH less if you’re using vanilla extract)

Instructions

  1. If you haven’t left your cream cheese and butter on the counter for a few hours, do that now.
  2. Beat the butter and cream cheese together
  3. Add powdered sugar and flavoring. Beat until smooth.
  4. Refrigerate until ready to use

Basic Curd Recipe

  • 3 egg yolks
  • 4 tsp butter
  • ½ cup powdered sugar
  • ½ cup pureed fruit

Instructions

  1. Make a double boiler/bain marie by filling a larger saucepan with water and putting a smaller saucepan about halfway submerged in the water (let it rest on the water, don’t let any water inside the smaller saucepan).
  2. Combine ingredients in a bowl
  3. Turn on the stove, allow water to boil
  4. Pour ingredients into smaller saucepan. Stir constantly until mixture reaches desired thickness.
  5. Remove from heat and transfer to heat-proof bowl to cool

-Ella