Blueberry, cotton candy and mango macarons


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What would you do if you had green and pink coloured macarons in the freezer? What kind of photo would you want to build next?

Well naturally I wanted to do a ‘rainbow macarons’ photo.

So I need to start hogging the best shaped macarons for my photo shoot and start making more for this to work!

This was my plan:

Red: [not going to reveal this yet as this is going to be a special one]

Orange: orange

Yellow: mango

Green: mint chocolate chip

Blue: blueberry

Purple: cotton candy

This time I decided to tackle blueberry, cotton candy and mango.

I’ve used my normal macarons recipe, as below.

Macarons shell ingredients (for each colour)

150 g icing sugar

150 g almond meal

110 g egg whites, split into 2 bowls of 55g each

150 g caster sugar

38 ml water

1 g meringue powder

a few drops of gel colourings

Making macarons shells

Sift the almond meal and icing sugar, set aside in a large wide bowl.

Put the first lot of egg whites into your stand mixer.

Clip the sugar thermometer according to manufacturer’s instructions to a milk saucepan, put the water and caster sugar in and dissolve the sugar over a low heat. Leave it to heat up and don’t stir it.

Cook the sugar syrup until it reaches 70°C. You should monitor your sugar thermometer, and as it reaches this temperature, add the gel colourings and add the meringue powder to the egg whites and whisk in medium speed until it becomes frothy.

Once the sugar syrup has reached 118°C (soft ball stage), take the saucepan off the heat, keep the mixer speed on medium and slowly trickle the sugar syrup in, down the side of the bowl. (Be warned not to get the syrup onto the whisk as you will then have spun sugar.) Increase speed to high and whisk until the bowl is warm to touch, about 8 minutes.

Add the second lot of egg whites to the almond meal mix, then add the meringue and use a large spatula to thoroughly combine it. Continue mixing the mixture to soften the meringue. Don’t be afraid to slap the mixture down.To achieve “macaronnage”, I mixed the batter about 25 times. Don’t over do this.

macronnage[this is a picture from my other macarons recipe, showing the same stage]

Scoop half into a piping bag fitted with a #12 Wilton tip, and pipe. To get even rounds, hold the piping bag above the baking sheet, with the tip at a 45 degree angle. Squeeze the mixture in the centre of the rounds and as it is close to filling the circle, stop squeezing and flick the tip from three o’clock to 6 o’clock. This ensures a smooth top.

Allow 30 minutes for a skin to be formed.

Fan-bake them at 125°C, for 20 minutes. After a few minutes in the oven, you should see them rising nicely.

Once out of the oven, the macarons were left for 2 minutes on its trays before I checked them. They should peel off the baking paper quite easily. Slide the whole sheet off the baking sheet onto a cool counter top. This causes a thermal shock and will make it even easier to peel off.

I paired these with a dark chocolate ganache of different flavours

Filling Ingredients:

250g white chocolate

125ml cream

3 drops each of blueberry, cotton candy and mango oil flavouring

Instructions:

Break up chocolate into small chunks. Bring cream up to a boil in a pan, and pour over the chocolate. Let it sit for a minute before stirring. Let it cool, and pour into 3 separate bowls. Add 3 drops of flavouring into each bowl and let it thicken in the fridge.

Spread a teaspoon of ganache on half of your shells and top them with the remaining half of your shells.

The filled macarons need to be kept in the fridge for 24 hours for the filling to flavour the shells, so don’t eat it yet! These freeze well (up to 3 months).

yellow and purple macarons with white chocolate ganache and mango flavouring
teal, purple and yellow macarons on white porcelain egg case
teal, purple and yellow macarons on white porcelain egg case and white cake stand

I’m completely in love with this colour combination – so what do you think?

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