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Writer's pictureLisa

Tiramisu Macarons



Tiramisu will always be on of my favourite desserts and I particularly enjoy combining tiramisu with other types of desserts, such as macarons and cupcakes. These little cookies have all the flavours of a classic tiramisu while being significantly more portable and they should also be fine to keep in the fridge for several days without going bad!


Ingredients:

Batter:

- 100g almond flour (1 cup)

- 100g powdered sugar (3/4 cups)

- 5g espresso powder (1 tsp)

- 100g egg white (~3 large eggs)

- 100g caster sugar (1/2 cup)

- 1/2 tsp vanilla extract

- 1/2 tsp espresso

- pinch of salt


Filling:

- 1/2 cup mascarpone cheese

- 1/4 cup whipping cream

- 1/3 cup powdered sugar

- 1/2 tbsp espresso

- 1/2 tbsp coffee liqueur


Cover with sifted cocoa powder


Yields approximately 25 macarons

 

Weigh in the powdered sugar, almond flour and espresso powder. Transfer the dry ingredients to a food processor and blend briefly. Sift the dry ingredients into a fresh bowl, then transfer them back to the food processor. Repeat this process 2-3 times.


In a clean bowl (I like to wipe my bowl with a paper kitchen towel and a little bit of lemon juice ahead of making meringue), add the egg whites and whisk until foamy. Next, slowly mix in the caster sugar in small portions at medium speed. Once you have reached soft peaks, mix in the vanilla extract, espresso (let it cool down before adding it) and salt. Keep whisking until you reach stiff peaks.


Next, slowly sift the dry ingredients into the meringue mixture and combine with a silicone spatula. You will want to keep folding the batter until it reaches the "ribbon stage". The batter should be shiny and flow off the spatula. The batter should be able to form the number 8 in one go while flowing off the spatula and the edges should disappear into the batter within approximately 15 seconds.


Many people like to use silicone baking mats, but I personally like to use regular parchment paper. You can either print out a template and put it underneath the parchment paper while you pipe or alternatively, you can draw circles on the parchment paper (for example using the cap of a bottle) with a pencil, turn over the parchment paper and then pipe the batter on the other side.

Once the parchment paper is ready on a metal cookie baking pan, transfer the batter to a piping bag and pipe the batter onto the parchment paper. I find it easiest to pipe the batter using a medium-sized round tip. Hold the tip perpendicular to the paper, approximately 1-2 cm above the paper and evenly apply pressure to the piping bag. The batter should spread in a circle. Stop once it reaches the edges of the template.


Carefully drop the cookie pan onto a flat surface from a height of 10-20 cm a couple of times to release air bubbles. Let the batter rest at room temperature for approximately 30 minutes until it develops a skin. It should be fine to touch without batter sticking to your finger.



Bake at 300F for 17 minutes. If the shells are properly baked, they should easily come off the parchment paper. Otherwise, bake for another minute or two until they do. However, be careful not to let the shells turn brown, indicating that they have been baked for too long.


While the shells cool off (the should be at room temperature before you add the filling!), prepare the filling. In a bowl, whisk the whipping cream until it develops stiff peaks. Then slowly mix in the mascarpone cheese, sifted powdered sugar, coffee liqueur and (cooled) espresso. It is important for the whipping cream, espresso and mascarpone cheese to be cool or the piping won't retain its shape. Pipe the filling onto half of the shells with whatever tip you prefer (I went with a star-shaped Wilton 32).



After you have added the filling, the macarons should be stored in the fridge and they should be good for several days. If you want, you can sift cocoa powder on top of the macarons for some contrast (plus, it tastes really good!). Enjoy! :)

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