Jennifer Poirier

Coconut Macarons.




Careful now,
a tad too much
pressure:

Shell caves,
the smooth surface,
with golden flecks:

Toasted,
roasted
coconut.

Enveloped in a pool of milk cocoa.

...

Coconut Macarons
time ganache 30 minutes plus overnight resting, preparing and baking the shells 50 minutes, assembling 20 minutes yields around 30 macarons
ganache: 260ml cream 115ml coconut milk 1/2 vanilla pod 190g milk chocolate 75g sweetened shredded coconut, toasted
shells: 150g ground almonds 150g powdered sugar 55g egg whites
50g water 150g sugar
55g egg whites 20g sugar food coloring

Prepare the ganache:
toast the coconut in the oven for 8 minutes at 180 degrees.
Let cool.
Chop the milk chocolate.
Bring the cream, coconut milk and vanilla to a boil.
Pour over the chocolate, let stand for a minute, then stir, starting from the center, creating an emulsion.
Stir in the coconut, cover and refrigerate overnight.
Make the shells: grind your almonds together with the powdered sugar in a kitchen machine to a flour-like consistency. Then sieve, to get out any bigger pieces. This is important, so you have a completely smooth top.Then start to whip your egg whites with the sugar and the food coloring slowly. At the same time, boil the water and sugar to 113 degrees celsius. Slowly pour the mix into the egg whites. Beat until the mixture feels luke warm.
In the meantime, mix the almond mixture together with the liquid egg whites. In two steps, fold the whipped egg whites into the almond mixture.
Do not be shy at this step - the egg whites will collapse somewhat, that's okay. What is not good, is if you whip all the air out of them, you do not want a runny mass!
On a prepared baking sheet, pipe the macarons in round circles (around 3 cm in diameter). When your sheet is full, tap it to achieve a smooth surface on the macarons.
Let dry for a couple of minutes.Bake first at 230 degrees for 3-4 minutes, until a "foot" has risen, then for 7-8 minutes at 170-180 degrees (open up the oven door to get it to cool off).
The shell should not be sticking to the sheet surface.
Let cool completely, before you remove the macarons from the baking sheet and fill them, ideally with help of a piping bag with a round tip.


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