Macaroons

Macaroons

British cookery expert Debbie Major created a recipe for traditional almond macaroons, tweaking the recipe until she found the definitive version with a sweet crunch and a soft, yielding centre.

Macaroons

Looking for the French patisserie macaron? Take a look at these easy-to-make macaroons.

  • Serves icon Makes 16
  • Time icon Hands-on time 15 min, oven time 20-22 min, plus cooling

British cookery expert Debbie Major created a recipe for traditional almond macaroons, tweaking the recipe until she found the definitive version with a sweet crunch and a soft, yielding centre.

Looking for the French patisserie macaron? Take a look at these easy-to-make macaroons.

Nutrition: per serving

Calories
85kcals
Fat
3.5g (0.3g saturated)
Protein
2.2g
Carbohydrates
11.2g (9.6g sugars)
Fibre
0.1g
Salt
trace

Ingredients

  • 100g whole blanched almonds, plus 8 to decorate
  • 150g golden caster sugar
  • 60g free-range egg whites (about 2 medium eggs, or use Two Chicks Egg White, twochicks.co.uk, from large supermarkets)
  • 2 tbsp ground rice or fine semolina
  • ¼ tsp almond extract

You’ll also need…

  • Disposable plastic or nylon piping bag fitted with 1.5cm plain piping nozzle
  • 2 sturdy baking sheets lined with rice paper or non-stick baking paper
Sticky screen? No thanks! Tap to prevent your screen from going off while cooking.

Method

  1. Heat the oven to 150°C/130°C fan/gas 2. Using a small sharp knife, split the 8 extra almonds in half lengthways and set aside.
  2. Put the remaining 100g blanched almonds in a food processor and whizz until they’re coarsely ground. Scoop out 30g and set aside. Add the sugar to the remainder in the
    food processor and whizz briefly until the nuts are very finely ground.
  3. Put the egg whites in a clean mixing bowl and, using an electric hand mixer, whisk for about 15 seconds until they’re foamy and aerated. Stir in the nut and sugar mixture, the reserved coarsely ground nuts, the ground rice or semolina and the almond extract.
  4. Spoon the mixture into the piping bag then, holding the nozzle 1cm above the baking sheet, pipe about 1½ tbsp mixture for each macaroon to make 16 in all, leaving plenty of space in between to allow for spreading during baking.
  5. Put an almond half, rounded side up, in the centre of each macaroon and bake for 20-22 minutes or until golden brown around the edges and pale golden in the centre. Slide the biscuits, still on the paper, onto a wire rack and leave to cool.
  6. If you’ve used rice paper (which is edible), cut around each macaroon to remove the excess. Or, if you’ve used non-stick baking paper, lift off the macaroons. Store in an airtight jar or tin.

Nutrition

Calories
85kcals
Fat
3.5g (0.3g saturated)
Protein
2.2g
Carbohydrates
11.2g (9.6g sugars)
Fibre
0.1g
Salt
trace

delicious. tips

  1. The macaroons will keep for 2-3 weeks in an airtight jar or tin somewhere cool.

Buy ingredients online

Recipe By

Debbie Major

Subscribe

Fancy getting a copy in print?

Subscribe to our magazine

Rate & review

Rate

Reviews

Share a tip

Or, how about...?

Save recipe icon Save recipe icon Save recipe

Christmas gift recipes

Double chocolate macarons

Eric Lanlard’s rich, decadent take on classic French macarons are...

Save recipe icon Save recipe icon Save recipe

Afternoon tea recipes

Easy macaroons

These easy macaroons make great gifts, are ideal to hand...

Subscribe to our magazine

Food stories, skills and tested recipes, straight to your door... Enjoy 5 issues for just £5 with our special introductory offer.

Subscribe

Unleash your inner chef

Looking for inspiration? Receive the latest recipes with our newsletter

We treat your data with care. See our privacy policy. By signing up, you are agreeing to delicious.’ terms and conditions. Unsubscribe at any time.