How not to make macarons: an outline of 3 different methods for making macarons and their results.

The first macaron I ate was about 2 years ago at Le Panier in Pike Place. Somehow, I had avoided ever tasting one up until then. I had just started blogging and funny enough when I sat down with my latte and macaron on the one open stool in the packed bakery, I noticed 2 girls obsessively taking pictures of their individual macarons with crazy big lens outfitted cameras.

At the time, I was still using my 5 year old point and shoot and had no idea what could be so interesting about a baked good to spend 15 minutes taking pictures of it instead of shoving it in their mouths instead. As I was leaving, I overheard a sentence of their conversation and the word “blog” and put it all together. Fast forward 2 years and I’d probably fit right in with them at that table now. Although, I would order multiple macarons so I could shove one in my face before taking pictures. Priorities.

Since then, they’ve been unavoidable when you follow far too many food blogs than should be admitted and the thought of attempting to make them myself has slowly grown on me as one of those “must dos” when your life sort of revolves around food. When Lindsay announced this month’s kitchen challenge I took it as a sign and convinced myself this needed to happen.

I’m not a baker. I don’t own a kitchen scale (and refuse to buy one for the sole purpose of weighing macaron ingredients). And my pastry bag & tips consist of a ziplock bag with the tip snipped off.

That might give you a bit of an idea of how this all went…

How not to make macarons
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I followed a recipe I found online from a trusted source exactly. Stella kinda knows her stuff so I figured I might be able to swing these fickle little things after all. I watched the videos that Mardi made based on Stella’s recipe about 3 times before starting and I’ll admit, I was feeling a bit confident in myself.

That feeling lasted up until about minute 6 of beating the egg whites.

Mardi claims that she’s used chilled liquid egg whites with no problem in this recipe and since I’m a cheapo that didn’t want to waste half my organic eggs by using them (because let’s be real, what the hell do you do with the yolks when custard isn’t really something you want to take on that day?), I went that route straight out of the gates. Except by minute 6 when they were barely even foaming as the mixer beat away at them I had a feeling I was already in trouble.

At minute 12 when they looked like nothing more than bubbly egg whites, I had resigned to failure and went upstairs to put store appropriate clothing on so I could run out for more powdered sugar, food dye and eggs for batch #2. I happened to leave the mixer running though and when I came back downstairs at minute 22ish, they actually happened to look somewhat fluffy and whipped. So I threw my bag down on the chair, flipped the speed to 10 on the Kitchen Aid and whipped the shit out of them for another 2 minutes. I figured it was a 50/50 shot at this point and just went with it.

Folding in the dry ingredients actually went much more according to plan than I thought it would and when I put them in the oven (on wax paper instead of parchment by accident) I had hope.

I sat in front of the oven door, praying for those little suckers to puff up and grow feet like an absolute idiot who was literally talking to them at one point.

18 minutes later and this is what I had.

Making macarons

Tiny little feet but almost flat as a pancake. When you bit into them there was hardly any of that chewy middle underneath the eggshell-esque outside.

Oh, and then there was that whole wax paper thing.

How not to make macarons

It’s not non-stick, in case you were wondering.

A mid-day 12 mile bike ride ensued to clear my head a bit and then to the store I went to restock and reattempt.

How not to make macarons

Things were looking good with this batch. When my egg whites looked like this after the 10 minutes or so of whipping, I was thinking “yep, this is the batch”.

macaron batter

I piped them out, stuck ‘em in the oven and was confident those little feet would appear and I’d have conquered the art of macaron making.

Except, that didn’t happen.

How not to make macarons

I got good “puffage” except not even a freakin’ toe, let alone feet.

How not to make macarons

These tasted great though. Good texture inside & out and the silpat vs. the parchment didn’t seem to make a difference either way.

I had a bit of batter left in the bag at this point though so I marched on to attempt #3.

How not to make macarons

After googling things like “why won’t my macarons grow feet”, it seemed like people swore by letting the batter rest after piping before going into the oven (even though Stella said this doesn’t matter). Something about it drying it out and a whole bunch of other baking terms I won’t pretend to understand but figured I’d attempt it as a last ditch effort.

So I sat impatiently, uploading my failures to instagram for the next hour and waited while they “dried”.

How not to make macarons

And….the result.

Probably the worst batch of the day. Completely hollow underneath, no chew factor and obviously no feet considering they more closely resembled amputees from the waist down.

At this point I gave up, showered and got ready for a birthday dinner where I shoved a bacon manhattan and 1lb. of king crab legs down my throat to forget about these bastards of a pastry and the frustrating day.

I will conquer these suckers eventually though. I get obsessive about stuff like this and can’t end on failure. I’m pretty sure success is going to require a kitchen scale and an oven thermometer though so I gotta work on that first.

If nothing else, Ginger enjoyed a few extra snacks for the day and it was a good excuse to play around with a new lens & tripod. I’m in love with the tripod, not so sure about the lens yet.

Got any macaron tips?

Founder and Writer at Running to the Kitchen | About

Gina Matsoukas is an AP syndicated writer. She is the founder, photographer and recipe developer of Running to the Kitchen — a food website focused on providing healthy, wholesome recipes using fresh and seasonal ingredients. Her work has been featured in numerous media outlets both digital and print, including MSN, Huffington post, Buzzfeed, Women’s Health and Food Network.

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33 Comments

  1. awwww I am sorrry but lost no hope my friend.. I have no idea when it comes to baking macarons but absolutely enjoy eating them :P

  2. Awww, that poor lil’ first batch. They looked like they so badly wanted to rise more! Can’t believe you had the patience to not only take gorgeous photos but try twice more and write a funny post about the experience, haha! Try Martha Stewart’s French Macarons recipe if you’re up for another go… never tried it but have heard great things. I’ll get back on that horse one day!

  3. Listen to Mardi…get a scale! Also, when I had success with these I aged the whites on the counter overnight AND I aged the macs on the sheet for an hour before baking.

  4. Oh and one more thought I have read that you have to have a copper bowl to make these really work. Something chemical that’s far to complex for me to understand.

  5. Yikes! I was going to try to make macarons for this month’s challenge. Now I’m scared.

    1. don’t be! if nothing else, we can laugh at our failures together but who knows, you might nail them! All that’s wasted is some sugar and eggs ;)

  6. Last year I took a macaron making class taught by a French pastry chef here in town (she sells them to a local cafe in town and at the farmers market). It was a three hour class and I left feeling like I could conquer the world! Have I ever made them on my own since that class? No. However, if you honestly want the recipe she gave us and my notes that go along with it, I will gladly send it your way! She was a Chemist turned baker and it shows. …I am far too much of a chicken shit to try doing it on my own LOL. I’ll find the recipe and send it your way!

    1. haha, yes please, send them my way if you find them! You should totally try them at home and if they fail miserably, we can commiserate together ;)

  7. Ah the frustratingly addictive macaron… I feel your pain, having spend months perfecting these and even now I still have my bad days.

    And yes, the scale makes the magic. I would never attempt making macarons using volume measures ever again (I have a few times and it’s a complete disaster).

    Also, I mostly do bring my liquid egg whites from cartons to room temperature – not for hours but at least so they are not chilled. But I haven’t had the 22 minutes whipping issue so it makes me think there might have been something up with the liquid egg whites. Some egg white cartons say “great for meringues” and those are the ones I would use. Many of them are not “ideal for baking” so will not whip properly. Also, sometimes if my mixing bowl is not completely clean (like, it you have used it to make butter cream or something with some oil content, there might have been residue left in the bowl – that can ruin egg whites too.)
    In any case, the first batch look promising – the batter might have been a little over mixed or the oven might have been too hot (did you double up your trays?).

    Good luck – you WILL conquer them (but a scale is important!)

    1. Thanks so much for the comment, Mardi! Yeah, not using the scale was stupid. I’m just stubborn like that ;) I will try the doubling trays thing next time. I’ve never checked my oven’s temperature so I really have no idea how true it runs, but it does seem (based on the cracking) that it might be a little hot so that should help. And thank you for those videos. The visual of Stella’s directions was so helpful!