It’s the time of the month where the mac passionate folk amongst us strut our stuff… that is FEET! We host the monthly event at Mactweets, the brainchild of Jamie and me, where a bunch of us get together and bake macarons to a theme. The theme for April was ‘What’s Your Holiday?’, and it was an all encompassing one.
Whatever your celebration was, be it Easter, a birthday, Passover, April Fool’s Day (Poisson d’Avril for you Francophiles), World Health Day or Earth Day etc. My choice was Earth Day, and I almost never got there. The story is long, I don’t want to write the saga, and you certainly don’t want to read it! To cut it short, the fiddly feet didn’t appear over 8 attempts, and the ones I post today are ones I found in between, but wasn’t too happy with. They make me feel happy now though, since the filling was fun!
I’m posting them because I was egged on to ‘show my feet‘ by Mardi at Eat Live Travel Write last evening, who promised she wouldn’t laugh at my feet, and would stand by me. Jamieshowed off the most amazing feet in a picture on twitter, and reasserted that she indeed is the Mac Queen!! I am still in search of a 100% macaron success rate, but am inspired (or stupid enough), whichever way you want to look at it, to keep trying on a daily basis.
The filling is the part I liked best. I wanted to make matcha macs for Earth Day, in blues and greens, but it was not to be as they spread and bubbled alarmingly like lava once in the oven. Man Friday is having a field day. He takes my failed attempts home for his son everyday, so I have an alternate to filling, stacking and hiding my epic failures.
Earth Day is a day designed to inspire awareness and appreciation for the Earth’s environment and is held on April 22. It was founded by U.S. Senator Gaylord Nelson as an environmental teach-in in 1970 and is celebrated in many countries every year. Earth Day is in spring in the Northern Hemisphere and autumn in the Southern Hemisphere. My message is simple … lets try and go local, reduce waste, recycle, save energy and water, spread the words, look at sustainable development … i.e. do our bit for the Earth! In the micro sense, I piped my macarons with recycled bags, and also recycled my failed macarons to sweeten the buttercream filling. Another good idea for failed macarons could be these Mac-Verrines!
I hung on to the failed matcha macs, made with some precious matcha from a little box Meeta brought for me at the FBC in London. Matcha is finely-milled Japanese green tea. I guard it with my life because I find the colour so fascinating. I HAD to put the failed matcha macs to some good use, so I ran them in the grinder and milled them back to powder. I made a butter-cream sweetened with matcha macaron powder, sandwiched my macs with them and came away singing! All thanks to egging on by Mardi and Jamie!!
Do stop by and look at the round up at MacTweets which shall be up later today. There is amazing creativity amongst our folk, and they never fail to impress!
Milled Nut Flour Macarons
Recipe for macarons from Ottolenghi – The Cookbook, posted here Macaron Butter-cream Filling 10-15 macarons (I used failed matcha macarons) 1/4 cup butter, slightly soft 1 tbsp cream
Method:
Grind the macarons in a coffee/ nut grinder till fine.
Beat the butter and cream until light and fluffy. Add most of the macaron powder, and continue to beat till of the correct consistency. Add more macaron powder if need be.
Assembling:
Turn macarons so their flat bottoms face up, and match the halves for size.
On half of them, pipe about 1 teaspoon of butter-cream and sandwich these with the remaining macaroons, flat-side down, pressing slightly to spread the filling to the edges.
Allow to set in a closed box, in the fridge. They taste better after 24 hours.
♥ Thank you for stopping by ♥
Do you want to join us making MACARONS?? If you do, you are most welcome to join the ‘Attack’. You can find all the information at our dedicated macaron blog MacTweets. The rules for can be found here. You can always join us next month. Just drop us a mail or tweet.
“The early bird gets the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.” Peter @ Kalofagas via Twitter
Must begin my post by giving credit to the quote I grabbed the minute I read it. It belongs to the ‘Greek God of Food’,Peter. Check out his blog @ Kalofagas (you probably have already), to see what I mean. He twittered the quote a few days ago, & I leaped to it, asking him if I could use it, & he willingly parted with it. I never let a good quote opportunity pass me by. Thank you Peter!
It’s Earth Day today. To quote Mother Earth News, April is officially Earth Month, and the great highpoint of the month is Earth Day, April 22. During the 364 unofficial Earth Days, you probably recycle, work to reduce your water consumption and utilize a number of other tricks for living lightly. But April 22 is a day to come together with millions of others from around the globe — to celebrate this glorious planet and all of its life.
Can you tell I’m a AB in 5 convert? For foodies like me, I would like to celebrate with BREAD!! Five Minutes a Day for Fresh-Baked Bread is my call for today.In MARK LUINENBURG words, “Baking bread at home saves hundreds of dollars on groceries every year. With this easy method, each deliciously crusty-on-the-outside, moist-and-chewy-on-the-inside loaf will only cost you about 50 cents and 5 minutes a day. We’re not kidding! “
My first exposure to Artisan Bread in 5 minutes, as I’ve written earlier, was thanks to Paula @ Dragon’s Kitchen. I risk repeating myself, but it was really the best thing to have happened to my bread baking days. There was a time when I was mortified of yeast, a fear I then shared with my good friend Ben, my amigo from What’s Cooking US. Together we moved our strengths from baking powder to yeast, & there’s been no looking back. AB in 5 converted my yeastly thinking completely. How can I even put into words, the luxury & ease of dough, sitting ready-to-use in the fridge. Just take a ball of it, slap it or roll it into shape, & voila, you have bread … Bread in many avatars!
Endless emails & google talk time hours later, I’m happy to have convinced a handful of Indian bakers to begin baking bread, modifying a few bits to suit local conditions. A couple got a frightened by the term‘pizza peel’ & ended any bread baking thoughts. I don’t have a pizza peel, so I just sprinkle my cookie sheet or pizza pan with cornmeal ,& get on with it. AB in 5 is a nice beginning for bakers who are terrified of yeast. Twittering with ‘Pastry Chef/Co-author Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day’, Zoe Francois, I was ruing the fact that the book isn’t available locally here as yet, & was discussing the fear we have of baking here in India; yeast just makes the fear mortal!
Twitter me:Bread baking is non-existent here…most folk are TERRIFIED of yeast, as I was once! Twitter Zoe: Shame! You have to teach them not to be afraid! 😉 I hear that all the time, which is why we wrote the book. Her words pretty much sum up yeastly fears across the globe, & I’m happy to say the book has changed the lives of hundreds of home-bakers. I can’t wait to lay my hands on the book, as Peter says there is a nice naan recipe included too. For the moment, I am enjoying this master dough to the max!!
Artisan Bread in 5 minutes … Pizza Dough adapted fromArtisan Bread in Five Minutes a day by Jeff Hertzberg and ZoëFrançois Ingredients: 4 1/2 cups plain flour 2 cups whole wheat flour 2 tbsp olive oil 1 tbsp sea salt 1 tsp freshly groundblack pepper 1 head roasted garlic 1 1/2 tbsp active dried yeast Handful fresh chopped herbs 3 cups luke warm water
Method:
Take a large container that will fit inside the fridge. Pour in the warm water, add salt, yeast, oil, garlic & freshly ground pepper & stir well.
Add the flours together in one go, & mix in well with a wooden spoon till well incorporated & no dry dough is visible.
Allow dough to rise in a warm place for2-5 hours, & then refrigerate until use. It’s a good idea to keep it in the fridge overnight because the dough is easier to use the next day.
Take a small ball of dough, size of an apple, dust it well with lour, & then roll into a circle to line your pizza pan.
Dust the pizza pan generously with cornmeal before putting thedough on.
Give the dough a light brush of olive oil (or garlic flavoured olive oil), a slathering of pizza sauce, add toppings of your choice, top with mozzarella, and bake on top shelf at 300C for about 20 minutes till cheese light brown & bubbly & the crust is light brown too. Rest for 10 minutes before serving. (I made a couple of round pizzas & a rectangular one too…moreish I thought!)
ENJOY!!!
Here’s my pizza sauce recipe, written mainly for Maya in mind, who asked me for it some time back, but I don’t have an email address for her. My 13teen year old cannot tolerate mushrooms on her pizza for some insane reason, so I sneak those into the sauce, with a carrot to keep it company. The kids haven’t figured it out yet, & they won’t coz the daughter does not read the recipe portion of my posts, not yet! They are both happy to eat this pizza, hot or cold, any time of the day!! Pizza Sauce Recipe Ingredients: 8-10 tomatoes 1/2 kilo; peeled & roughly chopped 1/4 tsp roasted red chili flakes 1 big onion, chopped 5-6 cloves of garlic, chopped 300ml tomato puree 1 generous handful fresh herbs (I used thyme & oregano) 200gms mushrooms; grated fine 1-2 carrots grated fine Salt to taste 1 pinch of sugar
Method:
Add olive oil to pan, & simmer red chili flakes for a minute or 2.
Sweat the onion & garlic for 4-5 minutes on low heat, & then add the grated mushrooms & saute till they leave liquid.
Add the tomatoes, tomato puree, carrots, salt & pepper if desired. Add herbs & simmer for 30 minutes till the sauce is nice & thick. Mash any bits of tomatoes with the back of a spoon. Let the sauce cool & the flavours to mature. The sauce can be made 3-4 days in advance & stored in the fridge.