Showing posts with label Apple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Apple. Show all posts

Saturday, 2 November 2024

Sugar-Free Capybara Apple Pop Tarts

 I made these felt toy lookalike capybara pop tarts for hubby's birthday!



A peek at the insides!


I tried to make it as low a GI as possible without compromising taste and kept the use of artificial colouring minimal.

If this style of felt toy lookalike pop tarts seem familiar to you, it means you must have seen Melly's (Instagram: @mellyeatsworld) incredible pop tart creations a few years ago! I was truly inspired by her work and the pop tarts stood out because I have never seen anything like them before. I hope I did her style of work justice here to make the pop tarts good enough to fool you into thinking that they are handmade felt toys 🤭.

My hubby loves capybaras (actually everyone in my family does) and anything with apple pie filling so I took the chance to create these sugar-free pop tarts as his super early birthday bake. Hardly any sugar replacements are used because sugar is optional for this bake. Although sugar sweetens and helps with caramelization, it's not absolutely necessary for the structure. I relied on brown butter, cinnamon and caramelizing the apple to give this creation amazing flavours. It's naturally coloured too except for the 🍎 that the capybaras are holding.

Here's the template. Do tag me on social media if you create it!

Please resize the template till the height of the capybara is 10cm

I put a heart on the template instead of an apple for sizing purposes since I have an apple cookie cutter that's about 1".

Sugar-Free Capybara Apple Pop Tarts
(makes 4 pop tarts)

Apple filling*:
2 large Gala apples, peeled & finely diced 
A pinch of salt
1/8-1/4 tsp lemon juice (optional)
1/4-1/2 tsp cinnamon powder
1-2 tbs (8-16g) Alchemy fibre* (replace with sugar or omit)
25g unsalted butter 

1. Mix all ingredients except butter in a mixing bowl. Set aside
2. In a light coloured saucepan, brown butter over low heat 
3. Add 1. into brown butter. Cook until apple is translucent & slightly caramelized. Adding sugar helps with the caramelization but I want to keep the GI as low as possible
4. Cool completely before using or stored in the fridge until assembly

Tart dough:
180g plain flour
5-10g powdered Erythritol/icing sugar (optional)
Pinches of salt
1/2-3/4 tsp cinnamon powder
100g cold unsalted butter, cubed*
1 egg yolk
30g cold milk/ice water

Egg wash*:
1 egg yolk
15g water
1/2 tsp cocoa powder
5g boiling hot water

1. Whisk together flour, sugar, salt & cinnamon
2. Rub in cold butter until it resembles fine breadcrumbs
3. Whisk egg yolk & cold milk together. Add to 2. Mix well until a ball of dough forms
4. Portion out dough & colour:
Red: 20g + red gel color
Dark brown: 25g + 1/16 tsp cocoa powder + a few drops of water
Green: 5g + green gel color 
Black: 3g + 1/16 tsp charcoal+ a few drops of water
5. Wrap & refrigerate for at least 30min
6. Roll to 3mm thick for base dough for capybara's body & 1mm thick for the rest. Freeze for 15 min 
7. Cut out dough using template. Join small parts to main body by brushing some water/egg wash. Press small cutouts firmly into body. Freeze if not assembling yet

I had leftover dough which I used to make some circles 

8. Assemble with apple filling by adding 1 tbs of filling to the base dough cutout. Brush perimeter with water/egg wash. Press top dough cutout down firmly. Crimp the edges & egg wash stitches*. Pierce holes for nostrils & mouth to vent. I used a combination of a cake tester and a small knife to create the vents.





9. Freeze assembled tart while preheating oven to 170C fan/185C

10. Bake 10-12min. Rotate tray & bake another 10-12min or until lightly browned. Adjust baking conditions to whatever works for your oven as each oven is different.


* Additional notes:

🔸Alchemy fibre: A prebiotic fibre mix of inulin & edible gum. Glycemic index is not zero but has beneficial effect on gut health, glycemic load and cholesterol. Tastes mildly sweet

🔸The portion of apple filling is more than enough for filling 4 capybara pop tarts. I recommend serving the pop tarts with extra filling on the side as overstuffing the tarts may risk them exploding during baking. Other types of fillings that are rich like S'mores (milk chocolate & toasted marshmallows), or really strong flavoured like jams that are sweet and tart at the same time need not have filling top-ups

🔸You may replace some of the butter with shortening if your environment is really warm like mine (30-31C kitchen these days 🥵) for better shape retention 

🔸 Egg wash: Mix egg yolk with 15g water for a regular egg wash or to glue pieces of dough together. For the brown stitch egg wash paint, dissolve cocoa powder in boiling hot water, then mix in 20g egg wash. I used fine tweezers instead of a fork to crimp the edges for a more realistic stitch pattern. Fork tinnes tend to be a little thicker so it won't appear too "stitch-like"

🔸 Tarts can be stored at room temperature for 2 days or in the fridge for a week tightly wrapped. Extra apple filling can be stored in the fridge for a week. Reheat by toasting tart for a few minutes until sizzling before consuming it piping hot with extra filling. If you aren't diabetic, you may pair it with a caramel drizzle and vanilla ice cream 😋


Here's the video of the process:

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DB4492cykUz/?igsh=MWc5aGl1OXYxenh0bg==


with lots of love,

Phay Shing






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Sunday, 22 September 2024

Succulents & Cacti Marshmallows in Butter Cake Pot

 I made this for my dad's birthday this year!


Made another simpler cake for my uncle's birthday too!


Both my dad and uncle love a little bit of gardening so I thought this theme is just right for them. The old school butter cake recipe can be found in this blog post. I included some prebiotic soluble fibres to make it healthier.

The succulents and cacti are made out of zephyrs, an agar-based marshmallow. Instead of using fresh egg whites, I used meringue powder. Those of you who bought my Deco Marshmallows book may be pleased to know using meringue powder works just as well! Please refer to this reel for the substitution and some visuals:


The zephyrs are coloured with a combination of matcha powder and gel food colouring.

Here are some pictures to share...

Piped marshmallows 


Butter cake pot with chopped toasted almond slices as the "soil"


A slice of the cake!


Dad posing with a cactus!

This is the reel with snippets of piping the succulents:

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DAN_8s2y-Px/?igsh=MW5sbWg5YTZnanllMg==


Both Dad and Uncle loved the cakes!


with lots of love,

Phay Shing

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Thursday, 29 August 2024

Apple Earl Grey Apple Macarons

Happy Teacher's Day to all teachers! Thank you for your hard work! I didn't have time to make a teacher's day special bake so this unplanned bake came at the right time! This unplanned bake happened because I had leftover batter from an epic project that was sitting in the piping bag for 4 hours. Presenting my apple macarons filled with apple Earl Grey ganache and apple jam filling! The ganache is dairy-free and temperature stable in tropical Singapore's non-airconditioned room temperatures.


I used my default Swiss meringue method recipe where the egg whites are split into whipped and unwhipped portions to give a smoother finish on the surface. Really pleased that despite leaving out the batter for long, the macaron shells are still full, smooth and have even feet!

Even the stems and leaves were made from leftover batter too and of a different color. The stems were made from leftover grey batter with cocoa powder and cornstarch added. I added the cornstarch to thicken the batter some more to give the stems a little texture. The leaves were made from leftover beige batter coloured with green gel colouring.


The apple jam is actually what I use for making zephyrs (agar-based marshmallows). Since this bake was unplanned, I just used the same apple jam for filling the macarons as I am preparing for a marshmallow bake soon.



Proper technique and attention to detail during the process is so important and that's what I teach in my classes. It's not simply about following a recipe as we all work with different equipment and conditions.

See my reel for the filling recipe and video tutorial of the process:

https://www.instagram.com/reel/C_Nl4M-S_cA/?igsh=cWsxbWNrMXRvbmty


with love,

Phay Shing

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Tuesday, 7 February 2023

Sugar-Free Apple Raspberry Marshmallow Bouquet

 I have finally gotten started at writing my marshmallow book! In the process of writing, I need to test out the recipes and of course make the items for photography for the professional photographer to shoot in due time. I made zephyrs before but wondered if sugar-free versions will work as well. Zephyrs are agar-based marshmallows so they are vegetarian-friendly. I am pleasantly surprised the use of sugar replacements was all right and the marshmallow batter remained in a workable consistency!


I tried to use natural food colouring as far as possible. I used matcha powder for the green leaves and raspberry puree for the pink. I did use a little strawberry paste from commercially sold source but most of the colouring is natural.

Here's a closer look at the tulips piped using  Russian tip.


And a closer look at the roses piped using a petal tip.


Using Granny Smith apples as the fruit base helps a lot as the pectin content is high. It's tartness also helps to temper the sweetness level of these marshmallows so they end up being only mildly sweet but full of fruity flavour!

I love the fact that besides looking pretty, these marshmallows are low in fat, high in fiber and the only contribution to glycemic index is from the fruit used!

See these marshmallows in squishy action and their cross sections over here:

https://www.instagram.com/reel/Cn6z4U0AOfJ/?igshid=NTdlMDg3MTY=

Detailed recipe will be shared in my upcoming book Deco Marshmallows.


with love,

Phay Shing

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Saturday, 11 September 2021

Apple Black Tea 'Basket of Apples' Cake

After making the chiffon apples in biscuit basket, I made another version of the "apples in basket" theme with the same flavour (apple black tea) but with the basket made out of cake this time! This was for my dad's and uncle's combined birthday celebration.

The apples are the same as what I made for my dad's small birthday bake where each large apple has an apple black tea diplomat cream and apple dragonfruit black tea jelly filling. Here's how the cross-section looks like! 


The mini apples don't have filling because it would have been challenging to insert it in. 

The recipe for the cake (chiffon sponge, diplomat cream and jelly) can be found over here where I did my trial bake for cake flavour. I made chiffon apples back in 2014 when I first discovered that cake marbling technique can be used to create the patterns on the apple. I have done basket weave type of cake using chiffon sponge a number of times since I made the first one for my mum's birthday in 2015. But this is the first time I am making it this complicated as there is a heart-shaped hole at the side of the basket revealing the layers of goodies that the cake is made up of. While I usually make a half basket weave covered cake as the cake base to showcase the basket weave as well as the beautiful yummy cake layers, I thought this would look a little odd for the apple theme. But I am not willing to cover up the sides totally in basket weave as it is a pity to hide the goodies inside. I ended up with a compromise of a hole at the side to showcase the cake layers and basket weave. This is the first time I sliced the chiffon sponge cake into 5 layers too. Usually I slice into 3 layers only. Quite a challenge to slice it so thinly because chiffons are so soft! 

Here's a peek at the layer of filling between sponge layers. 

Apple black tea diplomat cream and apple dragonfruit black tea jelly

Here's a view of the basket cake without the apples! 


I baked very thin layer of chiffon sponges to make the basket weave. I added a little more kocha powder (black tea powder) and a little cocoa powder to make a slightly darker brown for the basket weave but I think it isn't too obvious 😂. 

I chose a heart shaped opening at the basket because this bake is made with lots of love for the people who love me. My uncle treats me like his own daughter although he never had children, and has continued to support my family over the years. So this cake is a little gift I make in return for all the love and care. 


With lots of love,

Phay Shing

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Sunday, 5 September 2021

Apple Black Tea Chiffon Cake 'Apples' in Biscuit Basket

My dad's and uncle's birthdays are pretty close to each other and because we have 2 separate celebrations, I decided to make 2 separate but related bakes for them. Both are apple themed. For my dad's small home birthday celebration, I revisited an old bake back in 2014 but with filling this time and placed in an edible basket! 

Apple black tea chiffon cake "apples" in biscuit basket! 

A close up view of the cross-section of the insides! Apple black tea diplomat cream and apple dragonfruit black tea agar jelly! 

It actually took me 2 tries to get the basket right. The first try was my default construction cookie recipe that tastes awesome and it's easy to work with as rolled cookies. But it was difficult to handle for weaving as the dough kept breaking, and the basket fell apart when I placed it upright to dry it out a little more in the oven. Way too fragile due to the microcracks induced by the compression forces as the weaved dough expanded slightly during baking in the oven. 

I had a think and remembered that I had a biscuit dough recipe which has a texture and elasticity similar to bread dough, making it easier to handle for weaving and hopefully, remains sturdy enough after baking to keep its shape and hold the apples! This biscuit happens to be my iced gems biscuit base. I tweaked it slightly to include a little cinnamon and cocoa powder for colouring, and reduced the baking powder to minimize expansion of the dough which may cause cracks due to the weave pattern. Thank God it worked this time! 

You may refer to any basket weave tutorial for circular baskets on how to weave. Pinch seal the ends of each rope of dough when you run out of length. Use a metal bowl that is wrapped in aluminium foil as your work surface. Remember to grease it first before slapping on the dough. 


I didn't take photos of the weaved rim and handles because it was late and I was a little miffed at having to rebake😂. I used small hemisphere slicone moulds as the work surface for the handles. The various parts were glued together using royal icing

Ta-dah! My edible wicker biscuit basket! 

Recipe for biscuit basket
Ingredients:
140g plain flour 
1/2 tsp baking powder
20g icing sugar 
1/8 tsp salt
1/8 tsp cinnamon powder
1/4 tsp cocoa powder

48g unsalted butter
50g milk (use less or add more as necessary) 
1/4 tsp vanilla extract 

Steps:
1. Sift together all powdered ingredients into mixing bowl. Add vanilla extract to milk. 

2. Rub in unsalted butter into powdered ingredients until it resembles fine breadcrumbs. 

3. Add milk a little at a time until a ball of dough forms. Cling wrap and let it rest for 30 minutes. This will help the dough to relax and make it more pliable.

4. Prepare the baking tray/ moulds, lining with parchment or foil and greasing as necessary. Preheat oven to 165C.

5. Portion and roll out the ropes of dough as needed for weaving. Weave the basket, pinch sealing portions where you need to join the ropes. 

6. Bake until slightly golden brown. This bake time can vary depending on size of the weaved portion. Can range from 15 to 25 min. Cool completely before assembling with royal icing as the glue. 


The basket was stored at cool room temperature in airtight condition. 

I prepared some apple dragonfruit black tea jelly and measured 1 tsp of it for each apple, set in cling wrap. You may refer to this post for the jelly recipe. 

Refrigerated until ready to fill the chiffon apples. It would be perfect if I have moulds of the right size but I didn't so this less ideal cling wrap trick will have to do.  You only need to prepare a small quantity of jelly since each apple only needs 1 tsp worth. 

Prepare the apple black tea diplomat cream and store it in a piping bag in the fridge until ready to fill the apples. Please refer to this post for the recipe. You will only need a little cream and 1 egg yolk portion recipe is more than enough. 

Apple black tea chiffon cake recipe for "apples" 
Note that I increased the sugar content in the meringue to improve its stability compared to my old recipe in 2014. This makes it easier for patterning the apple design. 

Ingredients (makes about 9-12 cupcakes) :
Egg yolk batter
3 egg yolks
42g vegetable or canola oil
3/4 tsp vanilla extract 
1/4 tsp cinnamon powder
1/8 tsp salt
60g cake flour 
1/4 tsp baking soda (to neutralize acidity of tea) 
1/2 tsp kocha powder (black tea powder) 

Colouring for yellow and red batters
Yellow gel colouring 
1/8 tsp red powder colouring 

Meringue
4 egg whites
1/4 tsp cream of tartar
80g caster sugar 

Steps :
Kindly refer to this post for the detailed steps because it is too long to type😂. The difference is I simplified the use of many sources of colouring because some of them impart a flavour which I didn't want as it will detract from the apple black tea base that I intended it to be. 

Inverting the glass bowls to cool the chiffon apples. 

Carefully unmould the cakes by hand when cooled totally. Use a piping tip to mark out the hole and then use a toothpick to dig out a portion of cake. Don't throw the cake cutout, instead pipe in a little cream. Insert a ball of jelly and coat with more cream.  It should look like this:


Cover the hole with some of the cake cut out earlier. Shape the base of the cake to make it taper slightly inward. To do so, you may shape by hand, or use a mould/bowl with smaller diameter. Insert the base of the cake into the mould/bowl to round it out. I used a silicone mould with smaller diameter than the glass bowls they were baked in. 

To shape the apple top, make an indent on the top of the apple with a clean finger or wider end of the chopstick. 

Ta-dah! Shaped apple. The shaped portions may tend to bounce back to its original shape. Just keep pressing or inserted into the mould for a longer time and the shape should hold better. 

Insert a sliver of cinnamon as the apple stem and you are done! 

With lots of love,

Phay Shing


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Saturday, 28 August 2021

Apple Black Tea Swiss Roll

This was an accidental flavour that is so good that picky cake eaters like hubby, gave a thumbs up, and so did my elder kid who appreciates desserts with complementary multidimensional flavours and textures. Presenting my trial bake for apple black tea cake! 



This cake consists of a soft and moist apple black tea chiffon sponge, same flavour of diplomat cream, and a crunchy apple black tea dragonfruit agar jelly.  I brewed a concentrated tea and used it as a base for making the various components. I originally planned for a hojicha cake but Phoon Huat was out of stock for hojicha powder so I settled for kocha, a black tea often used to make bubble teas. I thought just kocha alone would be one-dimensional. And since I am planning an apple themed bake, I thought why not make it apple black tea! The flavour is refreshing with some fruity tartness from the apple, and sweet aroma from cinnamon and kocha. The addition of dragonfruit was an afterthought as I wanted to colour the jelly naturally for a reddish tinge. But this turned out necessary as the fine dragonfruit seeds add a nice crunch to texture which complements the crunchy agar and soft cake and cream.  

This is a long post as I am recording it for my reference too. 

Apple black tea
Feel free to upsize or downsize, or change any ingredient quantity according to taste. You should aim for what you want the jelly to taste like (except that it is unsweetened) as your base tea that you will use for all ofher components later on. You may store excess in fridge or freezer. Recipe is adapted from here

Ingredients:
3 apples, peeled and grated 
6 cups of water
1/2 tsp cinnamon powder
1/8 tsp ginger powder
1 tbs (6g) Kocha powder (I bought from Phoon Huat) 

Steps:
1. Bring water, tea powder, cinnamon and ginger to a boil. Turn the heat down and simmer for 5 to 7 minutes.

2. In the mean time, peel and grate the apples. Add grated apples to the tea mixture and simmer for another 3 min. 

3. Remove from heat at let the ingredients steep and cool to room temperature. Sieve before using or storing. 


Apple black tea jelly
This is a very small portion for my trial bake so feel free to upsize it for larger cakes or swiss rolls. 

Ingredients:
150g apple black tea
20g honey (feel free to adjust according to taste or change to sugar of choice) 
25g pink dragonfruit puree, optional if you don't need extra crunch (I blended it so seeds are broken to smaller bits) 
2-3g agar powder (depending on how firm you prefer)

Steps:
1. Place all ingredients into small saucepan. Bring to a boil, stirring constantly to ensure agar powder is completely dissolved. 

2. Continue boiling and stirring for a minute more. 

3. Pour into lined tray or silicone mould/tray until at least 1cm high. Chill in fridge until firm. 


Apple black tea diplomat cream
This is again very small quantity. Feel free to upsize it. Excess can be frozen and eaten like ice-cream. 

Ingredients:
1 egg yolk
20g cornflour
3g kocha powder
A pinch of salt
15g erythritol (or sugar of choice, adjust amount according to taste) 
75g apple black tea
25g heavy cream 
7g unsalted butter
50g whip topping (or stabilized dairy whipped cream) 

Steps:
1. Heat apple tea and heavy cream in a small saucepan until you are able to feel the heat rising from the pot when you place your hand over it. 

2. In the mean time, whisk egg yolk, cornflour, sugar of choice, salt and kocha together until a thick paste forms. 

3. When apple milk tea is warm, pour it in a thin stream into the egg mixture while whisking the egg mixture constantly. Pour everything back into saucepan. 

4. Heat over medium low heat while whisking constantly. Once the custard starts to thicken, remove from heat and whisk vigorously until smooth. Place saucepan back on heat and continue to whisk and cook until thickened further, able to hold a firm peak (peak with a curl at the end) . Remove from heat. 

5. Add unsalted butter and whisk until well combined. Transfer to bowl and press cling wrap on surface. Chill in fridge overnight or at least a few hours. 

6. Whip up the whip topping until stiff peaks. Take the pastry cream/custard out and whisk it to loosen the texture. Fold the whipped cream into the custard. Transfer into piping bag and store in fridge until ready to assemble. 


Apple black tea chiffon cake
Quantity here is enough for a mini 7x7 inch swiss roll plus one or two 5cm cupcakes. Feel free to upsize to a 2 egg yolk recipe for a 10 x 12 inch swiss roll. 

Ingredients :
Egg yolk batter
1 egg yolk
5g caster sugar
14g vegetable oil
17g apple black tea
1/4 tsp vanilla extract 
1/8 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp kocha powder
A pinch of salt
23g cake flour

Meringue
One and a half egg whites (about 55g)
25g caster sugar (more if you have sweet tooth, up to 35g)
1/8 tsp cream of tartar

Steps:
1. Line tray with parchment paper or teflon sheet. Preheat oven to 170C.

2. Prepare egg yolk batter. Whisk egg yolk, salt and sugar together until pale and thick. Add oil and whisk until smooth. Add apple black tea and vanilla and whisk until combined. Sift in flour, cinnamon and kocha powder gradually. Whisk until no trace of flour is seen. 

3. Prepare meringue. In a clean metal bowl, beat egg whites with cream of tartar until firm peaks, gradually adding in the sugar once the egg whites are foamy.

4. Quickly but gently fold meringue into egg yolk batter in 3 batches. Pour into cupcake case and prepared swiss roll tray. 

5. Bake at 170C for 12- 14 min or until skewer comes out clean. Immediately flip onto fresh sheet of parchment paper and roll it up to cool completely. 

Assembly
1. Cut out apple shapes from the jelly or any other shape you like with a cookie cutter. I used a small 1 inch apple cookie cutter for this mini roll. 

2. Unroll the cooled cake and pipe/spread a thin layer of diplomat cream. 

3. Place a row of apple black tea jelly cutouts upside down in the middle of the roll as shown below. 


4. Pipe a thin layer of cream around the jelly, smoothing it out with a spatula as necessary. 

5. Carefully roll it up and refrigerate for at least a few hours before attempting to slice it. 

I wasn't sure how this would end up tasting so I was pleasamtly surprised that it was really refreshing with all the subtle complex flavours coming out when you take time to savour all 3 components together. 


With love,

Phay Shing 

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Monday, 13 June 2016

Father's Day Special: Star Wars Assorted Macarons (French Method!)

I had some aged egg whites to clear from the fridge and since I had time during my break from baking for orders, I decided to give the French method a try again after relying on the Italian method for the longest time. I was pleasantly surprised that the taste and texture of the macaron shell this time round were pretty close to what I get using the Italian method. Here's my successful attempt which is meant for my hubby who is a Star Wars fan :)

BB8, stormtrooper and R2D2 macarons!

As there were too many macarons for hubby to finish, I gave some away to a birthday girl and someone who needs a pick-me-up. The rest were up for grabs. I opened for sale and they were snapped up within an hour of announcement! I filled half of the macarons with hubby's favourite spiced apple swiss meringue buttercream with salted caramel and the other half with dark chocolate ganache laced with coffee and liqueur. I decided to make the dark chocolate ganache more adult-friendly knowing that kids are probably not consuming these ;). Add coffee and liqueur to dark chocolate and you transform an otherwise delicious and rich but gentle version of chocolate to a mind blowing powerful one.

Many people have tried Daniel Leong's recipe for French macarons and raved about their success. I thought why not give this recipe a try. I adapted my recipe from the one that Jeannie Tay posted on her blog over here. My previous attempts usually resulted in shells that were way too chewy for my liking. I prefer the delicate texture of macarons made with the Italian method. Upon studying the ingredients carefully, it's not hard to see why his recipe works so well. The ratio of castor sugar:egg whites is pretty high. This results in a firmer and more stable meringue than in recipes that call for less. I have seen recipes with castor sugar that is less than a third of the weight of egg whites, whereas the castor sugar is about 90% of the weight of egg whites in Daniel Leong's recipe. Similarly, the icing sugar:almond meal ratio is also pretty high. Icing sugar provides structural stability to the macaron shells as well. With these combined factors for improving the stability of the batter, chances of success is increased.

I tweaked Daniel's recipe a little by including a bit more salt to counter the sweetness, cream of tartar to stabilize the meringue, cornflour and egg white powder to help the piped shells to dry faster. You may omit all these but I was working on a humid and rainy day and didn't want to wait for hours for the shells to dry.

Do checkout this blog post for video tutorials of macaron basics such as how to test the consistency of batter, how to test if the shells are dry, how to pipe the batter and how to remove shells from baking sheet. Folding the batter using French method is slightly different from Italian method. You begin by folding more gently with the French method to avoid deflating the meringue too much whereas you can be more rough with the Italian method.

Feel free to half the recipe. I was clearing out the egg whites in my fridge so the portion is bigger over here.

Macaron shell recipe (French method)
Ingredients (makes about 40 macarons, 80 shells):
140g egg whites (aged in the fridge for a few days at least)
126g caster sugar
1/4 tsp cream of tartar
1/2 tsp egg white powder (optional)
150g superfine almond powder
200g icing sugar (without cornflour added)
1 tsp cornflour (omit if your icing sugar contains cornflour)
1 tsp white powder food colouring*
1/8 tsp fine sea salt

*Or gel food colouring or omit if you wish. If using gel, add to the meringue when you just reach the stiff peak stage. Beat a while more to incorporate the colouring until you get a really stiff peak.

Steps:
1. Prepare baking trays with template under a baking sheet.

2. Sift together almond, icing sugar, cornflour, salt and powdered colouring. Set aside.

3. In a clean metal bowl, beat egg whites with cream of tartar and egg white powder until  foamy. Gradually add caster sugar and beat until stiff peaks form and you are able to over turn the bowl without the meringue falling out.

Stiff, glossy peaks!

4. Scatter some of the almond mixture over the meringue and fold gently until evenly incorporated. Repeat until all the powder mixture is added. Now you may fold the mixture more vigorously, deflating the batter a bit more and testing the consistency as you go along. To test, drop some batter off the spatula. It should flow slowly in an almost continuous ribbon (see video tutorial link). If the batter breaks off at a few points, continue folding. If your batter is too runny, you have overfolded it. It's better to err on the side of underfolding. Use some batter to stick the baking sheet onto the baking tray.

5. Transfer batter into piping bag fitted with a Wilton #10 tip (about 5-6mm). Pipe the shapes accordingly and use a toothpick to nudge the batter where necessary. Remember to bang the tray on the tableto flatten any peaks.

Just piped. Note the peaks.

After banging the tray on the table 

Piping stormtroopers

Piping BB8s

6. Dry the piped shells in aircon room and/or under a fan. The shells should be dry to touch when you run a finger across the surface. About 2 hours for me.

7. Bake at lowest rack in preheated oven at 140°C for 10 minutes, rotate the tray and continue baking at 130°C for another 7 minutes. If the feet still appear wet, bake for another 5 minutes at 120°C and check again. People have asked how I keep pastels  pastel and whites white. Good temperature control is the key. A higher starting temperature is necessary to set the structure and prevent hollows in shells but a lower temperature is necessary  towards the end of baking time to prevent browning. Always use an oven thermometer too!

8. Cool completely before attempting to gently peel the baking sheet away from the shells.

I had to do a taste test before I decided if it was worth the effort to follow through with deco and filling.

Nice fluffy interior, only slightly chewy, crisp outer shell!

I still prefer the Italian method for a more delicate texture, especially the reduced sugar version with rice flour substitution. Hubby thinks so too. But for an easier way of making macarons logistics wise (no need for boiling syrup and candy thermometer), this recipe is a keeper!


I used royal icing and edible marker to add on the details. It took me about one and a half days to complete all of them due to the fine details involved! Kids were home for the school holidays too so I was a little distracted.

Checkout the awesome feet on these stormtroopers!

Finally finished deco!

Here's the recipe for the adult version of dark chocolate ganache...

Dark chocolate ganache with coffee and liqueur
Ingredients:
120g dark chocolate, chopped
35g heavy cream**
15g unsalted butter
1tsp vanilla bean paste
1/8 tsp fine sea salt
1 tbs liqueur (I used Choya. You may use rum, Baileys or Grand Marnier)*
1/2 tsp instant coffee granules*

*The addition of coffee and liqueur is to enhance the dark chocolate richness and not to overpower it so only small quantities of coffee and liqueur were used. You may add more if that's your preference.

** You may use more cream for a softer ganache, up to a ratio of 2:1 for cream:chocolate. I am catering for hot Singapore where the room temperature is about 28°C.

Steps:
1. Melt chococolate with butter in microwave-safe bowl for 20 seconds on medium power. Stir with spatula. Repeat until mixture is smooth and chocolate has all melted.

2. Heat cream with coffee granules added until it starts to bubble.

3. Pour cream onto melted chocolate. Stir well in one direction.

4. Add salt and stir until dissolved.

5. Mix vanilla in liqueur. Add the mixture one tsp at a time to the ganache. Mix well.

6. Set aside at room temperature to firm up to toothpaste consistency. About half an hour to an hour. You may put the ganache in the fridge to speed up the process but do check every 10 minutes or so.

7. Transfer ganache to piping bag and pipe onto bottom shells.


8. Sandwich the filling by placing top shells onto the bottom shells. Refrigerate in airtight container for at least 24h before serving. Let the macarons sit at room temperature for at least 15 minutes before eating when taken out from the fridge. If the ganache is still hard, leave it out a while longer.

The other half of the macarons were filled with spiced apple swiss meringue buttercream and salted caramel. The recipe can be found here.

Hubby's favourite!

This batch of macarons took about 4 days to mature to a level that I am satisfied with. When consumed too early, the texture is not as delicate.

Hubby loved the macarons a lot, needless to say :). The other recipients loved the fact that these macarons are not too sweet!

To my love, my dads and all dads out there, blessed Father's Day!

Update 14/1/17: check out this post for the recipe for reduced sugar macaron shells using the French method!

With lots of love,
Phay Shing
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Thursday, 26 May 2016

Safari Animals Assorted Macarons

I made this a couple of months ago but finally deciding to post it because this post has been "collecting dust" sitting as a draft :p. I had a request for safari themed macarons but with a slightly different set this time compared to my first attempt last year :).


Instead of zebras, I made monkeys! Natural food colouring was used as far as possible. Carrot powder for orange, purple sweet potato powder for purple, Queen's natural sourced yellow powder for yellow and Dutch processed cocoa powder for brown.

Checkout my Creative Baking: Macarons book for a more systematic and detailed step by step writeup of macaron basics and pointers!



Ingredients:
200g almond powder/ground almond, preferably superfine
200g icing sugar
200g caster sugar
160g egg whites, divide into two equal portions
75 ml water
carrot powder (optional)*
Queen's natural sourced yellow food colouring powder (optional)*
Dutch processed cocoa powder*
Yellow, purple and orange gel food colouring

* add a few grams of natural powders per 100g of almond. For light brown, start off with a pinch first. Gradually add until a shade you like is obtained. Remember that the shade will lighten up significantly when meringue is added. Add a little yellow and orange gel food colouring to brown to make the shade warmer.

Here's a photo of the carrot powder my hubby bought from Akari at Anchorpoint!



Steps:
1. Make the mass. Sift together icing sugar and almond powder. Add 80g of egg white and mix well to form a thick paste.

2. Divide the mass into the ratio of 2:2:2:1:1 for orange:purple:yellow:light brown:dark brown. You may have excess of some colours but it's easier to divide this way.

3. Add sifted natural powder colouring to the respective masses and mix well. Add additional gel food colouring to get the desired shade. It is optional to use natural food colouring if you don't have but it helps to reduce the amount of artificial colouring needed. Here's how the orange mass looks like when coloured with just carrot powder...


4. Make the Italian meringue. Heat caster sugar and water in a small sauce pan without stirring until the syrup temperature reaches 115°C. In the mean time, beat 80g of egg whites in a clean metal bowl with electric mixer at medium-low speed until foamy and opaque. Do not beat past the soft peak stage. Turn the mixer speed down if necessary to keep egg whites moving. Once syrup reaches 115°C, remove from heat, turn mixer speed up to medium-high and slowly pour the syrup into the egg whites. Keep beating for 10 minutes until meringue is stiff, glossy and cool.

5. Divide the meringue into the ratio for the various colours, or follow this formula that I use for meringue: mass ratio by weight, I.e. weight of meringue/weight of mass=0.55. By following this formula, you will end up with a little meringue leftover, which can be used to stick the baking paper onto the tray. Fold the meringue into the masses in two additions, with the first addition using about a third of the portion. Do watch my video demo for the macaronage process and how to test if the batter is ready. Fold until batter moves in a slow-moving lava-like manner.

6. Transfer batter into piping bags fitted with a Wilton #10 tip for most of the piping, except for fine parts where you may want to transfer about 1-2 tbs of batter into piping bags fitted with a Wilton #5 tip. You may refer to the video tutorials here for piping simple shapes and here for piping complex shapes. Remember to bang the tray a few times on the table after piping.


I piped the hippo a little differently this time, with indented nostrils. I can't release the details here of how to make it as it will be in my upcoming Creative Baking: Macaron Basics book

Giraffe is the same as my previous safari bake. To pipe the monkey, start with the dark brown outline, then fill in the light brown part of the face.

Tiger is the same as my previous safari bake.

7. Dry the piped shells under a fan or in an aircon room for 1-2 hours or until the shell is dry to touch.

8. Bake in preheated oven at 135°C for 17-20 minuted with oven rack set at lowest position. Bake for a few minutes more at 120°C if the shells are still stuck to the baking sheet or the feet appear wet. Let the shells cool before removing from baking sheet. They should be able to come off the sheets easily if properly baked.

Use royal icing and edible marker to decorate the shells as desired.

I filled the macarons with spiced apple swiss meringue buttercream and salted caramel or dark chocolate ganache.



Enjoy these cute treats! I heard they were gone from the dessert table at the party really fast!

With love,
Phay Shing

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