Earl Grey and Lavender Honey Macarons

Earl Grey and Lavender Honey Macarons Tea Party - b. sweet
 

These macarons combine earl grey tea and sweet lavender honey. Fresh local honey is infused with lavender that deepens the floral flavor. Then, it is mixed into Swiss meringue buttercream before being sandwiched between two fresh earl grey infused macaron shells. A taste of spring perfect for a tea party.

 
Earl Grey and Lavender Honey Macarons Tea Party - b. sweet
Earl Grey and Lavender Honey Macarons Tea Party - b. sweet

Macarons are notoriously finicky and this recipe cuts out some of the extras like aging your egg whites and making a sugar syrup for the meringue.

Earl Grey and Lavender Honey Macarons Tea Party - b. sweet
 

On a gloomy day, we decided to take these macarons and have a coffee table tea party. Every stuffed animal and toddler had thier fill of macarons. With a baker for a mother, my two cakelette favorite cookies are macarons and these earl grey and lavender honey macarons are adult and kid approved!

 
Earl Grey and Lavender Honey Macarons Tea Party - b. sweet
Earl Grey and Lavender Honey Macarons Tea Party - b. sweet
 

Macarons are notoriously finicky. This recipe cuts out some of the extras like aging your egg whites and making a sugar syrup for the meringue. It’s what works for me. Do some experimenting to find what works best in your kitchen and with your oven. If you find that your macarons have delicate and brittle shells with air pockets between the shell and fluffy interior, you may be over beating your egg whites. Turning your mixer down when you are getting close to stiff peaks and help pin point the magically point. I also like to use a hand mixer to make macarons, I feel more in control of the mixing that way. If your macarons are sticking to your liner/parchment, you probably have under baked them increase the baking time (darker macarons with more added coloring tend to take longer). If your macaron’s feet never seem to make an appearance. It is probably due to the drying time. Make sure that the batter is completely dry to the touch before placing them in the oven. Again this is what works for me. Its all about trial and error with macarons and somedays you can do everything right and then the humidity in the air just makes baking perfect cookies impossible.

 
Earl Grey and Lavender Honey Macarons Tea Party - b. sweet

Earl Grey and Lavender Honey Macarons

 

Macaron Shells

  • 3 large egg whites

  • 50g granulated sugar

  • 90g fine ground almond flour

  • 180g confectioners sugar

  • 1 teaspoon loose leaf earl grey

*more earl grey for topping

Lavender Honey SMB

  • 1 tablespoon lavender honey

  • pinch of salt

  • 3 large egg whites

  • 3/4 cup granulated sugar

  • 3/4 cup cold butter, cubed

Macaron Shells: Preheat the oven to 300F for convection (320F for non-convention) I have used the recipe with both convection and non-convection oven. I have found that the convection oven creates a fluffier center but have had equal success with both.

Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a silicone mat. I have had success with these parchment paper liners and these silicone mats. If you use folded or rolls of parchment you run the risk of wonky unsymmetrical shells.

Using a food processor pulse the confectioner’s sugar, lose leaf tea, and almond flour together several times until fine. Then, sift the mixture using a fine-mesh sieve. If there are any large morsels use a spatula to press them through, disagreed any large lumps and set mixture aside. I have found that using the combination of processing and sifting helps to produce very smooth tops. 

I prefer to use a hand mixer to beat the egg whites. I feel that this gives me more control but a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment will do the job too. Place your room temperature egg whites in a clean, dry bowl and beat on high until the eggs become frothy and lose their pale yellow tint. Then, add the granulated sugar gradually while continuing to whip. Keep beating until the whites get glossy and stick firmly to the sides of the bowl and reach stiff peaks. At this point, add the gel color until you reach the desired color. For these macs, I used 1 drop violet gel coloring to color.  It is important not to over beak your egg white, this can cause large air pockets to form in the shells between the outer crust and fluffy feet.

Now mix the dry ingredients into the egg whites in 3 equal parts, fold the mixture gently until it is all incorporated. Once incorporated the tricky part begins, you need to stir out some of the air to make the batter have the right consistency. The batter should run off the spatula in a ribbon. I am still working on finding the perfect consistency here but you want batter spoon on top to standup on itself but then smooths into the batter after 10-20 seconds

Spoon the batter into a pastry bag fitted with a large round tip and pipe onto the template allowing for a little room for the batter to spread when it settles.  Give the tip a quick flick of the wrist at the end to help smooth the surface but if you have mixed correctly slight peaks should smooth and become even as they settle.

Once all of the macs have been pipped give the tray a firm tap to help any air bubbles to rise to the top and burst. Keep a toothpick handy to coax the larger bubbles to pop. Sprinkle with the extra earl grey. Then, set the tray on the counter to allow the macs to air dry until dry to the touch. This is the key to large ruffled "feet". Depending on several factors this can take anywhere between 30 minutes to 2 hours. Just be patience and you will be rewarded.

Once dry to the touch, place the macs on the middle rack of the oven and bake for 10 minutes. Then lower the temperature to 275F (295F for non-convection ovens) and bake for another 7-8 minutes. Every oven is different so keep an eye on them. The foot should be visible after the first 10 minutes. Remove the macs from the oven and let sit to cool. The macs should lift easily from the parchment but a metal spatula can help to release the shells. 

Lavender Honey SMB:

Add egg whites and sugar to a heatproof bowl and simmer over a pot of water, whisking constantly, until temperature reaches 160°F, or if you don't have a candy thermometer until the sugar has completely dissolved and the egg whites are hot.

Transfer the sugar mixture to the bowl of a stand mixture fitted with the whisk attachment, begin to whip until the meringue is thick, glossy, and the bottom of the bowl feels neutral to the touch (this can take up to 10 minutes or so). 

Once your meringue has reached stiff peaks and the bowl no longer feels warm, switch to the paddle attachment and, with mixer on low speed. Begin to add butter cubes, one at a time, until incorporated, and mix until it has reached a silky smooth texture. Mix in lavender honey to taste until incorporated

Assembly:

Fill a pastry bag fitted with the pastry tip of your choice (I used a 1M tip) with the SMB.

Top each cookie and press gently to distribute the filling

makes approximately 2 and a half dozen

Earl Grey and Lavender Honey Macarons - b. sweet