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Sunday 5 July 2015

Horse Milo Macarons

I have a request for horse macarons with Milo filling along with crab macarons with salted egg yolk filling. Here are my horsey macarons!


This is not the first time that horses make an appearance. I made horse macarons along with giraffe a couple of months ago. But the shell does not have Earl grey flavour in it this time as the filling is not salted caramel.

Recipe for macaron shells*
Ingredients (makes about 26-30 horses, 52-60 shells):
100g ground almond
100g icing sugar
100g caster sugar
37g water
80g egg whites, divide into 40g, 30g and 10g, portions, preferably aged
7g + 1g cocoa powder

*You may end up with excess light brown batter but I find this ratio easier to work with. You may double the recipe for the Italian meringue preparation to be easier.

Steps:
1. Prepare horse template on baking tray with baking sheet over it. Use italian meringue to hold the baking sheet down if it is not lying flat. Sift together almond, icing sugar and cocoa powder. Divide almond and icing sugar into 3:1 ratio by weight, adding 7g cocoa powder to bigger portion and 1g cocoa powder to smaller portion. Picture on the left below.

2. Add 30g egg white to bigger portion and 10g egg white to smaller portion. Mix well with spatula until a thick paste is formed (middle picture).

3. Make the Italian meringue. Boil caster sugar and water in a small saucepan while beating the rest of the egg whites in a clean metal bowl with electric mixer at medium low speed at the same time. Make sure the egg whites are not beaten past soft peak stage. When syrup temperature reaches 115°C, remove from heat, increase mixer speed to high and slowly pour syrup into the egg whites. Keep beating for 10-12 minutes on high speed until stiff, glossy and cool. Portion out the meringue in 3:1 ratio, leaving about 2 tbs of meringue unused.

4. Fold the meringue into the masses in two additions using the fold and press motion. Fold in 1/3 meringue for first addition until batter is even. Fold in the rest until the batter falls off the spatula in a slightly discontinuous manner. Do watch my video tutorial for the macaronage process.



5. Fill piping bag with dark brown batter fitted with Wilton #12 tip for horse head. Fill piping bag with dark brown batter fitted with Wilton #5 tip for the ears. Fill piping bag with light brown batter fitted with Wilton #10 round tip. Use a toothpick to pull the batter a bit for the ears after piping a small dollop. Pipe top and bottom shells as shown below.


Tap the tray hard a few times after piping.

6. Dry the shells in aircon room for 1.5-2h or until the shells are dry to touch. You should be able to run a finger across the shell surface easily.

7. Bake at 130-140°C with rack at second lowest position for 17-22 minutes. Rotate the tray halfway through baking.

Freshly baked shells

8. Prepare brown royal icing by adding some cocoa powder to plain icing and a bit of brown gel colouring. Too much cocoa powder may cause the royal icing to have difficulty drying. Pipe the horse hair using the same template and baking sheet for macaron shells.

Horse hair royal icing

Dry the icing in oven with fan on but heat turned on only for a few seconds. It may take about an hour to dry completely. Alternatively you may air dry overnight. Carefully lift off the hair and stick onto the horse head with more royal icing.

Use black edible marker or black royal icing to draw on the eyes and nostrils.

Completed shells!

Milo swiss meringue buttercream (smbc)
Ingredients:
40g egg whites
27g caster sugar
72g unsalted butter, cubed and softened but cool
Pinch of salt
35g Milo powder
10g hot water
1/2 tsp vanilla extract

Steps:
1. Prepare the smbc. Place egg whites, salt and sugar in a metal bowl that can be fitted over a saucepan. Fill the saucepan with about 1" of water. Make sure the water does not touch the base of the metal bowl. Heat the saucepan and whisk the egg whites with a hand whisk until foamy. Keep the egg whites moving as you monitor the temperature.

2. When temperature reaches 71.1°C, remove from heat and beat with an electric mixer at high speed for about 10 minutes until stiff, glossy and cool. I like to place a damp cloth under the bowl to cool the meringue down faster.

3. Add in butter one piece at a time as you beat the mixture. Don't worry if it appears to curdle. Just keep beating and it will come together towards the end and form a smooth cream.

4. Dissolve Milo in hot water to form a paste. Add vanilla to smbc and beat until well combined. Add Milo mixture gradually and beat until well combined.

Milo paste and smbc

Milo smbc!

You may prepare the filling ahead of time and freeze it. Just thaw and rewhip before filling the shells.

Filling the horses with Milo smbc

All packed!

Thank God that they were well received along with the crab macarons! Keep a lookout for cute guinea pig macarons that I made with leftover batter!

The recipient has kindly shared a photo of the horses at the party :).



With love,
Phay Shing

9 comments:

  1. Hi these are sooo cute!!! How much are they? Do you hv a FB business page that I can buy from??

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    Replies
    1. Thanks LadyL :). We don't have a fb business page. If you are interested to buy, you can drop us an email. Thanks!

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  2. Hello! May I know for the swiss meringe buttercream, does it hold it shape well in room temp, or it melts easily? And also, if I want to make other flavors like ovaltine, horlicks, etc, can I just remove the milo portion and add these instead? Thank you

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    Replies
    1. Hi, it holds up well but will become soft if left out for long at room temperature in Singapore. You may replace with other malt drink base but they will be sweeter. I have tried Horlicks smbc and find it too sweet. Do adjust according to taste. Some salt can help to offset the sweetness of malt drink based smbc. You may try reducing sugar but the level of sugar in my smbc is already considered low compared to many recipes.

      If I am uncertain about how long the cream has to be out in hot conditions, I try to avoid using cream based filling in macarons. I hope this helps

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    2. Thanks for the prompt reply! Is it able to hold up for an hour? Yes I do notice your recipe for smbc has lower sugar compared to other recipes out there, as sugar is one of the main component for it to be stable, hence I was curious how long it can withstand under room temp. For the recipe here, can I also use if with other flavoring like earl grey, lavender, etc, instead of malt drink based ingredients? Thank you once again

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    3. Oops I just saw your query! Sorry for the late reply. Yes you may use other flavourings as well. You can checkout my other macaron posts. It should be able to hold for an hour in air-conditioned room but not outdoors when it is hot.

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  3. This is so cute! Thank you for sharing

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  4. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  5. So cute! I'd like to make them for my daughter's riding show, do you happen to have a copy of the template somewhere on your site?
    Amy

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