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Bright green matcha macarons filled with matcha white chocolate ganache

Matcha Macarons (Green Tea Macarons)

Print Recipe
These swiss-method matcha macarons have matcha green tea powder in the macaron shells and are filled with a matcha-infused white chocolate ganache!
Course Baking
Cuisine French
Keyword gluten free, green tea, green tea powder, macarons, matcha, matcha macarons, matcha powder, swiss macarons
Prep Time 40 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 1 hour
Servings 18 macarons

Equipment

  • Stand mixer

Ingredients

Matcha Macarons

  • 105 g Sifted Super Fine Almond Flour
  • 105 g Sifted Confectioners Sugar
  • 2 tsp Matcha Powder
  • 100 g Egg Whites
  • 100 g White Sugar
  • 3 g (1 tsp) Egg White Powder, otherwise known as meringue powder (optional but highly recommended)
  • Green Food Colouring, optional

Matcha White Chocolate Ganache

  • 125 g White Chocolate, finely chopped
  • 1/3 cup (75 g) Heavy Cream
  • 1 tsp Matcha Powder

Instructions

Dry Ingredients

  • Prepare a baking sheet with parchment or silicone mat (if you have enough, prepare 2 baking sheets).
  • Over a large mixing bowl on a scale, sift almond flour until you reach 105g. Discard any large pieces of almond flour. Repeat with the confectioners sugar, then also add in the matcha powder. Whisk the almond flour, confectioners sugar and matcha until very well-combined. Set aside.

Making the Meringue

  • Add egg whites, white sugar, and egg white powder to the bowl of your stand mixer, and whisk together. Place the bowl over top of a simmering pot of water (bain-marie), ensuring a tight seal and ensuring that the bottom of the stand mixer bowl is not actually touching the water.
  • Continuously whisk the mixture while it heats up over the bain-marie, heat the mixture until it reaches 140°F (60°C). When temperature is achieved, remove the bowl from the simmering water pot and place onto your stand mixer, fitted with the whip attachment.
  • Beat the mixture, starting on low. Once soft peaks have been formed, increase the speed to medium. Once medium peaks are achieved, increase the speed to high. Beat on high until stiff peaks have formed. Add in the food colouring, if using, and beat until just combined.

Macaronage

  • Remove the bowl from the stand mixer, and place a sieve over top. Pour the dry mixture into the sieve, then sift the dry ingredients into the meringue.
  • Fold the dry ingredients into the meringue. I like to scrape around the sides of the bowl in an entire circle, and then cut through the centre – similar to the Greek letter phi which looks like this: Φ
  • Be gentle and careful not to overmix or over-deflate the meringue. The mixture is ready to be piped when it ribbons off your spatula, meaning that the batter, when lifted with a spatula, should keep flowing off the spatula in ribbon shapes nonstop, without drizzling off too quickly. If it is coming off in large V shaped chunks it still needs to be folded further. Another test is the figure 8 test: If you can lift some batter up and use it to draw several figure 8’s without the stream breaking, it is ready!

Piping and Drying the Macarons

  • Add mixture into a piping bag with medium to large sized round tip. Pipe small circles of batter onto a cookie sheet fitted with a silicone baking mat or parchment paper. Ensure piping bag is held straight up and perpendicular to baking sheet. Using a stencil or a macaron mat makes this process much easier and fool proof, I try to make my macarons around 1½” in diameter.
  • Tap the baking sheet multiple times against counter to remove any air bubble from the macarons. If some air bubbles still remain, use a tooth pick to gently poke them out.
  • Preheat oven to 300°F, or 275°F for convection oven. While oven is preheating, allow the macarons to sit and form a skin. This skin will ensure the macarons bake up and not out, giving them those classic “feet”. This skin should form anywhere from 8 minutes to an hour. You know the macarons are ready to be baked when you can touch them lightly without having the batter stick to your finger. Keep checking them to see if they have formed a skin– overly dried macarons are just as much of a problem as under-dried macarons!

Baking

  • Bake for 15-20 minutes. Your bake time will depend on the size of your macarons. Check at 15 minutes, and if they are not ready then keep checking every minute. The macarons are ready when the tops are firm and do not move around their base at all.
  • Allow the macarons to cool completely before attempting to remove them from the sheets/mats/parchment. When cooled, find “perfect pairs” of macaron halves and set aside to be filled.

Matcha White Chocolate Ganache

  • Add the chopped chocolate into a heat proof bowl and set aside.
  • Whisk together the heavy cream and matcha in a small saucepan over medium heat. Bring to a simmer, then pour the cream over the chopped chocolate and lightly stir. Allow to sit for 2 minutes to allow the chocolate to melt.
  • Whisk the ganache until it comes together and is smooth. Cover with plastic, then allow the ganache to cool to room temperature before using. If using the fridge to cool the ganache faster, ensure that you check the ganache intermittently to ensure it doesn’t cool and harden too much.

Assembling the Macarons

  • Pipe the matcha white chocolate ganache onto ½ of the macaron shells (bottoms of perfect pairs), then top each bottom with it’s corresponding top. Place into the fridge overnight to mature and meld together.