Figgy Almond Macaroons
- 1 1/2 cups (170 grams) powdered sugar, extra for dusting.
- 2 cups (170 grams) fine almond flour (I use Bob's super-fine almond flour, which is blanched) or 1 rounded cup (170 grams) whole blanched almonds
- 1 teaspoon aniseed, slightly crushed with a rolling pin
- 1 cup (170 grams) lightly packed moist whole dried Mission or golden figs, chopped into pieces about the size of large raisins
- 3 large egg whites, cold or at room temperature
- 3/8 teaspoon cream of tartar
- 1 1/2 teaspoons pure almond extract
- 1/8 teaspoon salt
- 1/3 cup (66 grams) granulated sugar
- Powdered sugar, for serving (optional)
- Position racks in the lower and upper thirds of the oven. Preheat the oven to 350u0b0F (325u0b0F for convection).
- If using almond flour, sift the powdered sugar into a bowl and whisk it with the almond flour and aniseed until the mixture is lump free. rnrnIf using whole blanched almonds, put them in a food processor with the powdered sugar and pulse until they are as finely ground as possible without becoming a paste.
- Toss the almond mixture with the fig pieces to coat and separate them. Set aside.
- Beat the egg whites with the cream of tartar and almond extract at medium high speed until they are white like shaving cream (no longer yellow and translucent) and soft peaks form when the beaters are lifted. Mix the salt into the granulated sugar and beat it gradually into the egg whites to make a very stiff meringue with a dull sheen. Pour the almond-fig mixture over the meringue. Fold with a large rubber spatula just until the dry mixture is fully incorporated. Don't be tempted to mix and smear the meringue into the almonds, just keep folding-the ingredients will come together.
- Drop heaping teaspoons of batter (about 1 level tablespoon) an inch apart onto the lined pans. Bake for 12-15 minutes until cookies are golden brown with some browner peaks and golden brown and sealed on the bottoms (check this by turning a corner of the parchment liner back and peeling it gently away from one of the cookies). The surface will feel crusted and may be cracked, but the cookies will be soft inside. Rotate the pans from top to bottom and from front to back halfway through the baking time to ensure even baking. Set the pan on racks to cool. Let cookies cool completely before storing. To remove cookies from the parchment, gently peal the parchment from the bottoms of the cookies rather that lifting the cookie, which might tear the bottoms. Cookies keep in a covered container for several days at room temperature.
- Sift a little powdered sugar over the cookies before serving, if you like.
powdered sugar, almond flour, golden figs, egg whites, cream of tartar, almond, salt, sugar, powdered sugar
Taken from food52.com/recipes/65732-figgy-almond-macaroons (may not work)