Hi All! First, I would like to say thank you for everyone who has been following my blog. I'm getting a lot of visits everyday and even if it takes me quite some time to update, I just want to say thank you for keeping up with me and my blog. I know some of you could be checking from time to time for new entries, I will really keep my weekends reserved for updating my blog. Pinky Promise!
In my last entry, I promised to make a macaron tower. It's not my first time to make one, although it's always challenging each time. Click here to see my previous Mac-en-bouche.
On constructing my own tower, it reminds me of what my chef-mentor always tell me and my classmates "Being a pastry chef requires extra assertiveness and resourcefulness; sometimes you are a designer, sometimes a carpenter, sometimes a sculptor, sometimes a painter, sometimes an art teacher"-Chef Carol Lavin
It also reminds me of Disney Channel's Art Attack with Niel Buchanan. I always watch that when I was younger, I could say Niel Buchanan influenced me so much by being resourceful. If you are a baking student or baking enthusiast you know by now how expensive baking tools are. Even just a quality paint brush is expensive.
I'm often commended for being resourceful by my work mates and mentors, say instead of purchasing silicone molds and cocoa butter sprays I will improvise whatever is available in National Bookstore and TrueValue. I sometimes even go as far as Wilcon Depot. Yep, I could be that resourceful :)
And so, while creating my first macaron tower for a rush order, I had to think deep "How am I supposed to construct this one? I cannot order a cone-shaped styro foam because ordering takes at least 2 days to be placed and worst of all, the supplier is located 2 hours away". My first Art Attack/macaron tower started by surveying Wilcon Depot for whatever I can use.
You will need chicken wire (depends on how tall your tower is), wire cutter, scissors, old news papers, straw or thread, 2 pieces 1 whole size card board paper or cartolina, scotch tape, and parchment paper.
1. Shape the chicken wire into a cone and cut the excess with well, scissors and let your most handsome barista do the work for you, this could be a little dangerous because the wire can scratch nails and fingers. If you have a wire cutter, you know already by now.
2. Lock the edges with knotted straw or thread.
3. Fill the cone with crumpled news papers, it has to be well compressed as the old news papers will give weight to your tower.
4. Wrap the cone with a plain card board paper, you may get 1 whole size as big as cartolinas in National Bookstore.
5. Then, cover with parchment to make your tower Food-grade.
The usual woe in macaron tower making is when the pieces are falling off. I suggest that you use hard ganache as fillings instead of buttercream. On pasting the macaron sandwiches on the tower use melted and tempered chocolate.
My macaron project now however is only for display , thus it has to stand for a long time. I used royal icing with thick consistency to fill the macaron sandwiches and for pasting on the tower.
| Royal icings are so easy to make, you will just need an egg white and powdered sugar. The ratio is about 1 part egg whites to 3 parts powdered sugar to achieve a thick consistency. |
| This shade of green reminds me a summer afternoon in the garden with flowery teas and English scones. |
| As part of your Mise En Place, partner each pieces and fill them with royal icing. We want them to dry well before pasting on the parchment covered tower or else it will just slide off. |
| Fill with ample amount of royal icing |
| Let the macaron sandwiches dry well before pasting them on the tower. |
| Even sizes is essential on this aspect. If the shells are not relative on size it will look ugly or well, really ugly. It will also be difficult to space the macaron sandwiches. |
| So close! |
| Finished with Twigs and Swirls. |
| We're done yay! |
| Let's just call this one, Flora. Because I can't think of something else! |
Flora is one of my final projects in Le Petit Cheri, please expect a really cheesy and long entry after this one that I'd like to dedicate to every beautiful soul I met in my 1 year and half in South. To end this entry, I would like to share my favorite quote from my writing goddess and hero, Elizabeth Gilbert.
| Lovely Macaron ruins, in order to make this project I had to deconstruct an old macaron tower. |
"Ruin is a gift. Ruin leads you on the path to transformation." - Elizabeth Gilbert, Eat Pray Love
love always,
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