{recipe} Pillowy Coconut Macaroons
This recipe is:
- super easy
- gluten-free
- dairy-free
- eaten up in mere moments
- good for passover, as they are not leavened (I’m not Jewish, but I know how that stuff works)
Lately, you can’t escape food lovers and cooks waxing poetic about the latest baking craze: macarons. I get it. They are oh so lovely to look at. They are small and colorful. They are so de rigeur. But I actually don’t think they taste that great. I think they taste meh. Even the really really really good ones. I’m just not into them. There, I said it. My name is Karen and I don’t think macarons taste that great.
So let me dispel your confusion: this recipe is not for macarons with one o, it is for macaroons with two os. I have always (rightly or wrongly? who knows) thought of the one-o macarons as being a French thing, and the two-o macaroon as being an American thing. Anyone know if that’s true? And two-os are not adorable little sandwiches of prettily colored, perfectly round discs, they are blobs of coconutty goodness.
Maybe it was the one-o vs. two-o inferiority complex, maybe it’s because they looked like albino McDonald’s fry guys, or maybe it’s just because I am frickin’ fancy- but I put gold leaf on them. It was Tuesday. No one expects gold leaf on a Tuesday.
Pillowy Coconut Macaroons
makes 16… unless you make them freakishly small or freakishly large, in which case it will make a different amount
Ingredients:
- 3 egg whites (as with one-o macarons, using old egg whites is acceptable/encouraged)
- large pinch of salt
- 2 Tablespoons sugar
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 2 cups sweetened coconut (I use the “angel flake” kind, but maybe it’s just good marketing)
Method:
- Preheat oven to 350. Prepare a baking sheet with a silpat, parchment, or cooking spray.
- Put egg whites and salt in a mixer with a whisk attachment and beat until the whites form very soft peaks.
- Add sugar and continue beating until the whites form stiff peaks.
- Gently fold the vanilla and coconut (the vanilla part will be awkward and streaky at first, but it will all work out in the end.)
- Use your hands to gently grab a wad of dough and form it into a circular mound shape.
- Bake for 15-20 minutes, until macaroons are lightly browned but still soft inside. Remove to a wire rack for cooling. Unlike most cookies, these don’t taste that great when they’re hot- they are better at room temperature.
Gold leaf on a Tuesday sounds like a pleasant surprise during the work week.
Hurray for someone else liking the two o’s version better than the one!
I’m totally with you. Love macaroons, a passover favorite. (Cannot believe you didn’t mention that! Oh, now I scrolled back up and see that you did.) Dipped in chocolate also good and coconut/chocolate is a fab combo. Don’t care for macarons and think the name is unfairly confusing.