Cakes, cookies, frostings, and confections

Macaroons.

428 · First Edition, 1896 · Report an issue

Ingredients

  • ½ lb. almond paste
  • ½ lb. powdered sugar
  • 3 whites of eggs

Method

  1. Work together almond paste and sugar on a smooth board or marble slab.
  2. Then add whites of eggs gradually, and work until mixture is perfectly smooth.
  3. Confectioners at first use the hand, afterward a palette knife, which is not only of use for mixing but for keeping board clean.
  4. Shape, using a pastry bag and tube, on a tin sheet covered with buttered paper, one-half inch apart; or drop mixture from tip of spoon in small piles.
  5. Macaroon mixture is stiff enough to hold its shape, but in baking spreads.
  6. Bake fifteen to twenty minutes in a slow oven.
  7. If liked soft, they should be slightly baked.
  8. After removing from oven, invert paper, and wet with a cloth wrung out of cold water, when macaroons will easily slip off.

Kitchen Notes

  • Original calls for a slow oven — about 300°F.

Original 1896 Text

½ lb. almond paste ½ lb. powdered sugar 3 whites of eggs Work together almond paste and sugar on a smooth board or marble slab. Then add whites of eggs gradually, and work until mixture is perfectly smooth. Confectioners at first use the hand, afterward a palette knife, which is not only of use for mixing but for keeping board clean. Shape, using a pastry bag and tube, on a tin sheet covered with buttered paper, one-half inch apart; or drop mixture from tip of spoon in small piles. Macaroon mixture is stiff enough to hold its shape, but in baking spreads. Bake fifteen to twenty minutes in a slow oven. If liked soft, they should be slightly baked. After removing from oven, invert paper, and wet with a cloth wrung out of cold water, when macaroons will easily slip off.