Mango & Cardamom Macaron Cake

Mango & Cardamom Macaron Cake | Patisserie Makes Perfect

Mango & Cardamom Macaron Cake | Patisserie Makes Perfect

This mango & cardamom macaron cake is the first macaron recipe on the blog since January 2016. I’m shocked by this as they are one of my favourite treats. The reason this came as a shock to me is because I made them so many times last year, I just didn’t blog about them.

I made some mixed berry and white chocolate macarons for a family party, a batch of my salted caramel macarons for visiting friends – well they had come all the way from New Zealand so I had to make the good stuff – and then I made pink champagne macarons for a hen party. Each time I was too busy to photograph the macarons or write up the recipe, which is really annoying as I wont be able to make them again, well not easily anyway.

Mango & Cardamom Macaron Cake | Patisserie Makes Perfect

Despite what you might think, I’m really bad at making a note of the recipes I use and the changes I make to them. I spend ages looking online and tweaking recipes and then I end up losing the pieces of paper or throwing them away.

When it’s something for the blog I jot down everything in my trusty notebook that I take everywhere. When I’m baking for myself, that’s a different story! I never write in my cookery books, as I was always told not to write in my books as child and that has just stuck with me. They are however covered in splodges of things I’ve cooked and sticky fingerprints and some pages are even stuck together. I am aware this is a total contradiction.

I do need to start marking up my recipes, making notes of the changes I’ve made etc, but I think I might have to do this with post-it notes for now!

Mango & Cardamom Macaron Cake | Patisserie Makes Perfect

Enough of my rambling though, back to this mango & cardamom macaron cake. I love macaron cakes, I think they look and taste great, you don’t really come across them very much, Pierre Herme makes some fantastic examples. This is the third one I’ve featured on the blog and it might just be my favourite.

Two large macaron shells are sandwiched together with a cardamom creme mousseline and pieces of mango lightly cooked in honey and lemon. A creme mousseline is a cold creme patissiere that is beaten with butter to create a light cream. This sets quite hard when it’s in the fridge, so don’t be tempted to make the creme mousseline in advance and chill it. Also be sure to bring the macaron cake out of the fridge about 30 mins before you serve it, so it can come up to room temperature.

Mango & Cardamom Macaron Cake | Patisserie Makes Perfect

We don’t often have mango at home, I like it, but peeling it is a real nightmare. The mango I used for this recipe was leftover from some that my boyfriend bought. He has a dehydrator now which he uses to make his own biltong and dried mango.

It actually tastes really impressive, I can’t stop eating the dried mango, it’s so much tastier than the stuff you get in the shops. So this recipe came about because of one sad very ripe mango that was languishing in the fruit bowl.

Cardamom & Mango Macaron | Patisserie Makes Perfect

Mango & Cardamom Macaron Cake | Patisserie Makes Perfect

Mango & Cardamom Macaron Cake

Patisserie Makes Perfect
5 from 3 votes
Prep Time 1 hour 30 minutes
Cook Time 45 minutes
Total Time 2 hours 15 minutes

Ingredients
  

  • ***Macaron Shells***
  • 200 g Ground Almonds
  • 200 g Icing Sugar
  • 50 ml Water
  • 175 g Granulated Sugar
  • 150 g Egg Whites
  • Orange Food Colouring or a mix of red and yellow.
  • ***Cardamom Creme Patissiere***
  • 2 Cardamom Pods
  • 250 ml Milk
  • 60 g Egg Yolks about 3 eggs
  • 50 g Caster Sugar
  • 25 g Plain Flour
  • ***Cardamom Creme Mousseline***
  • 1 x Quantity of Creme Patissiere
  • 200 g Unsalted Butter cubed and at room temperature
  • ***Mango Filling***
  • 1 Ripe Mango
  • 1 Tbsp Runny Honey
  • Juice of 1/2 a lemon

Instructions
 

  • The cardamom creme patissiere can be made in advance and stored in the fridge for up to 3 days.
  • Bash the cardamom pods with something hard like the bottom of your saucepan to split the shell slightly. Bring the milk and cardamom pods to a boil in a saucepan over a medium heat.
  • Remove from the heat and leave to cool completely.
  • Meanwhile combine the sugar and flour in a medium bowl. Add the egg yolks and whisk until the sugar is combined and you have a pale mixture.
  • Sieve the cooled infused milk to remove the cardamom pods and any seeds. Heat the milk again until it comes to a boil.
  • Whisk a third of the milk into the egg mixture to loosen it. Whisk in the remaining milk and return the mixture to the saucepan, cook over a medium heat, whisking constantly.
  • As soon as the pastry cream begins to thicken, keep cooking it over the heat for a minute or two to cook off the flour.
  • Scrape the pastry cream into a bowl and cover with a layer of clingfilm, pressing it down so it touches the surface of the cream. This will stop a skin forming. Allow to chill completely.
  • To make the mango filling, peel, pit and cut the mango into 1cm cubes.
  • Warm the honey in a frying pan over a medium heat, add the diced mango and lemon juice.
  • Cook, stirring occasionally until the mango is evenly coated, this should take about 2 minutes.
  • Transfer to a bowl and leave to chill.
  • To make the macaron shells, preheat the oven to 170C Fan/190C and line two baking trays with baking parchment. Draw two 20cm circles on the reverse of the baking parchment to help with the piping. Also draw 20 smaller circles on another piece of baking parchment, with a diameter of 5cm. You may not use them all.
  • Grind the ground almonds and icing sugar together in a food processor and then sift them into a clean bowl that is quite large. This is necessary to make sure your macaron shells are nice and smooth.
  • Add 75g of the egg whites to this mix and beat it, until it forms a paste. Leave to one side while you make the meringue.
  • Add the water and granulated sugar to a pan and stir over a medium heat until the sugar dissolves.
  • Put half of the egg whites into a stand mixer and whisk them on a medium speed until frothy.
  • Bring the syrup to a boil and heat until it reaches 121 degrees.
  • Pour the syrup in a slow steady stream into the egg whites as they are being whipped on a medium speed. Keep whipping until the meringue forms a stiff peak and the side of the bowl feels cool - around 5mins.
  • Add the food colouring and mix through until you have a nice orange shade.
  • Add a third of the meringue to the almond paste and beat it in thoroughly to loosen the paste.
  • Fold through the remaining meringue, ensure the ingredients are mixed thoroughly. Keep mixing until the mixture is looser and falls from the spoon quite easily, be gentle though, don't overmix or beat it harshly.
  • Put the macaron mix into a piping bag and pipe out the two circles working in a spiral from the centre, don't bang the tray as you want to keep the spiral shape.
  • With the remaining mix pipe out the small macarons until you have used it all up.
  • Place the large macarons in the oven for 20mins. Turn the trays halfway through cooking to ensure an even bake.
  • Then cook the smaller macarons for 10mins, rotating the trays halfway through cooking. Let the cooked macarons cool completely before trying to remove them from the tray. This helps to stop them sticking.
  • To make the cardamom creme mousseline, take the chilled creme patissiere out of the fridge about 30 mins before you want to use it, if it's too cold the butter wont blend with it.
  • Place it in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Give it a mix to loosen it up and with the mixer running the whole time, slowly add the butter bit by bit so you have a soft fluffy cream almost like a buttercream.
  • Place the cardamom creme mousseline in a piping bag with a round nozzle about 1cm fitted and pipe a layer of the cream on the bottom macaron shell in a spiral pattern, then pipe a ring around the outside edge and fill the inside with the mango (remember to reserve some mango for your smaller macarons and for decoration). Pipe a small amount of cream on top and then lay the other shell on top gently so they don't crack.
  • Take the small macaron shells and pair up even sized shells, pipe a ring of cardamom creme mousseline on the base and fill it with the mango filling. Place a shell on top and place these in the fridge.
  • Place the macaron cake in the fridge and allow it to set for at least a few hours before you eat it, as the shells will absorb the flavours.
  • Don't place the remaining cardamom creme mousseline in the fridge as it will set too hard to pipe.
  • To decorate the macaron cake do this just before serving or the shell will absorb the moisture and go soggy. Pipe small blobs of the cardamom creme mousseline on top and place a piece of mango on top. You can then use gold leaf or tempered chocolate decorations to finish it off.

Mango & Cardamom Macaron Cake | Patisserie Makes Perfect

As you can see this recipe has some macaron mixture leftover, you can use this to either make two 16cm macaron cakes, or I like to make one large macaron cake and then some smaller macarons to accompany the cake. These are filled exactly the same way, with a ring of creme mousseline and the mango filling.

These are really refreshing, but if you don’t like cardamom you can always leave it out of the creme patissiere and replace it with a tsp of vanilla extract.

Mango & Cardamom Macaron Cake | Patisserie Makes PerfectMango & Cardamom Macarons | Patisserie Makes Perfect

These are really delicious and they feel a bit like a welcome to Spring because of their vibrant colour.

Have a lovely weekend everyone and thanks for reading.

Angela

7 Responses

  1. Jodie Dodd

    I love mangos and this looks like a perfect Springtime cake! I didn’t realize you could make a macaron cake. I have never had cardamom but I hear about it all the time. Aww, the lonely mango became the star of the show! 😀

    You should video your baking adventures or make voice recorded notes on your phone. Then you won’t throw them away. 🙂 xx

  2. heather (delicious not gorgeous)

    this sounds delicious! i don’t use cardamom enough, but it sounds like such a good idea to pair it with sweet, sunny mango. i do agree about how annoying it is to peel mangoes; that’s why when i’m home and there’s a mango, i’ll just wait until my mom cuts it up and i can reap the benefits (;

  3. Laura@howtocookgoodfood

    Wow I love the idea of a macaron cake and this isn’t something I have tried before but I love setting myself challenges so this could be next on my bake list. What a wonderful looking creation!

  4. Deborah Thompson

    5 stars
    Love this Angela! I have to admit I don’t make macs at home very often, but I make hundreds at work every week. I’m gonna try this lovely recipe!

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