Macarons or Macaroons
Pictured To Left Macarons from Bouchon Bakery, New York City.
Needless to say that this bakery didn't have them, but I remembered a facebook post a while back that mentioned that a bakery in Baltimore sells the french style macarons. Patisserie Poupon at the corner or President and Baltimore Streets, is the only place in Baltimore that I know of currently making the French style of macarons.
When I got there they had five flavors available; lemon, raspberry, chocolate, pistachio, and hazelnut. I bought 2 pounds of mixed macarons at $16 a pound, with about 38-40 cookies per pound. Not to bad of a price in my opinion since the almond flour used to make them costs 10 a pound at the grocery store.
I first tried the chocolate macaron, outer shell nice and airy, breaks apart easily in your mouth and still a little moist in the center, but it was filled with chocolate ganache. While I must admit I do enjoy chocolate ganache, I don't think it works very well with macarons. It's just to heavy of a filling for such a light cookie. When I made macarons I filled them with a butter cream filling, and I think that a chocolate butter cream filling my work a little better.
Then I tried the raspberry macarons stuffed with a raspberry jelly, much better then the ganache filled macarons. Then I tried the lemon macarons, that's the flavor I wanted, the light fluffy cookies with a light lemon cream in between them, DELICIOUS. After that I tried the hazelnut macaron and that one was even better in my opinion.
While many bakeries will have Macaroons on their menu, make sure you a specific in describing the kind you want. The french style of macaron is two very light airy cookies that are sandwiched together usually with a cream filling, and the more commonly found macaroon is made with coconut and then dipped in chocolate.
7:32 AM | Labels: baltimore, food review, macarons, macaroons, patisserie poupon, volt restaurant, voltaggio | 0 Comments
The James Beard Award Nominees
The nominations for this years James Beard awards has been released. I want to take a minute to congratulate all local nominees in the Maryland, DC, northern Virginia area. So congrats to:
Jose Andres, Minibar DC- for outstanding chef
Amanda Cook, CityZen at Mandarin Oriental, DC- Outstanding Pastry Chef
Cathal Armstrong, Restaurant Eve, Alexandria, VA- Best Chef: Mid Atlantic
Peter Pastan- Obelisk, DC- Best Chef: Mid Atlantic
Bryan Voltaggio, Volt, Frederick, MD- Best chef: Mid Atlantic
Johnny Monis, Komi, DC- Rising Star Chef of the Year
Tim Carman, Washington City Paper, "How Not to Hire a Chef/ The Canning Process"- Newspaper feature writing aboutr restaurants and/or chefs
Joe Yonan, The Washington Post- Newspaper Food Section
Congratulations to all and good luck. Hopefully in the near future we will see more chefs from the Baltimore area make the list.
1:55 PM | Labels: Beard awards, chef, DC, james beard, James Beard awards, maryland, virginia, voltaggio | 0 Comments