This yummy raspberry macaron recipe has a burst of flavor with raspberry macaron filing made with fresh raspberries to add the perfect amount of sweetness.
These raspberry macarons are the perfect brunch treat and dessert. They go great with tea for a fun fruit filled spring and summer picnic.
Here are some more Macarons recipes to check out: Salted Caramel Macarons with Salted Caramel Filling, Lemon Macaron Recipe, Fresh Strawberry Macarons Recipe, Vanilla Macarons Recipe, and we even made Keto Macarons.
You can use these macarons as a topping for a cake like we did here: Strawberry & Macaron Cake Recipe.
Raspberry Macaron Recipe
It takes time to master making macarons, but I KNOW YOU CAN DO IT! I believe in you and that you with practice following the instructions, you can make the perfect macaron.
Ingredients
- Powdered sugar
- Almond flour or almond meal
- Salt
- Egg Whites
- Granulated sugar
- Vanilla extract
These raspberry flavored macarons get their flavor from the filing and not the macaron batter.
Raspberry Macaron Filling Ingredients
You can make a raspberry buttercream with fresh raspberries or frozen.
Here is a simple buttercream recipe you can add raspberry to in order to create raspberry buttercream. The flavor of the macaron is mostly defined by its filling.
- Raspberries
- Granulated sugar
- Vanilla extract
- Unsalted Butter, Softened
- Cream Cheese
- Powdered Sugar
- Vanilla Extract
Tools & Supplies
- Stand Mixer (paddle and whisk attachment)
- Baking Sheet
- Parchment Paper or Silicone Mat (see notes)
- Mixing Bowl
- Saucepan
- Piping Bag
- Piping Tip
How to Make Raspberry Macaron Shells?
Line a few trays with parchment paper. Use a round object like back of large piping tip (about 1 inch in diameter), draw circle on your parchment paper with about a half and inch space in between.
You will need at least two baking sheets and parchment paper. You might need more , depending on the size of your trays.
If you are using a silicone mat, you will need to increase the baking time to 18 to 20 minutes. Take out at 18 and if you need to, you can add back in for another 2 minutes.
Start by placing the almond flour, powdered sugar, and a half teaspoon of salt into a food processor. *
NOTE : * Although your almond flour might say that it is “finely ground” it still needs further processing.
This helps avoid lumpy macarons. Pulse a couple dozen times and you should be able to tell that the mixture is more powdered than it was.
Using a sifter, tip the contents of the food processor out and gradually sift the dry ingredient mixture into a bowl.
This step is very important and also helps with getting a smooth top on the macaron. Once you are done, set the dry ingredients aside.
Carefully crack three eggs into a bowl without puncturing the yolk. Using clean hands, scoop out the yolk one by one and hold it above the bowl so that all of the egg white slides off. Repeat this with the two remaining yolk.
Add a half teaspoon of salt to the egg whites and begin to whip. Cream of tartar is also traditionally used as a stabilizer.
Using a whisk attachment on a stand mixer, whip the egg whites until they get fluffy and granulated sugar and vanilla extract along with dd 1 to 2 drops of the yellow food coloring.
Get the color you want before the stiff peaks form. Do not add color after the eggs meringue becomes stiff.
Continue to whip them until you get stiff peaks. **
NOTE: ** Sometimes you will get peaks that appear stiff, but if they tip over at all, they are not stiff enough. Properly whipped, the egg whites, now a meringue, will not come out of a bowl even if you tip it upside down.
Grab a spatula and begin adding the dry mixture to the meringue a quarter at a time.
When adding it, make sure to fold the merginue and dry mix together by scooping from the bottom of the bowl upwards and folding it over.
Continue this until all is incorporated and keep folding.
You will know it is ready by doing the figure 8 test.
This means you can dip the spatula and pick it up and to a complete, continuous figure as the batter drips off.
Use a little dot of the batter on the underside of the four corners of parchment paper. This helps keep the paper in place while you are piping.
Fill a piping bag with a half inch tip and begin piping small circles of batter onto the parchment paper. ***
NOTE: *** Keep the bag straight up and fill about 2/3 of the circle so that when you knock the air out in the next step.
Pick up each tray and drop them onto the counter to knock any loose air out from under the macarons. ****
NOTE: **** You can do this a few time to get the air bubbles out. If you see an air bubble pop up, you can pop it with a tooth pick at this stage only. Don’t do it after the film has formed.
When all the batter has been piped, let it sit on the counter for at least 30 minutes.
This is an important step! It causes a film to form over top of the macaron, and will help it retain its shape while it is baking and help make macaron feet.
If you don’t do this, the result might not look as close to what you envision when you picture a macaron.
While waiting, preheat the over to 300 degrees.
Place the first tray in and bake for 15-18 minutes for parchment paper and DO NOT be tempted to open the over door while it is baking, because this can result in an uneven bake.
Take the macarons out.
If they are not perfectly dried out, then you can pop them back into the over for a few more minutes.
You will be able to tell when they are ready because they will come off the parchment without sticking at all.
Let them cool completely before adding any filling.
Once you finish one tray, set it aside, and start on the next.
How to Make Raspberry Macaron Filing?
Take out butter and cream cheese and allow them to come to room temperature.
In a sauce pan, combine raspberries and sugar.
Let the mixture boil over medium heat stirring constantly. Break up the raspberries as you the mixture boils.
Then, add vanilla extract to the mix. Take pan off the heat and allow to cool.
Pour the mixture through a mesh strainer to remove the raspberry seeds.
Then, once the cream cheese has softened, add it to the stand mixer with the paddle attachment.
Beat on medium speed for 3 minutes until the cream cheese becomes light and fluffy.
Add the powdered confectioners sugar and softened butter into the stand mixer bowl a little bit at a time.
Continue to beat on medium speed until the mixture is incorporated and light and fluffy. You will need to scrape down the sides and knock out ingredients that are stuck to the paddle.
Add the cooled raspberry syrup to the mixture and beat for 30 seconds.
Then, add the icing to a piping bag and pipe filling into the macarons.
NOTE: If the mixture is too warm and runny, you can put it in the fridge to cool it off and make it a little thicker.
Raspberry Macaron Recipe
Ingredients
- 2 Cup powdered sugar
- 1 Cup almond flour
- 1 tsp Salt
- 3 egg whites room temperature
- 1/4 cup granulated sugar
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 6 oz raspberries
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 4 Oz Unsalted Butter Softened
- 6 Oz Cream Cheese
- 1 ½ Cup Powdered Sugar
- 1 teaspoon Vanilla Extract
Instructions
- Line a few trays with parchment paper. Use a round object like back of large piping tip (about 1 inch in diameter), draw circle on your parchment paper with about a half and inch space in between.
- You will need at least two baking sheets and parchment paper. You might need more , depending on the size of your trays.
- If you are using a silicone mat, you will need to increase the baking time to 18 to 20 minutes. Take out at 18 and if you need to, you can add back in for another 2 minutes.
- Start by placing the almond flour, powdered sugar, and a half teaspoon of salt into a food processor. *
- NOTE : * Although your almond flour might say that it is “finely ground” it still needs further processing.
- This helps avoid lumpy macarons. Pulse a couple dozen times and you should be able to tell that the mixture is more powdered than it was.
- Using a sifter, tip the contents of the food processor out and gradually sift the dry ingredient mixture into a bowl.
- This step is very important and also helps with getting a smooth top on the macaron. Once you are done, set the dry ingredients aside.
- Carefully crack three eggs into a bowl without puncturing the yolk. Using clean hands, scoop out the yolk one by one and hold it above the bowl so that all of the egg white slides off. Repeat this with the two remaining yolk.
- Add a half teaspoon of salt to the egg whites and begin to whip. Cream of tartar is also traditionally used as a stabilizer.
- Using a whisk attachment on a stand mixer, whip the egg whites until they get fluffy and granulated sugar and vanilla extract along with dd 1 to 2 drops of the yellow food coloring.
- Get the color you want before the stiff peaks form. Do not add color after the eggs meringue becomes stiff.
- Continue to whip them until you get stiff peaks. **
- NOTE: ** Sometimes you will get peaks that appear stiff, but if they tip over at all, they are not stiff enough. Properly whipped, the egg whites, now a meringue, will not come out of a bowl even if you tip it upside down.
- Grab a spatula and begin adding the dry mixture to the meringue a quarter at a time.
- When adding it, make sure to fold the merginue and dry mix together by scooping from the bottom of the bowl upwards and folding it over.
- Continue this until all is incorporated and keep folding.
- You will know it is ready by doing the figure 8 test.
- This means you can dip the spatula and pick it up and to a complete, continuous figure as the batter drips off.
- Use a little dot of the batter on the underside of the four corners of parchment paper. This helps keep the paper in place while you are piping.
- Fill a piping bag with a half inch tip and begin piping small circles of batter onto the parchment paper. ***
- NOTE: *** Keep the bag straight up and fill about 2/3 of the circle so that when you knock the air out in the next step.
- Pick up each tray and drop them onto the counter to knock any loose air out from under the macarons. ****
- NOTE: **** You can do this a few time to get the air bubbles out. If you see an air bubble pop up, you can pop it with a tooth pick at this stage only. Don’t do it after the film has formed.
- When all the batter has been piped, let it sit on the counter for at least 30 minutes.
- This is an important step! It causes a film to form over top of the macaron, and will help it retain its shape while it is baking and help make macaron feet.
- If you don’t do this, the result might not look as close to what you envision when you picture a macaron.
- While waiting, preheat the over to 300 degrees.
- Place the first tray in and bake for 15-18 minutes for parchment paper and DO NOT be tempted to open the over door while it is baking, because this can result in an uneven bake.
- Take the macarons out.
- If they are not perfectly dried out, then you can pop them back into the over for a few more minutes.
- You will be able to tell when they are ready because they will come off the parchment without sticking at all.
- Let them cool completely before adding any filling.
- Once you finish one tray, set it aside, and start on the next.
- How to Make Raspberry Macaron Filing?
- Take out butter and cream cheese and allow them to come to room temperature.
- In a sauce pan, combine raspberries and sugar.
- Let the mixture boil over medium heat stirring constantly. Break up the raspberries as you the mixture boils.
- Then, add vanilla extract to the mix. Take pan off the heat and allow to cool.
- Pour the mixture through a mesh strainer to remove the raspberry seeds.
- Then, once the cream cheese has softened, add it to the stand mixer with the paddle attachment.
- Beat on medium speed for 3 minutes until the cream cheese becomes light and fluffy.
- Add the powdered confectioners sugar and softened butter into the stand mixer bowl a little bit at a time.
- Continue to beat on medium speed until the mixture is incorporated and light and fluffy. You will need to scrape down the sides and knock out ingredients that are stuck to the paddle.
- Add the cooled raspberry syrup to the mixture and beat for 30 seconds.
- Then, add the icing to a piping bag and pipe filling into the macarons.
- NOTE: If the mixture is too warm and runny, you can put it in the fridge to cool it off and make it a little thicker.
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What a pretty color! I bet the raspberries in the buttercream are delicious.
Is the 1/4 c sugar for the macaron or filling