All macarons taste the same regardless of their colour. It is the fillings that determine the individual flavours. I like pistachio and vanilla - just simple, plain and beautiful. Some colours and fillings are a little garish for my taste.
Macaron are best left in the fridge for a day after making and before eating. This gives the inside of the macaron time to soften. The outer shell and the soft inner are very much part of the sensual experience of eating macaron.
Would I make them again? Probably not unless I was making them for an event. You need a good table top food mixer to beat the egg whites and meringue which I do not have at home. We used lovely Kitchen Aid food mixers that were perfect for the job. You also need a crowd to eat the quantity of macaron made. But don't let that put you off. Macaron are satisfying, quite inexpensive to make and good fun if made in a pair with a cooking buddy.
They are expensive to buy - good ones cost about 95p each in Yorkshire. They probably cost more in London patisseries, so you are quids in if you make a job lot yourself.
There were two other people on the course I attended - Claire and Anne Chambers, a mother daughter team ,who were prompted to come on the course by British Bake Off fever. They had a great time and some of the macarons in the collage above are made by them.
"Kate is an excellent teacher, willing to help people individually and is very encouraging. She doesn't make you feel like a failure" said my sister Maggie who is an advisory teacher for Oxfordshire County Council.
Claire and Anne Chambers agreed.
I was learning how to make macaron courtesy of the York Cookery School where ace cake maker Kate Clarkson and her husband Fraser run courses for professional chefs and be
giners.
Courses at the school range from £25 for a taster session to £125 for a masterclass.