As you can tell from my posting spree this week, I have a little love affair with the macaron. So when I Love Macarons by Hisako Ogita came up for presale on Amazon, I added it to my cart immediately. Here’s a funny thing about macarons – they’ve become really popular with Japanese chefs, who are taking this elegant little cookie to new heights.
Aesthetics
First, a bit about the book itself: it’s thin. This book is only 80 pages long. I guess I was hoping for a Tome de Hermé, but macarons are a fairly simple recipe that requires a lot of personal precision, so I guess it makes sense that you wouldn’t need to dedicate a few hundred pages to the process.
Second, I love the photos. I’m such a sucker for colorful photos, especially photos of macarons, and this book is full of them. Woot.
A Plethora of Macaron Recipes
The recipes themselves are inspired, such as pistachio with bitter ganache filling and purple yam with chestnut cream, and there are lots of photos of the macaron making process, which is undoubtedly helpful for beginners. Ogita also talks about two different ways of making macaron batter – the classic method, using a French meringue that results in a softer cookie, and a second Italian meringue method, which yields macarons with a crunchier surface.

These photos are not from the book!
When it comes to baking, Ogita’s directions are easy. Actually, almost too easy. Macarons are relatively simple to make, though there are countless pitfalls that beginners can fall into. Fortunately, she has included a section at the end of the first chapter that provides some basic troubleshooting techniques, though recommendations are only one or two lines and leave a lot for interpretation. And therein may be the problem – the book was originally translated from Japanese, so something may have been lost in translation.
If you have a Japanese copy of the book, I’d love to hear your thoughts on it.
Overall Thoughts
Overall, though, I really liked this book. While it might not be appropriate for someone with no baking skills at all, if you know your way around a silpat, you’ll probably work through the recipes just fine. Ogita dedicates an entire chapter to making a variety of fillings, another on how to creatively wrap your sweet little gems (big plus in my book), and a final chapter on how to use the leftover egg yolks you will inevitably end up with after an afternoon of baking macarons.
If, like me, you love macarons, then you’ll enjoy I Love Macarons by Hisako Ogita. In fact, I’d say order it now, or give it as a gift to someone you know who is equally obsessed. Maybe wrap it up with a box of colorful macarons, straight from a local bakery. If anyone did that for me, I have to say I’d have a hard time controlling myself.

These photos are not from the book!
Win a copy of I Heart Macarons by Hisako Ogita!
I love this book, and you will too. And I’ve got a copy here to give away to one beloved Wasabimon reader. To win, leave comment on this post telling me why you love macarons (don’t forget to include your email address so I can reach you in you win!). For additional chances to win, you can subscribe to the email newsletter and post the following phrase on Twitter, verbatim: Hey! @sstiavetti is giving away a copy of Hisako Ogita’s “I Heart Macarons” book on @wasabimon: http://bit.ly/65imV8 – note: you need to leave a comment here in order to enter, even if you tweet.
I’ll pick a winner on Wednesday, January 27th, 2010. Sorry, but you have to live in the continental US to win, unless you want to pay for shipping.
You know you want a copy of this book!













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I love this book and have been baking macarons from it for the past 2 months. Macarons are wonderful once you get the hang of them. I encourage anyone who is up to the challenge to make them because they are so worth the effort involved. I will say this, even the most experience macaron bakers fail from time to time, so be patient and don’t skip steps. You will be well rewarded for your efforts.
*I already have the book so do not enter me for the drawing. I just wanted to share my thoughts on it
I love macarons because they’re so colorful and are beautiful to look at.
I am SUCH a visual person when it comes to food and my often mis-matched outfits would tell you that I love bright colors. I love macarons because they are naturally gluten-free and GORGEOUS!
I love macaron’s because they look like little clouds in a fairy tail.
I have never attempted to make macarons, so this could be my inspirational teaching tool. (or I’ll just try one of your excellent recipes instead.)
.-= Check out Casey@Good. Food. Stories.´s last blog post: Ask Casey: a simple soup supper =-.
Macarons are awesome because they are these bite-sized pieces of deliciousness and the texture when you bite down into one is just incomparable to anything else. But I think my favorite thing about macarons are how many wacky flavors people are making these days! (I mean, yam, ketchup, or foie gras? bizarre!)
This book would be useful because I’m always hesitant to incorporate anything liquid into my macaron recipe for fear of failing, so I’d definitely like to see how it’s done…
.-= Check out stephanie´s last blog post: Rose and Basil-Dark Chocolate Macarons =-.
I fell in love with them living in Paris and then all over again when living in Tokyo. I love the slight crunch of the shell and then the chewy almond. Plus they are so darn pretty!
.-= Check out Fuji Mama´s last blog post: Simple Sandwich Bread =-.
I love macarons because they are so beautiful, dainty, and delicious and I feel like a lady when I eat them
I love macarons but confess to having never made them before. The first time I had them was in Paris, then I stumbled across them in London, and when I worked in downtown SF, I found “legit” excuses to run to the Ferry Building to get some to have with my coffee. I want to make them and figure out for the last time what the heck it means for them to have “feet” its driving me CRAZY!
.-= Check out OysterCulture´s last blog post: Sugar, You Have Aliases I’ve Yet to Uncover =-.
I love macarons and I’d love to win this book! It looks so adorable.
Thanks for holding this giveaway!
Oishisou! I love how the Japanese are the ones who really understand the French – at least when it comes to baking. They’ve got a ways to go on the cheese. But seriously – the pastries I had in Tokyo and the pastries I had in Paris were pretty hard to tell apart.
I’ve never, ever seen one for sale and haven’t made them. But I’d love to!
.-= Check out Melanie McMinn´s last blog post: Too-too Felted Fleece Tote =-.
My family tasted the macaroons last winter in Paris at Ladure. A magical holiday for us. Lovely memory.
I need this book; mostly because I’m in the second month of a challenge with MacTweets and I need help! Yep, got some feet the first time but a bit swirly on top so today trying again. Daughter thought of buying it for me for Christmas but instead gave me book by author of ‘Julie and Julia’…what, I’m not reading that; it’s Julia I love!
I love macarons ’cause you eat with your eyes and they’re gorgeous!
My mom’s favorite snack is a good macaroon. I’m inspired. Her birthday is at the beginning of February. I’m going to try and bake some of these for her. How bad could they be even if they don’t look as pretty as the ones above? (Fingers crossed!)
A haiku!
Hello sweet macroon
Look, you’re so sweet pink and small
CRUNCH MUNCH- oops, all gone!
I heart them because they’re like crack. You can’t get enough of it.
.-= Check out Garrett´s last blog post: Zihuatanejo Market – A Short Tour =-.
I [heart] macarons because they are so cute and delicious…
.-= Check out Chef Panda´s last blog post: Ten in 10: Healthy Panda!! =-.
I love macarons because they have deceptively few ingredients, but magnificent taste.
I love them because the outside melts in your mouth when you eat them!
.-= Check out Jennifer Margulis´s last blog post: Photo Shoot With Christopher Briscoe =-.
Macarons, -rons, “ronds”…
you are so “bons, bons, bons”,
You are all my childhood…
ah, if you could be my only food !
I am a French lady living in the US for the past 15 years – I want to learn how to make macarons – and make them known around me, especially to children, to pass on the love of food that makes you pause…
I’m embarrassed to say that I’ve never had a macaron before–to my knowledge. So I can’t tell you why I love them. But they do look very bright and friendly in the photos, and you’ve made a great case for making and trying them.
.-= Check out Alisa Bowman´s last blog post: The Maddening Incident of the Last Egg in the Fridge =-.
I am late to the macaron party having just tasted my first one last night. And soon after my second and third. I now understand the love of macarons completely and am eager to try making them though am a little intimidated because they are so delicate and French. Anyway, I think after that first bite macarons may have become my new favorite cookie.
.-= Check out Patricia´s last blog post: chewy chocolate gingerbread cookies =-.
They are so delcious – and mini!
I love macarons because they look so delicate and taste so delicious.
.-= Check out Diane {createdbydiane.blogspot.com}´s last blog post: PIZZA =-.
i love macarons because, well, they’re so pretty. and because of the endless-oh-endless variations.
.-= Check out jule´s last blog post: un été sur l’herbe =-.
they look like they would taste wonderful mverno@roadrunner.com
The more I think about why I love macarons the more reasons I wood come up with! But, I’ll just say this:
-they are relatively rare in the USA
-French
-colorful
-tasty texture
-many flavors
-and, I like when people will see one and then ask me, “Wha’s That??!”
.-= Check out Cafe Pasadena´s last blog post: Girls will be Boys & Boys will be Girls =-.
Because they are yummy.
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