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Home › Recipes › Cookies

Updated on April 18, 2020 by Liz Marek · This post may contain affiliate links · 135 Comments

Chocolate Macaron Recipe

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chocolate macaron recipe
chocolate macaron recipe
chocolate macaron recipe

Chewy chocolate macarons with a crispy outer shell and chocolate ganache filling

Chocolate macarons are such a tasty treat. I love that first bite that cracks through the crisp outer layer before you sink your teeth into that chewy goodness in the middle. These chocolate macarons are based on my super-viral, no-fail French macaron recipe. Follow my tips and tricks in this blog post to make the perfect chocolate macarons. 

closeup of chocolate macarons in metal bowl

Why are chocolate macarons so hard to make?

There are a lot of things that can go wrong with such a simple cookie if you don't know what to look out for. Make sure you follow each step as close as you can to avoid these problems.

I find that a lot of people don't really follow a recipe when they are trying something new. They read the ingredients and tend to skim the instructions (I am totally guilty of this too) but this is not one of those recipes you can get away with doing that. 

close up of three chocolate macarons with ganache filling

Making chocolate macarons is more about the way you make them and less about the actual ingredients. If you want to watch my vanilla macaron video, you can watch it here. 

Chocolate Macaron Ingredients

Almond Flour - Provides structure, flavor and texture to the macarons. I prefer using Bob's Red Mill super fine almond flour or you can make your own.
Powdered Sugar - Gives the cookie a little bit of sweetness 
Cocoa Powder - Can't have chocolate macarons without chocolate!
Aged Egg Whites - Provides structure and texture that is iconic to the French Macaron
Vanilla Extract - Enhances the flavor of the macaron. You can use other flavors too!
Granulated Sugar - Helps the egg whites whip up properly
Salt - Enhances the flavor of the chocolate

Chocolate Macaron Ingredients

Chocolate Macaron Recipe Step By Step

  1. Sift together the powdered sugar, cocoa powder, salt and almond meal. This is important so you can remove any hard lumps that might be in the mixture which will ruin the shiny surface of your cookie later. sifted chocolate macaron ingredients
  2. Place the almond flour mixture into a food processor and pulse 8-10 times to make the mixture finer in texture and to get it mixed together really well. closeup of almond flour and cocoa powder in food processor
  3. Whip your egg whites until frothy with the whisk attachment then slowly add in your granulated sugar while mixing on low. frothy egg whites
  4. Continue mixing until the egg whites become white and you can see some lines being made in the meringue. Add in your cream of tartar. Whipping egg whites
  5. Whip until soft glossy peaks form. Now add in your extract and food coloring if you are coloring your macarons. egg whites at soft peaks
  6. Continue whipping on medium-high until the meringue is at stiff peaks. The meringue will feel dense and will start gathering on the inside of the whisk. meringue at stiff peaks
  7. Add in ⅓ of your almond mixture and fold by taking your spatula and going around the edge of the bowl just under the batter, then cut through the center. Repeat this until you don't see any dry spots. folding almond flour mixture into egg white mixture
  8. Add in the rest of your dry ingredients and continue folding almond flour mixture folded into egg whites
  9. Place your spatula flat on top of the batter and turn the bowl to knock out some of the air from the batter. You want the batter to fall from the spatula like a ribbon and move similar to lava. 
  10. Once your batter falls from the spatula in a ribbon, try and draw a figure 8. If the batter doesn't break, it's ready. You will also notice the edges of the batter begin to turn glossy and the mixture oozes very slowly. The ribbon should dissolve back into the batter after about 20 seconds.chocolate macaron batter at ribbon stage
  11. Place the piping bag into a cup while you pour in the batter. The cup helps hold up the bag so you can scoop every last drop of that batter into the bag. preparing the macaron batter in a piping bag inside a cup
  12. Now you can pipe your macarons onto your parchment paper and bake! I use a #802 round piping tip and a template. Hold your tip straight up in the center of the circle, about ¼" away from the paper and squeeze until the batter fills the circle ¾ of the way then lift straight up quickly to break the batter off. piping chocolate macarons
  13. Lift your tray up about 5 inches and drop onto the table to pop any bubbles that are under the surface of your macaron and the batter should spread to the edge of the circle. popping bubbles in chocolate macaron batter
  14. Let your macaron sit at room temperature until a crust forms over the surface. Depending on your room, it can take from 30 minutes to 2 hours. You should be able to touch the top lightly and it doesn't feel sticky. chocolate macarons that are dry to the touch

Tips for success:

  • Use room temperature egg whites (if you forget to bring them to room temp, put your eggs in a bowl of warm water for 5 minutes)
  • Age your egg whites overnight by putting them in a bowl in the fridge. This allows some of the moisture to evaporate and experts say, produce a stronger meringue. 
  • Sift your ingredients
  • Weigh all your ingredients in grams for the best and most accurate results
  • Make sure you use fresh egg whites that have been aged overnight. 
  • Wipe the inside of your bowl and attachments well to make sure they are grease-free
  • Don't over-whip your egg whites, make sure they are at the firm peak stage but still glossy and moist
  • If your room is very humid, put a space heater next to the macarons to help dry them out

drying macarons on a humid day with a space heater

filling chocolate macarons with chocolate ganache

Troubleshooting macaron problems

Perfecting your macaron recipe will take time. After your first try you might notice some problems. These are the most common and how you can fix them.

under-mixed macarons will have cracked tops
rough macarons
Meringue was under-whipped which creates cracks and a rough texture
  • Over-mixing your batter will produce very flat macarons that will be hollow in the center and won't have any feet
  • Oily blotches on the surface of your macaron is from over-mixing and causing the oil from the almond flour to release into the batter. Try folding more gently.
  • Macarons that have a raised nipple in the center after baking. This is caused by under-mixing and the batter is still too stiff.
  • Under-mixing your batter or not using super fine almond flour will make lumpy/rough textured macarons.
  • Cracked macarons are from not letting them sit at room temp for long enough so they haven't had time to develop a shell or they were not mixed enough.
  • Macarons won't be round when you don't hold your piping tip directly in the center of the template or your parchment isn't flat.
  • Hollow shells can be from not popping the bubbles in the surface of the macarons before baking or from the meringue being under whipped.

chocolate macaron recipe

chocolate macaron with bite taken out of it to show the inside

••Download the template to make perfectly-sized macaronsFrench Macaron Template

Want more macarons? Try these recipes!

Strawberry Macaron Recipe
French Macaron Recipe 
Cream Tart 

Recipe

closeup of chocolate macarons in metal bowl

Chocolate Macaron Recipe

How to make crispy, crunchy, chewy chocolate macarons! Delicate little cookies filled with chocolate ganache. Follow this recipe for tips on how to properly fold macaron batter, avoid hollow shells and other problems.
Print Recipe Pin Recipe Rate Recipe
Prep Time: 20 minutes minutes
Cook Time: 15 minutes minutes
resting time: 20 minutes minutes
Total Time: 1 hour hour 8 minutes minutes
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Servings: 18 filled cookies
Calories: 81kcal
Author: Liz Marek

Equipment

  • Food Scale
  • Stand Mixer
  • Sifter
  • Parchment Paper
  • Piping Bag
  • 802 Round Piping Tip
  • Food processor

Ingredients

  • 50 grams almond flour
  • 114 grams powdered sugar
  • 7 grams cocoa powder
  • 57 grams egg whites aged overnight in the fridge and brought to room temperature
  • ⅛ teaspoon cream of tartar
  • 28 grams granulated sugar
  • ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 pinch salt

Chocolate Ganache

  • 2 ounces heavy cream
  • 2.5 ounces chocolate semisweet, milk or dark
  • ½ teaspoon vanilla
  • ⅛ teaspoon salt
US Customary - Metric

Instructions

For The Chocolate Macarons

  • Preheat oven to 320ºF and line a ½ baking sheet with the macaron template and parchment paper
  • Sift together the powdered sugar, cocoa powder, salt, and almond flour, twice if not blended.
  • Pulse the mixture in a food processor 8-10 times to make the almond flour mixture even finer and texture and to blend the ingredients together.
  • Whip the egg whites on low to frothy consistency and slowly add the sugar in thirds.
  • Once the egg whites turn white and you can see some lines forming in the surface from the whisk, add cream of tartar, whipping on medium until soft glossy peaks form.
  • Add the vanilla to the meringue during the soft peak stage. Then continue whipping on medium-high until you get stiff peaks that start gathering and bunching on the inside of the whisk.
  • Add ⅓ of your almond mixture to the meringue. Fold your spatula under the batter and around the edges and then cut through the center until almond flour is mixed in. Continue with the rest of the almond flour and folding until homogenous. (see video)
  • Gently press the spatula on top of the batter while you turn the bowl to take out some fo the air from the meringue. Continue folding around the outside edge until the batter forms a ribbon and moves like lava.
  • Your meringue is ready when it forms a ribbon off the spatula and the batter that settles almost dissolves all the way back into the rest of the batter but still leave a bit of a line. 
  • Place parchment paper onto your sheet pan. Pipe small rounds about 1" in diameter. Use a template if needed
  • Drop the pan onto the table 5-6 times from about 5" above the table to release bubbles. Use a toothpick to remove big pockets of air trapped under the surface. Use a very small amount of water on your fingertip to smooth any rough spots.
  • Allow to dry, uncovered until a crust forms on the surface. About 30 minutes - 2 hours or until a dry film develops over the surface of the cookie. For humid areas put a space heater nearby to help dry the cookies faster.
  • Bake at 320ºF for about 14-15 minutes or until lightly browned. If not quite brown baked, bake for an additional 1 minute. Cooled cookies should pull away from the parchment paper without sticking. If they do stick, they were not baked enough.
  • Let cool fully before removing from the parchment and filling with ganache. Cookies can be stored in the refrigerator for up to 5 days. Shells can be frozen for 6 months in an airtight container.

For the ganache

  • Place all the ingredients into a heatproof bowl and microwave for one minute. Let sit for 5 minutes then whisk until smooth. Heat for another 15 seconds if not fully melted. Place into the fridge for 20 minutes then whisk until smooth. It should be the texture of peanut butter.

Video

Nutrition

Serving: 1cookie | Calories: 81kcal | Carbohydrates: 11g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 4g | Saturated Fat: 2g | Cholesterol: 4mg | Sodium: 40mg | Potassium: 29mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 10g | Vitamin A: 46IU | Calcium: 10mg | Iron: 1mg
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

 

 

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About Liz Marek

Liz Marek is a professional cake artist, sweet and savory recipe developer, and the founder of Sugar Geek Show, where she teaches cooking, baking and cake decorating through detailed tutorials, food science explanations, and kitchen-tested recipes. She has been creating recipes and teaching baking techniques since 2008, helping bakers of all skill levels gain the confidence to make professional-quality desserts at home.

Liz is known for breaking down complex cooking and baking concepts into simple, approachable methods. Her work focuses on helping people understand not just how a recipe works, but why it works. Through Sugar Geek Show, she shares step-by-step recipes, cake decorating tutorials, and practical baking guides designed to make professional techniques accessible to everyone.

Over the years, Liz has taught thousands of students through online tutorials, classes, and educational content focused on real kitchen results. Her recipes are carefully tested and written to help people succeed the first time they make them.

When she’s not developing recipes or teaching baking techniques, Liz also hosts curated travel experiences for women through her travel brand Soul Sisters.

You can find Liz’s latest recipes, baking tutorials, and food science tips at Sugar Geek Show.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Lisa M Daly says

    September 15, 2020 at 1:29 pm

    I will be trying this recipe this coming weekend. OMG i just saw you on TV. Your group made an AMAZING scary Halloween display. Congratulations on the win, it was well deserved!!!!!

    Reply
    • Sugar Geek Show says

      September 21, 2020 at 5:03 pm

      Thank you!!!

      Reply
  2. Zane says

    September 14, 2020 at 5:56 pm

    Can I use my electric hand mixer? Will the peaks be stiff enough?

    Reply
    • Sugar Geek Show says

      September 21, 2020 at 5:06 pm

      You can! You'll just have to whip the meringue for a long time, check out my video to make sure the peaks are stiff enough 🙂

      Reply
  3. sandra witty says

    September 10, 2020 at 8:10 am

    3 stars
    Hmmmm....the ganache based on the measurements in your recipe came out like liquid....didn't thicken...is it possible there is a typo?

    THank you!!

    Reply
    • Sugar Geek Show says

      September 21, 2020 at 5:34 pm

      The ganache needs to cool for a few hours to become thick, check out my ganache blog post recipe for more information

      Reply
  4. Rahma says

    August 19, 2020 at 5:27 am

    5 stars
    WOWWWW! I got it absolutely perfect first go! I made a silly decision to take them off the paper before cooling and they ended up crispy but delicious!!

    Reply
  5. haley says

    August 17, 2020 at 11:45 am

    4 stars
    made the shells and they turned out great but for the ganache it took me three tries to get it right because the chocolate to heavy cream ratio should be 2:1 but that’s not what the recipe said. when i did what you said the ganache turned out very liquidy so i had to go to another recipe for the right ganache 😕🙄

    Reply
    • Elizabeth Marek says

      August 17, 2020 at 2:21 pm

      you have to let the ganache fully cool before you use it. I use the 1:1 ratio every single time but I also use semi-sweet chocolate.

      Reply
  6. Carla says

    August 13, 2020 at 10:03 am

    5 stars
    Absolutely perfect! Thank you!!

    Reply
  7. Clare says

    August 11, 2020 at 4:01 pm

    5 stars
    Second time trying to make macaroons... First time trying your recipe - they came out perfect! Thanks.

    Reply
  8. Marica says

    July 31, 2020 at 8:53 am

    Thank you.... they are great!

    Reply
  9. Carol says

    July 31, 2020 at 12:36 am

    5 stars
    I have tried a few recipes and there was always something imperfect about the macarons. I followed your recipe today closely and the macarons came out perfect!!! I’m so glad I found your recipe! Your video and tips are also super helpful! Thanks Liz!!
    If I want a darker chocolate colored macaron- do I add more cocoa powder and reduce the almond flour by the same amount?

    Reply
    • Elizabeth Marek says

      July 31, 2020 at 9:14 am

      Im not sure if that would throw off the result, if you just want the color to be darker you could add a couple drops of chocolate brown food coloring.

      Reply
  10. Sophie says

    July 31, 2020 at 12:16 am

    5 stars
    Was looking for a Chocolate Macaron recipe came along and found this recipe, it is amazing, the macarons came out perfect 👌, with feet, smooth top, peeled right off parchment paper, sweet and delicious, really recommended trying this recipe!

    Reply
  11. Crysty says

    July 30, 2020 at 1:25 pm

    4 stars
    My Macarons haven’t developed the skin and it’s been an hour 😭

    Reply
    • Elizabeth Marek says

      July 31, 2020 at 9:49 am

      Most likely you did not whip your meringue enough (stiff peaks). I have had that happen to me before as well.

      Reply
  12. Tina says

    July 24, 2020 at 1:37 pm

    5 stars
    Made these for the first time today and they came out great. Well explained which I appreciate even as an avid baker myself. I made mine quite small (about 2.5cm in diameter) but it did not change any of the times as listed in your recipe (I baked them for 15 minutes). I did play around with the filling/ganache. It is a bit odd to switch back to US measurements for the ganache, but scales have unit change options for that reason 🙂
    I plan on making your other macaron recipes. Do you have other ones as well or would recommend how to make some coffee and/or matcha based ones? Thank you for the great recipe.

    Reply
    • Elizabeth Marek says

      July 27, 2020 at 11:15 am

      The ganache can also be in grams if you click the metric button in the recipe card. I usually use ounces in all my recipes but macarons are so finicky, they require measurements in grams.

      Reply
  13. Elizabeth says

    July 14, 2020 at 4:00 pm

    5 stars
    I made macarons for the first time EVER using this recipe just now.I watched the video several times and was very meticulous about everything. I almost gave up because I kept second guessing every step but they are worth every minute it took! I substituted the vanilla extract for mint extract to make some mint chocolate macarons and they turned out PERFECTLY! Only one she’ll had feet that were wonky- uneven and funny shape. It was delicious though! I will be making several more batches to experiment with this recipe. I want to make these as wedding favors for my wedding next month!

    Reply
  14. Beth Nairn says

    July 09, 2020 at 11:57 am

    5 stars
    I'd planned on taking a class on how to make macarons during a trip to Paris that was cancelled due to the Covid pandemic. With all of the time I then had on my hands due to quarantine, I thought, "Why not teach myself?" So, I searched recipes, found this one, and went for it. Had to buy a food processor and a food scale - but it was worth it. I've made this twice in the past two days and it was HIGHLY successful both times. The ganache filling is absolutely the BOMB and I've included a few of these treats with the meal deliveries I've been making to friends who are remaining quarantined due to underlying health issues. Feedback has been on the "OMG" and "You've changed my life." scale.

    Reply
  15. Amit says

    July 06, 2020 at 12:24 pm

    5 stars
    This was a great recipe and my first time making macarons! They turned out perfect, and I plan to make the strawberry or vanilla one next.

    Reply
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Hi, I'm Liz! I'm passionate about creating reliable, foolproof recipes that don't just tell you how to cook, but why things work - so you can skip the guesswork and confidently make the best sweet and savory dishes of your life.

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