Home » Vegan Strawberries & Cream Macarons

Vegan Strawberries & Cream Macarons

I am so excited to show you how to create the BEST Vegan Macarons!

Watch me make these macarons here.

No-eggs, No dairy, completely cruelty-free! That’s how we do it around here!

In this post, I’ll be sharing with you how to make vegan macarons that have a deliciously chewy texture along with FEET. yes, I said feet.

What are macaron feet?

Macaron feet are the tell-tale sign of a well-baked macaron. These tiny (and very adorable) ruffles around the bottom edge of the shell should be small, unbroken and even the whole way around the macaron.

These macarons are light pink and white shells with the most delicious cream cheese swirl with a core of strawberry jam. I topped them with some pink and white sprinkles, and also some Love Hearts as it’s coming up to Valentine’s day. 

You won’t be able to have just one, trust me- haha!

The jam adds a delicious fruitiness to these macarons! You could even make a strawberry compote to fill them. It’s easy to make and is only 3 ingredients, you gotta make it and try it out! Get my recipe here, just change the raspberries for strawberries.

Notes*

What colouring should I use?

For macarons, ONLY use a gel. I have tried a liquid food colouring and it completely ruined the batter. The best food gels which are vegan and highly pigmented are Pro Gel from Rainbow Dust Colours. Check them out here

What is Aquafaba:

Aquafaba is the water from a can/tin of chickpeas. The chickpea water or brine as it’s called, acts as an amazing egg substitute for cakes, cupcakes and this delicious meringue buttercream. You can also get aquafaba in a carton for easy use. Check it out here.

Preparation: 30 minutes

Makes: Around 20 macaron cookies

Baking time: 40 minutes

Level: Medium

A message from me: I’ve had a couple of messages over on Instagram of those wanting American measurements [cups]. As macarons are technical and extremely temperamental, you want to measure the ingredients precisely. Cups aren’t precise. They’re fine for things like cakes and cookies, but not macarons. Hope that helps 🙂

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Ingredients for the macaron shells

  • 75g of aquafaba (chickpea brine)   see notes*
  • 1/4 teaspoon of cream of tartar
  • 110g of ground almonds/almond flour
  • 112g of icing sugar
  • 70g of caster sugar
  • Pink food gel   see notes*

Ingredients for the filling

  • 150g of dairy-free butter
  • 60g of aquafaba (chickpea brine)   see notes*
  • 260g of icing sugar
  • 20g of dairy-free cream cheese
  • Pink food gel

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Use code LITTLEVEGAN15 at the checkout on the FancySprinkles website for 15% off your whole order!

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Method (macaron shells)

1. Line two baking trays with greaseproof paper and add a large round tip nozzle into two separate piping bags. Best to get these ready before starting as you’ll want to work quite quickly with the macaron batter.

2. In a large mixing bowl, add in the aquafaba and cream of tartar. Using an electric whisk or stand mixer with a balloon whisk attachment, whizz up on medium/high until white and fluffy.

This will take around 5 minutes.

3. Once fluffy, gradually add in the caster sugar a little at a time while the mixture is still mixing on high.

The mixture will turn thick and glossy after around 5-8 minutes. Adding the sugar gradually will prevent the air you created to deflate. You want this mixture to form stiff peaks. 

4. When the aquafaba and sugar mixture holds stiff peaks, sift in the ground almonds/almond flour and icing sugar. Using a rubber spatula, fold the dry ingredients into the aquafaba mixture until the dry is just incorporated into the meringue. As you’re adding in a colour, you don’t want to mix the mixture fully as you’ll need to mix in the colour which would then change the consistency.

Watch this video to learn how to fold in the mixture.

5. Divide the macaron batter into two bowls.

6. Add a drop of pink food gel to one of the batters and gently fold until combined. Leave the other batter plain white.

Again, you’re looking for the batter to slowly ribbon off the spatula, but not continuously. It should be runny, then stopping in clumps.

7. Add the macaron batters into the separate piping bags with the round nozzles.

Pipe 1 & 1/2 inch circles on the lined baking trays, spaced out. Tap the trays against your work surface to release any air bubbles.

If you’re adding on sprinkles, make sure to sprinkle them on the macarons before the shells dry. Sprinkle them on half of the macarons, as you will want the other half as the bottom of the macarons sandwich. 

8. Allow the macarons to rest at room temperature for around 1 & 1/2 hours or until the shells are dry. To test the macarons are dry, lightly touch the tops and sides of the macaron shell with your fingertip. If batter comes off on your finger, they need more time to dry. Depending on your weather and humidity in your kitchen, they might take longer. It all depends so keep an eye on them.

9. When they are dry, bake one tray at a time. 

Preheat oven to 120 degrees c fan. Place one tray into the middle of the oven and bake for 40 minutes. Rotate the tray every 15 minutes to ensure an even bake. 

The baking time might vary depending on your oven so just keep an eye on them and keep checking them.

If the feet look like they’re spreading outwards (which shouldn’t happen at such a low temperature but it might do with your oven), wedge a wooden spoon in the door of the oven to help reduce the temperature. Doing this will prevent the feet from spreading.

10. Once they have feet and have baked fully, turn off the oven and allow them to rest in the oven for around 30 minutes with the oven door ajar. This will help dry them out.

To know they’re ready, they should just peel away from the greaseproof paper and have a smooth flat base. Only try and lift them up after they have had time to cool. if you try and lift them whilst they’re still hot, they’ll stick to the paper and break.

Repeat for the other tray.

Method (filling)

1. In a large mixing bowl, add in the dairy-free butter and cream cheese, whip until creamy. I use a stand mixer with a balloon whisk attachment, a hand mixer will work great too.

2. Add in the aquafaba and whip on high for a few minutes until incorporated into the whipped butter.

3. Sift in the icing sugar and whip on high speed for around 5 minutes to incorporate it.

Your Swiss meringue buttercream should be thick, very creamy and silky smooth.

4. Add half of the buttercream into a piping bag fitted with a star tip nozzle. Add a drop of pink food gel to the other half of the buttercream and re-whip to incorporate it. Add the pink buttercream into a separate piping bag fitted with a star tip nozzle.

5. Add around 2-3 tablespoons of strawberry jam into a piping bag and snip off the tip.

6. Pipe a swirl of buttercream on each bottom shell, add some strawberry jam into the middle then top with a shell with sprinkles.

Let macarons sit at room temperature for an hour before serving.

Store the macarons in the fridge in a sealed container for up to 7 days, or in the freezer for a month.

Make sure the container they are in a sealed as you don’t want any moisture to get into the macarons, as this can ruin them.

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10 Comments

  1. Amanda hernandez
    February 8, 2021 / 6:32 pm

    Hi! Im from chile…what is cream of tartar? Thank u, i lov your blog ❤

  2. Amanda hernandez
    February 8, 2021 / 6:32 pm

    Hi! Im from chile…what is cream of tartar? Thank u, i lov your blog ❤

  3. Ida Elen
    February 15, 2021 / 1:21 pm

    These turned out great! The recipe was easy to follow and the macarons were delicious👌🏻 Have tried several of the recipes on this blog and the results have all been amazing, really love Holly's recipes❤️

    • The Little Blog of Vegan
      February 21, 2021 / 1:15 am

      Hello, Oh wow! I am so so happy you enjoyed!!!! Feedback like this is just so wonderful, thankyou again 🙂 x

  4. Unknown
    February 22, 2021 / 7:29 pm

    Thank you for this recipe

  5. Juste
    February 1, 2022 / 5:45 pm

    Hey, can i use guar gum or xanthan gum instead of cream of tartar? if yes – which is better and what are the proportions?
    Thank You in advance <3

    • February 4, 2022 / 2:39 pm

      Hey there! I did a research and you can replace the cream of tartar with the same amount of lemon juice or vinegar. I tried with lemon juice and it worked amazing.

  6. Amy
    July 25, 2022 / 8:03 pm

    What is the reason for baking one tray at a time??
    I can’t wait to try them!

  7. Deb
    July 26, 2022 / 8:10 pm

    What can I use instead of caster sugar as I am also sugar free. Will granulated stevia work?

  8. Malou
    September 14, 2023 / 3:04 pm

    Hi! Is it possible to use coloured powder, such as 100% blueberry or beet powder instead of a coloured gel with additions?

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