Kawaii blueberry cheesecake macarons! The template is simple—each chicken is just a plain circle made with white batter. All of the decorations are added post-bake with melted milk + white chocolate. Super easy for beginner character macaron bakers and lots of fun to bake with others! :~)
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About these blueberry cheesecake macarons
As soon as I finished drawing the template for my lemon white chocolate chick macarons, I drew up this chicken one! The template is a slight variation of the chicks, just with a few tweaks. But as always, it is a fairly simple design with maximum cuteness. Only one colored batter is made. The rest of the details are added on using melted milk chocolate and white chocolate that’s dyed yellow, red, and pink.
I find that decorating this way is much easier for beginners, in comparison to splitting up the macaron batter into multiple colors and piping bags. This process makes baking character macarons more approachable, especially if it is your first time making a design! BUT, if this is your first time making macarons shells EVER, I recommend checking out my more in-depth post on how to make macarons. You can find more pictures, GIFS, and macaron templates on that page! I also recommend reading Mimi’s macaron post for troubleshooting.
After baking and decorating chickens, the shells are sandwiched together with a perfectly tart blueberry cheesecake filling in between. The filling is also super simple, only requiring 4 ingredients: cream cheese, blueberry jam, heavy cream, and powdered sugar.
Overall, the macarons are light, chewy, not-too-sweet, full of blueb flavor, and are a fun way to celebrate warm weather!
Now, let’s get to baking, friends! 🙂
Tips for baking and decorating
Use a kitchen scale
Macarons are incredibly finicky. A kitchen scale allows you to measure all the ingredients correctly and helps you create consistent, full, sturdy shells. AND, if you use a cute kitchen scale like this heart-shaped one, it’ll increase your overall happiness by at least 10%.
Decorating with melted chocolate
You can use a piping bag, cookie scribe, or toothpick to add on the details. I used a piping bag for these guys.
For the white chocolate, you’ll want to use oil-based food coloring or the chocolate will seize up and become lumpy. However, if you don’t have oil-based food coloring, you can try mixing in a tsp of neutral oil (canola, vegetable) at a time! The chocolate should come back together. Maaagic.
Storing the kawaii cookies
Store the macarons in an airtight container. They can last in the fridge for up to 3 days, otherwise, they’ll get pretty soggy over time. I highly recommend freezing them instead (for up to one month), and eating them at room temperature.
I really hope you enjoy this recipe. If you make these cute chicken cookies, I’d love to see them. You can tag me at #bitesbybianca / @bitesbybianca on Instagram. Enjoy!
Other cute macaron recipes
Check out this link for chocolate bunnies, Thai tea bears, strawberry cheesecake Kirbys, Oreo bears, lemon duckies, chocolate pigs, and more!
Chicken Macarons with Blueberry Cheesecake Filling (French Method)
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Ingredients
For the French macaron shells:
- 50 g egg whites, room temperature
- 40 g granulated sugar
- 60 g almond flour, sifted
- 50 g powdered sugar, sifted
- gel food coloring (purple)
For the blueberry cheesecake filling:
- 3 oz cream cheese, softened
- 2 tbsp blueberry jam
- 1 tbsp heavy cream
- 1-3 tbsp powdered sugar, sifted & according to taste
For the decorations:
- 1 tbsp milk or dark chocolate, melted
- 3 tbsp white chocolate, melted
- oil-based food coloring, see steps (yellow, red, pink)
Instructions
Preparation:
- Put printed macaron templates on baking trays. Place silicone baking mats or parchment paper on top of templates.
- Set up one large piping bag with a medium round tip. If you do not have a round tip, you can just snip the end of the bag before piping.
For the French macaron shells:
- In a medium bowl, mix the sifted almond flour and powdered sugar.
- Pour the egg whites into the bowl of a stand mixer. Set up a stopwatch to time how long to whip the meringue. (These times are listed to help beginner macaron makers. With practice, you can go by eye.)0:00 – 4:00 minutes: Mix on medium-low for 4 minutes (Kitchenaid speed 4).4:00 – 9:30 minutes: Turn the mixer to medium speed (Kitchenaid speed 6). Add a third of the granulated sugar. After 30 seconds, add another third. After another 30 seconds, add the last of the granulated sugar. Keep mixing at medium speed until you have reached a total of 9:30 minutes. The meringue should be balled up onto the whisk, very thick, glossy, and have stiff peaks. If not, keep mixing at 30-second intervals at Kitchenaid speed 8 until it is.
- Using a toothpick, knife, or cookie scribe, swipe in a very small amount of purple food coloring. This will offset the yellow tint of the almond flour, yielding white macarons.
- Dump in all of the powdered sugar + almond flour to the meringue. Gently fold the macaron batter, often scraping the sides and bottom of the bowl. Continue folding, adding more food coloring as needed.
- Fold the batter until it reaches a thick, glossy consistency and flows off the rubber spatula into ribbons. To test if it is ready, allow the batter to flow off the spatula and into the batter. If the ribbons do not melt into the rest of the batter after 30 seconds, continue folding. Be careful not to over mix. When it passes this test, transfer the batter to your piping bag.
- Pipe about 16 round shells onto your silicone mats/parchment paper, using the macaron template as a guide.
- Tap the trays against the counter a few times to get rid of air bubbles. If there are bubbles on the surface, you can use a toothpick or cookie scribe to pop them. Popping the air bubbles helps stop them from cracking when being baked.
- Allow the macarons to sit out at room temperature to dry for at least one hour. They will be ready to bake once the surface of the macaron is matte and dry to the touch. If it is a really humid day, it can sometimes take 2 hours for them to dry.
- Preheat the oven to 325F. Place an empty baking sheet upside-down on the middle rack.
- Place the baking sheet with the macarons on top of the upside-down baking sheet. The upside-down sheet will help the macarons bake more evenly, decreasing the chances of cracking. Bake for 10 minutes, then rotate. Drop the oven temp to 310F (to prevent browning), and bake for 5-10 more minutes. To test if they are done baking, gently push the side of one shell. If it wiggles on the sheet, they need to be baked longer.
- Remove the macarons and place them on a wire rack. Bake any remaining macaron shells.
- Allow macarons to fully cool before peeling them off the parchment paper or silicone mats.
For the blueberry filling:
- In a medium-large mixing bowl, whip the cream cheese until smooth. Whisk in the heavy cream until light and fluffy, about 1 minute.
- Mix in the blueberry jam until combined.
- Taste test the filling! If it is too tart, add 1 tbsp powdered sugar at a time. Make sure not to overmix, or the filling will become too loose. If it does become too loose, whip in a small splash of heavy cream until it fluffs up again.
- Transfer filling to a piping bag and snip a medium tip.
Assembly:
- Match the macaron shells, lining up each pair on your work surface.
- For the details, you can use a toothpick, cookie scribe, or piping bag.
- Add yellow oil-based food coloring to 1/3 of your melted white chocolate. If you don't have oil-based coloring, your chocolate will seize and become lumpy. To counter this, add in a tsp of neutral oil (canola, vegetable), and mix until it comes back together. Use this for the beaks.
- Add red oil-based food coloring to the other 1/3 of your melted white chocolate. Use this for the tufts of feathers and underneath the beaks.
- Add pink oil-based food coloring to the last third of the melted white chocolate. Use this for the blush.
- Use the melted dark or milk chocolate for the chickens' eyes.
- Pipe the blueberry cheesecake filling on the bottom shell, then add the matching shell on top.
- Leave macarons in an airtight container in the fridge for at least 2 hours before eating. This allows them to mature, making them softer, chewier, and more flavorful. Eat at room temperature.
- Store the macarons in an airtight container. They can last in the fridge for up to 3 days. You can also freeze them for up to one month! Eat at room temperature.