This pistachio macaron recipe has been my obsession for years until I finally figured out how to get them right every single time. What started as me being stubborn about mastering the most annoying French cookie ever made turned into the dessert that makes people think I went to pastry school in Paris. The truth is, once you understand what makes macarons work, they're really just about being precise and patient - two things I had to learn the hard way through many, many ruined batches.
Why You'll Love This Pistachio Macaron
These pistachio macarons are perfect when you want to impress people but don't want to deal with some impossible recipe that fails half the time. Unlike a lot of macaron recipes that seem designed to make you cry, this one actually works consistently once you follow the steps. The trick is understanding that macarons are more about technique than fancy ingredients - once you get the hang of it, you can make them over and over without stress.
The best part is how they make you look like some kind of baking genius when really you just followed directions carefully. I've brought these to parties where people take pictures of them before eating, and everyone thinks I spent my whole weekend slaving away in the kitchen. Oliver loves helping make them because he gets to help measure ingredients and pick the shade of green for the shells. Plus they keep for days in the fridge, so you can make them ahead of time and not worry about last-minute baking disasters.
Jump to:
- Why You'll Love This Pistachio Macaron
- Pistachio Macaron Ingredients
- How To Make Pistachio Macarons Step By Step
- Smart Swaps for Pistachio Macarons
- Tasty Twists on Pistachio Macarons
- Equipment For Pistachio Macaron
- Storing Your Pistachio Macarons
- Top Tip
- FAQ
- French Perfection in Your Kitchen!
- Related
- Pairing
- Pistachio Macaron
Pistachio Macaron Ingredients
For the Macaron Shells:
- Almond flour
- Powdered sugar
- Egg whites
- Granulated sugar
- Green food coloring
- Pistachio extract or paste
For the Pistachio Filling:
- Unsalted butter
- Powdered sugar
- Pistachio paste or finely ground pistachios
- Heavy cream
- Vanilla extract
- Pinch of salt
Optional but Helpful:
- Food processor for grinding pistachios
- Digital scale
- Pistachio powder for extra flavor
See recipe card for quantities.
How To Make Pistachio Macarons Step By Step
Prep Everything First:
- Line baking sheets with parchment or silicone mats
- Sift almond flour and powdered sugar together twice
- Separate eggs and let whites come to room temperature
- Have all ingredients measured and ready
Make the Shells:
- Whip egg whites until foamy
- Gradually add granulated sugar, whip to stiff peaks
- Add food coloring and pistachio extract
- Fold in almond flour mixture in three additions
- Mix until batter flows like thick ribbon
Pipe and Rest:
- Pipe 1.5-inch circles on prepared sheets
- Tap pans hard to release air bubbles
- Let sit 30-60 minutes until tops feel dry to touch
- Preheat oven to 300°F
Bake Perfect Shells:
- Bake one sheet at a time for 15-18 minutes
- Don't open oven door while baking
- Shells should have "feet" and not wiggle when touched
- Cool completely before removing from pans
Make the Filling:
- Beat butter until light and fluffy
- Add powdered sugar, pistachio paste, and cream
- Beat until smooth and pipeable
Assemble:
- Match similar-sized shells
- Pipe filling on flat side of one shell
- Sandwich with another shell, twist gently
- Age in fridge 24 hours before eating
Smart Swaps for Pistachio Macarons
Pistachio Alternatives:
- Pistachio paste → Ground pistachios + a little oil
- Pistachio extract → Almond extract (but won't taste the same)
- Fresh pistachios → Freeze-dried pistachios ground fine
- Paste → Pistachio butter from health food stores
Almond Flour Swaps:
- Regular almond flour → Super fine almond flour (sift extra well)
- Almond → Hazelnut flour (but texture changes slightly)
- Store-bought → Grind your own blanched almonds
- Regular → Almond meal (sift really well first)
Egg White Options:
- Fresh → Carton egg whites (but fresh work better)
- Whole eggs → Just the whites (save yolks for something else)
- Regular → Aged egg whites (leave out overnight)
- Fresh → Pasteurized egg whites from carton
Filling Changes:
- Buttercream → Cream cheese frosting with pistachio
- Butter → Vegan butter for dairy-free
- Heavy cream → Coconut cream
- Pistachio → White chocolate ganache with pistachio
Color Options:
- Green food coloring → Natural spinach powder
- Gel coloring → Liquid (but use way less)
- Artificial → Natural green from matcha powder
- Colored → Leave them natural pistachio color
Tasty Twists on Pistachio Macarons
Chocolate Pistachio:
- Add cocoa powder to shells
- Make chocolate ganache with pistachio paste
- Dip half the shells in melted chocolate
- Oliver's favorite because chocolate makes everything better
Pistachio Rose:
- Add rose extract to filling
- Pink food coloring in shells
- Dried rose petals for garnish
- Fancy enough for weddings
Salted Pistachio Caramel:
- Make salted caramel filling
- Add chopped pistachios to caramel
- Sprinkle shells with sea salt
- Sweet and salty perfection
Pistachio Raspberry:
- Raspberry jam mixed with pistachio buttercream
- Pink shells with green filling
- Fresh raspberry on top
- Pretty and delicious
White Chocolate Pistachio:
- White chocolate ganache filling
- Chopped pistachios mixed in
- Cream colored shells
- Rich but not too sweet
Mini Pistachio Macarons:
- Pipe smaller shells for bite-sized treats
- Perfect for parties
- Less intimidating for beginners
- Easier to eat without making a mess
Equipment For Pistachio Macaron
- Digital kitchen scale
- Stand mixer or hand mixer
- Large mixing bowls
- Fine mesh sifter
- Piping bags and round tips
- Baking sheets
- Parchment paper or silicone mats
Storing Your Pistachio Macarons
Aging for Best Texture (24-48 hours):
- Assemble macarons completely
- Store in airtight container in fridge
- Let them "age" - shells soften, flavors blend
- Take out 30 minutes before serving
Short-Term Storage (3-5 days):
- Keep in airtight container in refrigerator
- Layer between parchment paper
- Don't stack too high or they'll crack
- Bring to room temperature before eating
Freezer Storage (1 month):
- Freeze assembled macarons in airtight container
- Thaw in fridge overnight
- Let come to room temperature before serving
- Texture stays perfect after freezing
Shell-Only Storage:
- Unfilled shells keep 1 week airtight at room temperature
- Fill just before serving for maximum freshness
- Great for making ahead for parties
What Not to Do:
- Don't store at room temperature long - filling goes bad
- Don't leave uncovered - shells get stale
- Don't stack without parchment - they'll stick together
- Don't eat immediately after assembling - they need time to soften
Top Tip
- These pistachio macarons actually taste better after aging overnight - the shells get that perfect chewy texture and the flavors really come together. When you first put them together, the shells are crisp and the filling is separate, but after sitting in the fridge for 24 hours, something cool happens. The moisture from the filling softens the shells just enough to give them that signature macaron texture - not crunchy like a cookie, but not soft either. It's this perfect chewy bite that makes real macarons so different from regular cookies.
- The flavors also get better overnight in a way that's really noticeable. The pistachio in the filling spreads into the shells a little, and everything tastes more balanced and rich. I found this out by accident when I made a batch for a party and couldn't serve them until the next day. When people tried them, they kept asking what I did differently because they tasted so much better than the ones I'd made before. Now I always plan to make macarons at least a day before I need them - the waiting is actually part of the recipe.
FAQ
What does pistachio macaron taste like?
Pistachio macarons taste nutty and slightly sweet with a rich, buttery flavor from the pistachios. The shells have a delicate almond base with pistachio flavoring, while the filling is creamy and really pistachio-heavy. It's not as sweet as some other macaron flavors and has this fancy, grown-up taste that's really satisfying.
How many calories are in a pistachio macaron?
A regular pistachio macaron has about 70-90 calories, depending on size and how much filling you use. They're pretty rich because of all the butter and nuts, so a little goes a long way. Most people are happy with just one or two, unlike regular cookies where you might eat a whole handful.
Can you make macarons with pistachios?
Yeah, you can definitely make macarons with pistachios. You can add pistachio paste or finely ground pistachios to both the shells and the filling. Some people even replace part of the almond flour with pistachio flour, but you have to be careful not to change the ratios too much or the macarons won't work right.
What is the best macaron flavor?
That's totally personal preference, but pistachio is definitely up there with the classics like vanilla, chocolate, and raspberry. Pistachio has this fancy flavor that's not too sweet and works for both kids and adults. Oliver thinks chocolate is best, but I'm partial to pistachio because it feels fancy without being too rich.
French Perfection in Your Kitchen!
Now you've got all the secrets to make perfect pistachio macarons - from aging those egg whites to the overnight resting trick that makes them taste like they came from a fancy French bakery. This recipe has turned me into the person everyone calls when they need something impressive for special occasions, and I love that something so elegant is really just about following steps carefully. The best part is watching people's faces when they bite into one and realize it tastes as good as it looks.
Looking for more impressive desserts that aren't actually that hard? Try our Healthy Mango Sorbet Recipe: 3 Ingredients that tastes like it came from a fancy restaurant. Want something rich and indulgent? Our Easy Butterfinger Cake Recipe gets raves at every party. Need something elegant but easier than macarons? Our Easy Strawberry Tart Recipe looks beautiful and tastes even better.
Share your macaron wins! We love seeing your beautiful creations and hearing about which occasions you made them for!
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Pairing
These are my favorite dishes to serve with Pistachio Macaron
Pistachio Macaron
Equipment
- 1 Digital Kitchen Scale (For precise measurements)
- 1 Stand mixer or hand mixer (For whipping egg whites)
- 2-3 Baking sheets (Line with parchment or silicone mats)
- 1 Fine mesh sifter (For almond flour and powdered sugar)
- 2 Large mixing bowls (For dry and wet mixtures)
- 1–2 Piping bags with round tips (For piping shells and filling)
Ingredients
Macaron Shells:
- 100 g Almond flour - Sifted twice
- 100 g Powdered sugar - Sifted twice
- 75 g Egg whites - Aged, room temperature
- 75 g Granulated sugar
- Few drops Green food coloring - Optional, for color
- ½ teaspoon Pistachio extract - Optional but recommended
Pistachio Filling:
- 113 g Unsalted butter - Softened
- 120 g Powdered sugar
- 2 tablespoon Pistachio paste - Or finely ground pistachios
- 2 tablespoon Heavy cream - Add more if needed for texture
- ½ teaspoon Vanilla extract
- Pinch Salt - To balance sweetness
Instructions
- Line baking sheets, sift dry ingredients, separate and warm egg whites, and measure everything in advance.
- Whip egg whites with sugar to stiff peaks, add coloring and extract, then fold in dry ingredients until ribbon stage.
- Pipe 1.5-inch circles, tap trays to remove air bubbles, rest shells for 30–60 minutes, and preheat oven.
- Bake at 300°F for 15–18 minutes. Shells should develop feet and not move when touched. Cool before removing.
- Make pistachio filling, pipe onto shells, sandwich, and refrigerate 24 hours for best texture and flavor.
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