If you’re like me and somewhat new to culinary terms & recipe names, peppermint meringues probably caused you to raise an eyebrow or take a couple minutes to figure out what the heck a meringue actually is. The only time I’ve ever been familiar with the word “meringue” was when I was sloshed at Perkins on 86th St in Des Moines at 2 am on a Saturday night gazing upon the endless rows of pies. Even while inebriated, lemon meringue pies didn’t look good. At all.
Cut to 2 weekends ago when Mandy told me that we were making peppermint meringues. I didn’t really even think about the process or what they would look like, all I knew is that I had to put on a brave face, step out of my comfort zone, & just cook.
As mentioned in one of my first entries, I’m not good at math. I couldn’t pass a fraction test if you had me try. I just don’t understand those types of things-math isn’t my strong suite. When Mandy was reading the instructions for the meringues & how we had to add the sugar in layers, I thought “Hey, no problem.” Yeah, that was until she said that we had to cut the amount of sugar we layered into thirds. “What the heck does that even mean?” With patience she explained it to me like cutting a pizza into thirds. “Oh, okay, I like pizza. I got it now.” If math teachers would have taken the time to explain things to me in regards to pizza, I think that I may have passed with flying colors.
Here's the link for the recipe: http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Peppermint-Meringues-368976
Our first attempt at Peppermint Meringues went like this:
The eggs are supposed to be at room temperature, right? Do you know how long it takes eggs to drop down to room temperature after being in the fridge? It seemed like hours! So while the eggs were warming up we were anxiously waiting for the apple cider I wrote about in the last post to finish. During this first attempt at meringues I learned how to crack the eggs so that you only get the egg white part in your baking mixture. No part of the shell fell in either! I was kind of impressed with myself. The hardest part about that was making sure you didn’t let any of the fat from the egg get into the mixture.
Mandy had measured out all the sugar & things we needed for the meringue recipe so that it would be smooth sailing as soon as she started mixing. Well, it was all going great. The mixture was peaking, sugar was being added, you name it. Then it was time for the peppermint extract. I was freaking out because I couldn’t tear the foil off of the extract bottle & I was also trying to strain the apple cider that was on the stove. Adding the peppermint extract was my only job. My ONLY job. Mandy was mixing like a pro & telling me to hurry up & add the extract or the mixture would fall. So, the foil comes off & we can’t find a measuring spoon. Mandy tells me just to eyeball it. Okay, fine, I’m a good eyeballer. Two seconds later almost half of the peppermint extract bottle was in the mixture thus causing it to fall. I had ruined the peppermint meringues.
Because we hadn’t ever made something like this before we figured we could salvage the meringues. We improvised and poured the now liquid meringue mix into a tiny cake pan & topped it off with candy cane Hershey kisses. Our meringue mixture was now cake batter. No big deal. Needless to say after it had finished baking it was terrible. We laughed for a really long time about the situation & decided that we had enough ingredients to try again.
Our second attempt at Peppermint Meringues went like this: My only job this time around was to add another layer of sugar to the mixture after 2 minute intervals. Mandy was going to add the extract this time. During the first attempt Mandy was mixing & adding the sugar without actually waiting the two minutes in between each sugar layer. So maybe THAT’S why the mixture fell & not because I added more peppermint extract than needing. (I highly doubt it.) After the meringue mixture has peaked, the peppermint extract was to be added. We had no problems what so ever that time around. We added red food coloring to the ziplock bag that we had transferred the mixture to. This was to make it appear like red peppermint swirls. I have had some experience in piping cookies & frosting things, so I offered to put most of the meringues on the baking sheet.
Here’s the finished product! These meringues & the apple cider were the only things we got around to baking that afternoon. Even though we messed up the first batch of these meringues, it was a great learning experience on how much you need to be prepared before you start baking & how attentive you really need to be instead of just going with the flow.






















