• Three shades of pink luster dust create a true ombré gradient — no food coloring needed for the shimmer
• Dry-brush the dust on finished shells for the cleanest color payoff
• Rose gold transitions the gradient from pink to warm gold beautifully
• This technique works on store-bought shells too — nobody has to know
The ombré effect here is all in the dusting, not the batter. Three colors, one brush, about five minutes of work after the shells come out of the oven.
Ingredients
- 1 cup Almond flour, sifted
- 1¾ cups Powdered sugar, divided
- 3 large Egg whites, aged 24 hours at room temp
- ¼ tsp Cream of tartar
- 3 tbsp Granulated sugar
- 1-2 drops Pink gel food coloring
- ½ cup Unsalted butter, softened
- 1 cup Powdered sugar (for buttercream)
- 2 tbsp Heavy cream
- ½ tsp Vanilla extract
- ⅛ tsp White Luster Dust
- ⅛ tsp Pink Luster Dust
- ⅛ tsp Rose Gold Luster Dust
Sift almond flour and 1¾ cups powdered sugar together twice. Discard anything that doesn’t pass through — lumps are the enemy here. In a clean metal bowl, whip egg whites and cream of tartar to soft peaks. Stream in granulated sugar and continue whipping to stiff, glossy peaks. Add one drop of pink gel coloring and fold until just combined.
Fold the dry ingredients into the meringue in three additions. You’re going for a batter that falls off the spatula like lava — slow, thick ribbons. Pipe 1½-inch rounds onto parchment-lined baking sheets. Bang the sheets firmly on the counter 4-5 times, then let the shells rest uncovered for 30-45 minutes until a skin forms. They shouldn’t stick to your finger when lightly touched.
Bake at 300°F (150°C) for 16-18 minutes. The shells should release cleanly from the parchment — if they stick, give them another minute. Cool completely on the pan before touching them.
Beat softened butter until pale and fluffy, about 3 minutes. Add powdered sugar, heavy cream, and vanilla, then beat another 2 minutes until smooth. Pipe or spread onto half the shells, then sandwich together.
This is the fun part. Sort your macarons into three groups. Using a dry, soft-bristle brush, dust White Luster Dust across the top third of one group — brush on, then lightly buff off the excess. Switch to Pink Luster Dust for the middle group. Finish the last group with Rose Gold Luster Dust concentrated toward the base of the shell. Arrange them together and the gradient reads as one continuous sweep of color.

The dry-brush method is the only way to go here. A little Pink Luster Dust goes a long way on a smooth macaron shell — the surface is almost reflective, so the edible pink glitter catches light without needing a heavy coat. For more on dry-brush vs. wet techniques on baked goods, the [technique breakdown in our cake and cookie guide](https://lusterdust.com/how-to-use-edible-glitter-on-cakes-cupcakes-cookies/) covers everything.
Fresh egg whites have more moisture, which can make macarons collapse or crack. Leaving them uncovered in the fridge for 24 hours evaporates some of that moisture. It’s a small step that makes a real difference in shell stability — especially when you’re adding a dusting step at the end and want clean, smooth surfaces to work with.
The key is contrast between your three dust colors. White on the lightest shells, straight pink in the middle, rose gold on the darkest. When you arrange them together, stand back and look — the gradient only works if there’s visible separation between the shades. If the middle group looks too similar to either end, add a second light coat of dust before assembling the display.
Yes. Genuinely. Trader Joe’s and most specialty grocery stores carry plain macaron shells. The dusting technique is identical and the results are just as good. The luster dust is the whole point of this recipe — the shell is just the canvas.
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“description”: “Classic French macarons dusted in an ombré gradient using white, pink, and rose gold edible luster dust. The dry-brush technique creates a shimmering sweep of color across finished shells with no additional food coloring required.”,
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“1 cup almond flour, sifted”,
“1¾ cups powdered sugar”,
“3 large egg whites, aged 24 hours at room temperature”,
“¼ tsp cream of tartar”,
“3 tbsp granulated sugar”,
“1-2 drops pink gel food coloring”,
“½ cup unsalted butter, softened”,
“1 cup powdered sugar (for buttercream)”,
“2 tbsp heavy cream”,
“½ tsp vanilla extract”,
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{
“@type”: “HowToStep”,
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“name”: “Macaronage and pipe”,
“text”: “Fold dry ingredients into meringue in three additions until batter falls in slow, thick ribbons. Pipe 1½-inch rounds onto parchment-lined baking sheets. Bang sheets on the counter 4-5 times and rest uncovered for 30-45 minutes until a dry skin forms.”
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{
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“text”: “Bake at 300°F (150°C) for 16-18 minutes until shells release cleanly from parchment. Cool completely before handling.”
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“@type”: “HowToStep”,
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