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My First Madeleines

January 7, 2010 by Nicole 53 Comments

Madeleines on Plate

I have a confession to make.  Before making them myself, the only madeleines I had ever tasted were from Starbucks.  No one had ever made them for me, I’d never had a special pan to make them myself, and somehow I managed to spend a weekend in Paris once without tasting either a madeleine or a macaron—sad, but true.

I’ve always been curious about madeleines.  I mean, is there really anything special about them other than their shape?  Obviously Proust thought so.  But what makes them so magical?  And the big question—are they cookies or tiny little cakes?  Well, curiosity got the better of me one day so I bought a little package of madeleines at Starbucks.  And even though I knew that what I tasted out of that little plastic package was probably not a great representation of the classic French cookie (or is it cake?), I fell madly in love with the madeleine.

So now I can tell you why madeleines are such a big deal:  butter.  Oh, and let’s not forget the lemon.  Have I ever mentioned that butter and lemon are pretty much my two favorite flavors?  Madeleines can also be flavored with orange, and I’m sure that orange-scented madeleines are wonderful, but it’s definitely the butter and lemon that sold me.  And if you ask me, they are miniature cakes, not cookies—little lemon butter cakes from heaven.

I knew I had to get my hands on some special equipment so that I could try making the little scalloped cakes myself, so I ordered a couple of madeleine pans from Amazon.  After they arrived, I let the gorgeous shiny things sit on the counter for a few weeks—promising myself daily that I would make madeleines soon—but eventually I tucked the pans away in a kitchen cabinet where I promptly forgot about them.  That was a few months ago.  Well, a new year is upon us and I’ve decided to start crossing some things off my baking to-do list.

There are tons of recipes floating around for madeleines, but I settled on one I remembered seeing at 101 Cookbooks a couple of years back.  Heidi’s photos always draw me in, and somehow I knew I could trust the recipe.  I followed the recipe to the letter, taking special care to thoroughly coat my madeleine pan with butter to ensure an easy release.

Buttered Madeleine Pan

However, Heidi mentions in the recipe that although she uses butter and flour on her pans, the friend who taught her how to make madeleines uses cooking spray with flour.  Since I had two pans, I decided to experiment.  I thoroughly buttered and floured the first pan, but sprayed the second with Baker’s Joy—a nonstick baking spray that contains flour.  I knew in my heart that the buttered and floured pan would work better, but curiosity won out over gut instinct in this case.

Butter vs. Cooking Spray

Filling the pans with batter was a little intimidating.  I had read that the batter spreads in the oven, and not to overfill the molds, but I had a hard time judging whether they were 2/3 – 3/4 full (as the recipe instructed).  My method of transferring some of the batter to a measuring cup and trying to pour it into the mold didn’t work out so well for me.  Next time I’ll probably just spoon it in, or pipe it in using a bag.

Madeleine Batter

But it turns out I had no reason to worry about whether they were filled properly.  The batter spread evenly and a beautiful batch of madeleines emerged from the oven.

Baked Madeleines

The pan pictured above was the one that was buttered and floured, not coated in baking spray.  It turns out that there was a pretty big difference between the two.

Butter vs. Cooking Spray:  The Result

The madeleines in the pan coated with Baker’s Joy (on the right) didn’t rise like their butter-coated siblings.  And though they all released from the pan without too much effort, the butter-coated ones were much easier to pop out.  All in all, the butter-coated madeleines had a better shape, better color, and released from the pan better than the other ones.  From now on, I will use nothing but butter to grease my madeleine pans and I suggest you do the same.

Madeleines Out of the Oven

The little cakes are best eaten on the first day while the edges are still crisp, so I suggest inviting a few friends over the day you decide to make them.  But if you do have leftovers, they are perfectly fine the next day—especially dunked in your morning coffee.

Madeleines Dusted with Powdered Sugar

If you’d like to try this recipe for buttery, lemon-scented madeleines, head over to 101 Cookbooks and let Heidi show you how.  I ended up with exactly 24 regular-sized madeleines using her recipe.

Related Recipes:

  • Lemon Shortbread
  • Giant Lemon Sugar Cookies
  • Quick and Easy Lemon Cake

Around the Web:

  • Madeleines from 101 Cookbooks
  • Lemon-Glazed Madeleines from David Lebovitz
  • Orange-Scented Madeleines from Mark Bittman
  • Meyer Lemon Madeleines from Alpineberry
  • Classic Madeleines from Smitten Kitchen

Filed Under: Adventures in Baking, Cookies, Desserts, Holiday

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Avanika (Yumsilicious Bakes) says

    January 24, 2010 at 3:38 am

    I want a madeleine pan oh so bad! They look so good, I feel like I'm missing out. Thanks for the step-by-step, as soon as I am fortunate enough to own a pan, I'm coming back to this post!
    Reply
  2. alison says

    January 29, 2010 at 7:19 pm

    we used mini madeleine pans and made them for petits fours trays in culinary school (a traditional french pastry program) and they were so good and beautiful. as a fellow lemon lover, i've glazed them with a 10x sugar and limoncello mixture and it was just delicious.. i've used it on several types of madeleines--lemon, orange, green tea.. pairs so well to highlight a few points and questions mentioned: buttering and flouring the pan is key--allows you to just pop them right out and makes clean up easy. you get much more oven spring if you chill your batter (even just for a bit..) and that gives you a beautiful bump--we were always taught to display them with the bump side up because that was what showed the skill/nuance of madeleines. you'd be amazed at how much of a bump you can really have! i think the absolute best way to fill the pans (especially neatly if you are making a few batches and need to reuse pans and want to reduce on clean up time) is by using a piping bag (no tip needed and just toss it back in the fridge between batches).
    Reply
  3. Marcos says

    February 17, 2010 at 2:23 pm

    Another lurker popping out of the woodwork to say how I appreciate you writing up making these. I also had stumbled on Heidi's recipe last fall, and while I will admit to having made them in mini-muffin pans instead of Madeleine pans, the taste was still wonderful. And now that you've reminded me, I need to head over to Amazon so I can do these a bit better justice. Yum!
    Reply
  4. monica says

    April 8, 2010 at 3:44 am

    J'adore madeleines!
    Reply
  5. swati says

    May 14, 2010 at 1:12 pm

    I liked the way you explained your experience of making it first time. Before last couple of weeks ,I made madelines for first time too. As I was reading your post i found it so similar to my experience . Thanks for your suggestion to use butter.
    Reply
  6. Grace Pedde says

    July 10, 2012 at 11:02 am

    just bought a pan over the weekend...not gonna lie, but I'm kinda excited :D
    Reply
  7. Medallion says

    February 5, 2013 at 12:16 am

    Pretty! They look divine. I just made a batch of madelines myself this evening, and wanted to see whether you had ever made 'em--looks like you have! Anyway I posted some pictures on my little baking journal @ www.blossomandbake.blogspot.com. TY! ;)
    Reply
  8. Anaïs says

    March 4, 2013 at 9:56 am

    Hi, thank you so much for all your recipes (once I have bought american spoons and cups it has been so easy and pleasant to follow them !). I'm french, and I cook madeleines very often (even if there's a lot of butter inside...) and I can't see on your photos (that's original to show them upside down !) but they don't seem to have this "hump" on top of their own. If you want I could give you a french classic recipe, just for fun ? I almost forget : you can use orange-flower water instead of lemon, it's an other classic madeleine ! And don't worry : Madeleines are from Commercy, a little town two hours far from Paris (in the East) and Macarons are more from the West coast (where I live, and we have lots of macarons shops everywhere !) so it's not a typical parisian migniardise ;) And now I'm going to do your Velvet red Cake again, so wonderful !!
    Reply
  9. RR says

    February 14, 2016 at 4:11 pm

    Which company's pan do you use? I want one that can give good ridges.
    Reply
  10. marsha BOLING says

    September 8, 2018 at 6:57 am

    love my madeleine pan, my next project will be beef filled cakes, baked in my madeleine pan
    Reply
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