Earl Grey Madeleines

Earl Grey Madeleines
Sarah Anne Ward for The New York Times. Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop stylist: Paola Andrea.
Total Time
25 minutes, plus chilling
Rating
4(651)
Comments
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Cédric Grolet, the pastry chef of Le Meurice hotel in Paris, is famous for his Instagram feed, which has nearly a million and a half followers, his tattoos and his title: Best Pastry Chef in the World. Mostly, and most rightly, he’s famous for his elegant pastries, so I was surprised when he asked me if I’d tasted one of his simplest, his madeleines. Small sponge cakes baked in shell-shaped molds (metal pans give you the best color and crust), madeleines are known for the impressive bump that develop on their tops. These madeleines, adapted from a Grolet recipe, are made with brown butter and flavored with Earl Grey tea and honey. Like all madeleines, they benefit from a rest in the refrigerator before they’re baked. (Good for the mads, convenient for the baker.) If you can arrange it, serve the madeleines just minutes out of the oven — it’s when their fragrance and texture are at their peak. —Dorie Greenspan

Featured in: How to Bake the Perfect Madeleine

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Ingredients

Yield:About 20 madeleines
  • 2cups/255 grams cake flour, plus more for dusting
  • 1tablespoon baking powder
  • 3tablespoons full-flavored honey
  • 1cup plus 2 tablespoons/255 grams unsalted butter (2 sticks plus 2 tablespoons), plus more for greasing
  • ¾cup plus 1 tablespoon/165 grams granulated sugar
  • 2bergamots or Meyer lemons (or 1 lemon and 1 clementine), finely zested
  • 1tablespoon loose Earl Grey tea, finely chopped
  • 3large eggs plus 1 large egg white, at room temperature
  • 5tablespoons/75 milliliters whole milk, slightly warm
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (20 servings)

226 calories; 11 grams fat; 7 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 3 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 30 grams carbohydrates; 0 grams dietary fiber; 19 grams sugars; 3 grams protein; 72 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Sift together the flour and baking powder. Put the honey in a medium heatproof bowl, and place a strainer over the bowl.

  2. Step 2

    Bring the butter to a boil in a medium saucepan over medium-high heat. As the butter cooks, gently swirl the pan. The butter will foam, then bubble, then turn golden. In 5 to 7 minutes, when the butter browns (it will be the color of hazelnuts, and have that aroma as well), pour it through the strainer onto the honey. Some dark bits will slip through the strainer, and that’s fine! Stir to blend.

  3. Step 3

    In a large bowl, whisk the sugar, zest, tea, eggs and egg white, and milk until combined; whisk 1 or 2 minutes more after the ingredients are blended. Add the flour mixture in three to four additions, whisking the ingredients together gently. You’ll have a thick batter that will fall back on itself in a ribbon. Switch to a spatula, and gradually stir in the warm butter-honey mixture. The batter will have a beautiful sheen. Press a piece of plastic wrap against the surface, and refrigerate the batter for at least 8 hours or up to 2 days.

  4. Step 4

    When you’re ready to bake, center a rack in the oven, and heat it to 425 degrees.

  5. Step 5

    Butter and flour a regular-size madeleine pan (or coat it with nonstick baking spray); do this even if the pan is nonstick. Use a slightly rounded tablespoon of batter to fill each shell. Don’t worry about leveling the batter, as it will even out in the oven. Cover, and refrigerate any remaining batter.

  6. Step 6

    Bake the madeleines until the cakes are golden and the bumps spring back when gently prodded, 11 to 13 minutes. Unmold immediately by rapping the pan against the counter. Serve now ... or don’t. The madeleines stale quickly, but that just makes them better for dunking. If you’re baking more madeleines, be certain to cool the pan between batches.

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Ratings

4 out of 5
651 user ratings
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Comments

The method I've been using for years differs a bit: (1) Steep tea leaves in browned butter for 10 min; strain. Great flavor, no leaves in batter. (2) My batter is a true genoise: no baking powder, heat egg-sugar-honey mixture to 120F and beat in a mixer till ribbon stage and cool, 10 min. FOLD flour in (do not whisk). Mix 1 cup of batter with butter; then fold butter in (easier to incorporate). (3) Reserve juice from lemons to make a thin glaze. Dip cookies while warm. Raves every single time.

to what texture does one whisk the sugar/egg mixture? to say a madeleine is like a genoise indicates, at least to me, that the sugar/egg mixture is whisked to a ribbon. one or two minutes wouldn't be enough. or maybe it doesn't make that much difference as long as the sugar/egg mixture is well blended. baking powder will take care of the bump, but genoise depends on the air whisked in for leavening.

I have used actual earl grey tea leaves in shortbread cookies and the flavor is so good. What i do so that the tea leaves aren't bothersome I actually whirl the leaves with the flour in the food processor until smooth and you get flavor but no leaves

I make these regularly. They are lovely for brunches or teas. If a female friend has a birthday potluck, I bring these. They are elegant and smell wonderful.

425 was way too hot for my oven! Nearly burny my first batch at 11 mins I had to reduce to 390

425 is much too high. Madeline’s came out burned on the bottom and raw in the middle, only had them in for 9 minsZ

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Credits

Adapted from Cédric Grolet, Le Meurice hotel, Paris

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