Pistachio Madeleines

 

My first encounter with madeleines was in the form of a Christmas gift; a handful of chocolate chip madeleines in a little plastic bag tied shut with a golden string. They were light and delicate, at first crumbling and then melting in your mouth. The second time I ate them they were orange flavoured and warm, straight out the oven and dusted in a Christmas spiced sugar. It was part of a little petit fours plate, served to diners with their coffee and they were so delicious that diners often asked if there were any spare. So it is no wonder that for me madeleines and Christmas just go together!

I don’t think at any time are nuts more eaten than at Christmas. And what can be more Chrismtassy than the beautiful dark green, with that hint of red and pink of a pistachhio? Of course as a Lebanese I am particularly partial to pistachios, after they all feature in many of our desserts and sweets. I often use pistachio paste rather than grinding pistachios. Pistachio paste is wonderfully diverse – I’ve used it to flavour sponges, souffles and ice cream. It is also much more economical and time saving than buying pistachios and then grinding them yourself. Good pistachio paste gives a deep, rich pistachio flavour and should have a luscious dark green colour, resembling moss.

There are probably as many madeleine recipes as there are trees in the wood. However the recipe from the Leith’s cookbook is particularly delicious in that it uses browned butter. The browned butter gives it a nutty flavour, adding a wonderful depth and complements the pistachio flavour. The Leith’s recipe is for a simple, unflavoured madeleines but can be adapted beautifully. I’ve done this here by adding pistachio paste to flavour the madeleines as well as chopped pistachios for a bit of texture and extra flavour. Light, airy and moorish. Bake and east straight out of the tin.

Do:

Buy good quality pistachio paste otherwise your madeleines may end up tasting of marzipan.

Experiment with flavours. Omit the pistachios and pistachio and add an extra 20 grams of butter. You could make lemon or orange by adding their zest or adding different types of chopped nuts.

Prepare in advance. You can make the batter up to 24 hours in advance and store in the fridge.

Don’t:

Rush the resting time. The flour in the starch will swell and results a lighter and more tender madeleine. A chilled batter also means it is easier to spoon into the tins.

Overfill your madeleine tin otherwise you end up with madeleine monstrosities. Each mould should only be around 3/4 full.


Print Recipe
Pistachio Madeleines
Course Patisserie
Cuisine Baking, European
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 8 minutes
Passive Time 60 minutes
Servings
madeleines
Ingredients
Course Patisserie
Cuisine Baking, European
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 8 minutes
Passive Time 60 minutes
Servings
madeleines
Ingredients
Instructions
  1. Melt 30g of the butter in a small pan, then brush your madeleine tray lightly with butter.
  2. Melt the remaining butter on a medium-low heat and keep cooking until it is just brown and smells nutty. Immediately remove from the heat and pour the butter into a separate bowl to stop it from cooking any further.
  3. Whisk the eggs with the sugar, honey and pistachio until pale and thick.
  4. Sift the flour into the butter and beat in well, then cook on low heat for 1 minute stirring constantly. Leave to cool slightly.
  5. Stir in the butter mix into the sugar and eggs together with the baking powder. Finally stir in the chopped pistachios and leave to chill in the fridge for 1 hour. Meanwhile heat oven to 200C/180 fan.
  6. Spoon about 1 tsp into each mould (approx. 3/4 full), then bake in the middle shelf for 6-8 min or for mini madeleines 4-5 min. They should be golden and risen in the middle. Leave to cool slightly before turning out.
  7. Dust with icing sugar and ideally, serve warm.
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