Like any half-hearted confession, mine begins with a defense: I am not
a shopper. I love pointy shoes, of course, and pencil skirts, shrugs,
frilly things, and half-off items from the Marc Jacobs 2005 holiday
collection, but I’m not so into shopping, straight up. Though I
have wildly expensive taste—which, I might add, I cannot afford—I have
never been wild about exercising it. I go in pursuit of purchases only
once every few months or so, and then with a specific item in mind and a
single-minded purpose.
But within the wide world of shopping
malls, boutiques, and bazaars, there is one type of store that cuts
straight to the heart of this non-shopper. One step into the Bermuda Triangle of bakeware, cookware, and dishware, and all is lost. From City Kitchens to restaurant supply stores, Sur La Table, Williams-Sonoma, and the searing deals on The Mezzanine at Zabar’s, I am a crying, shopping shame. And the worst part, gentle reader, is that I kind of like it.
In
times like these, I tell myself that no kitchen can have too many
pastry brushes, shapely or newfangled spatulas, or silicone this and
that. Those tiny fluted tart molds were cute, after all, curled softly
into my hand, and there was no stopping the Bundt pan that leapt onto
the counter in front of the cash register. Those mini loaf pans were an
accident, but I took them home and loved them anyway. I’d be inhuman,
surely, not to give a nod to the cheery Le Creuset display, its 5
½-quart rounds, 6 ¾-quart ovals, crêpe pans, oval au gratins, and paté
terrines. And the hours spent contemplating a set of highball glasses
that leaned at an angle not unlike Charles de Gaulle’s nose were, I swear, served in solemn salute to the French Resistance.
But
there’s no denying a certain something that crept onto my receipt and
into my shopping bag one evening last December, when I was supposed to
be buying candy cups to hold a batch of chocolate-dipped fruit-nut balls. It was an honest errand—for holiday gifts, no less!—until I saw that madeleine pan, slim, slick, velvety gray, and with curves in all the right places.
I could blame it on after-work fatigue, I suppose, but this time, I
dare say that fate sent me shopping. From the first batch, a few weeks
later, of chocolate madeleines with toasted almonds and coffee, it was hard to imagine things having gone any other way.
Buttery,
toasty, and deeply, darkly chocolatey, these little cakes melt on the
tongue, crumbling away to a gentle crunch of almond. With a smattering of coffee for bitter complexity and a cockeyed milk chocolate cap,
these
ruffly-edged sweets are worth a good swoon, or even a shopping
excursion. It’s enough, really, to make a girl believe in fate—and
occasional frivolity.
Chocolate Madeleines with Toasted Almonds and Coffee
These
madeleines were declared “a religious experience” and dubbed “brownies
of the angels” by one of my colleagues. But don’t be fooled by such
lofty praise: despite their refined appearance, delicate texture, and
outright deliciousness, they are astoundingly easy to make. This recipe,
adapted from a family friend, doesn’t even require a mixer. A note for
icing lovers: because these cakes are so rich, I tend to prefer my icing
on the light side, with parts of the madeleine left bare. But if you
want a good, heavy coat, you may want to double the quantities of the
icing ingredients listed below.
For madeleines:3 ounces raw almonds
12 Tbs (1 ½ sticks) unsalted butter, cut into large chunks
5 ounces good-quality semisweet chocolate (not chips), chopped
2/3 cup granulated sugar
3 Tbs unbleached all-purpose flour
1 Tbs finely ground coffee (decaf works fine, if you prefer)
3 large eggs
1 Tbs whiskey
For icing:
2 ounces good-quality milk chocolate, chopped
1 ½ Tbs unsalted butter
1 Tbs heavy cream
½ Tbs Kahlúa
Preheat the oven to 325 degrees Fahrenheit.
Spread
the almonds on a baking sheet, slide them into the oven, and bake for
8-10 minutes, or until toasty and fragrant. Set them aside to cool.
Increase
the oven temperature to 375 degrees, and spray a nonstick madeleine pan
(standard size, with wells three inches long) with a thin film of
cooking spray. Place the pan on a baking sheet.
Put the butter
and chocolate in a medium metal mixing bowl, and place the bowl over a
saucepan of simmering water. The bowl should not touch the water.
Stirring occasionally with a wooden spoon, melt the butter and
chocolate. When the mixture is smooth and velvety, remove it from the
heat, stir in the sugar, and set it aside to rest for 20 minutes.
Meanwhile,
place the cooled toasted almonds, flour, and coffee grounds in the bowl
of a food processor, and pulse to grind to a very fine powder.
When
the melted chocolate mixture is ready, add the eggs one at a time,
stirring completely after each addition. Add the whiskey and then the
almond mixture, stirring to mix well. Do not overmix.
Spoon the
batter into the wells of the madeleine pan, using about 1 good
tablespoon per well. Don’t worry about smoothing the batter; it will
spread evenly as it bakes. Bake the madeleines for 14-17 minutes, or
until the tops look dry and spring back lightly when touched. Use a
butter knife to gently coax each cake out of its well and onto a cooling
rack, scalloped side up. Allow the pan to cool slightly; then repeat
with the remaining batter.
When the all the madeleines are baked
and cooled, make the glaze. Place the milk chocolate and butter in a
small saucepan, and, stirring occasionally, melt them over low heat.
When the mixture is smooth, remove it from the heat, and stir in the
cream and Kahlúa. Using a teaspoon, drizzle a spoonful of glaze onto the
scalloped side of each madeleine.
Note: These cakes freeze beautifully.
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