Delicate and soft classic French cookies flavored with green tea powder, these Matcha Madeleines make the most delightful sweet treat. Invite your friends over and enjoy it with Japanese tea like sencha, hojicha, or genmaicha.
Calling all the matcha fans! The new green tea dessert recipe is (finally) in, and today I’m sharing a delicate and tasty Matcha Madeleines (or Green Tea Madeleines) recipe. If you love these delicious and soft classic French cookies and the unique flavor of matcha, then these delicious madeleines are definitely for you. Why Matcha? Well, it’s my favorite ingredient for sweets and it’s also becoming a popular ingredient here in the States.
The Classic Madeleines
Madeleine is a traditional small cake from Commercy and Liverdun in northeastern France. They are small sponge cakes with a shell-like shape, traditionally flavored with just vanilla, but some also include lemon zest, which is also one of my favorites.
I’ve been making these classic French Madeleines for some time. Most recipes you see are very similar as it’s rather a simple recipe, and I have tested different recipes to see which one my family likes the most. When I tried the recipe from Julia Child’s From Julia Child’s Kitchen, I really liked how perfectly the Madeleines turned out. Since then, I always come back to this recipe, but I changed the ingredients and methods a little bit over time.
There’s no reason to be intimidated by these French tea cakes. Madeleines are probably one of the easiest baking recipes I’ve made, and since my son loves them it’s also one of the cakes that I make most frequently.
Tips to Make Matcha Madeleines
Here are some tips that will help you make good Madeleines.
- Use room-temperature eggs as they expand in volume when beaten. If you forget to take them out of the fridge, submerge chilled eggs in warm water for several minutes.
- Rest the batter in the refrigerator for at least one hour. I usually just refrigerate the batter overnight. By chilling the batter, it helps to give the madeleines their distinctive bumps (the bulging shape of the cookies).
- Don’t be shy about butter when coating the molds. It helps you take Madeleines out of the pan after baking as well as achieving nice golden color.
- Use a 1 Tbsp measuring spoon to transfer the batter. It’s the easiest way to measure the exact amount for each mold and not overfill.
- Use good quality matcha. The good quality matcha should have a bright green color, not dull green. By the way, you can’t grind regular “green tea leaves” to make matcha. More about matcha below.
- Use metal pans as I think they conduct heat better than silicone molds, but I’ve seen some people make beautiful Madeleines with silicon molds, so it’s up to you.
Where to Get Matcha
If there is a Japanese supermarket nearby, try checking their tea section for culinary use matcha. In my local Japanese supermarkets, they carry several grades of matcha powder including this Maeda-en brand matcha powder. In my local Asian supermarkets, I haven’t found 100% matcha powder yet. Be aware of some packages that are labeled “matcha”. Unfortunately, it’s not real matcha and it’s most likely a package for a cold drink that contains matcha and sugar. When it’s 100% matcha, the price should be around $8-10 for 1 ounce (28 grams). Yes, matcha powder is considered very expensive even in Japan. And get a small bag because you will need to use it within 2-3 weeks.
How to Enjoy Matcha Madeleines
From all my taste tests for this recipe, I got to enjoy Matcha Madeleines as an afternoon snack with my children. Instead of European tea, I recommend enjoying these madeleines with Japanese tea, like sencha (煎茶), hojicha (ほうじ茶), or genmaicha (玄米茶). The Japanese teas go much better with matcha-flavored snacks and sweets. I am getting hungry just talking about this dish, time to go open my snack container and enjoy one before my family eats them all. Till next time…
Other Delicious Matcha Recipes
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Matcha Madeleines
Video
Ingredients
- ½ cup unsalted butter (1 stick, 4 oz, 8 Tbsp; plus 1 Tbsp for coating the pans)
- ⅔ cup sugar
- 1 cup all-purpose flour (plain flour) (weigh your flour or use the “fluff and sprinkle“ method and level it off; plus 1 Tbsp for dusting the pans)
- ¼ tsp Diamond Crystal kosher salt
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1 Tbsp matcha (green tea powder) (1 Tbsp matcha is 6 g)
- 2 large eggs (50 g each w/o shell) (at room temperature)
- 1 Tbsp whole milk (at room temperature)
- 1 Tbsp confectioners’ sugar (optional, for dusting)
Instructions
- Before You Start: I highly encourage you to weigh your ingredients using a kitchen scale for this recipe. Click on the “Metric“ button at the top of the recipe to convert the ingredient measurements to metric. If you‘re using a cup measurement, please follow the “fluff and sprinkle“ method: Fluff your flour with a spoon, sprinkle the flour into your measuring cup, and level it off. Otherwise, you may scoop more flour than you need.
- Gather all the ingredients. You will need 2 madeleine pans.
- Melt ½ cup unsalted butter in a small saucepan over medium low heat. Be careful not to burn the butter. Once melted completely, transfer to a small bowl and let it cool.
- In a large bowl, add ⅔ cup sugar. Then sift 1 cup all-purpose flour (plain flour), ¼ tsp Diamond Crystal kosher salt, 1 tsp baking powder, and 1 Tbsp matcha (green tea powder).
- Whisk it all together to combine.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together 2 large eggs (50 g each w/o shell) and 1 Tbsp whole milk until frothy.
- Add the egg mixture into the flour mixture. Using a rubber spatula, stir until just combined.
- Slowly add half of the cooled melted butter. Make sure to blend the butter and mixture well before you add more butter. Mix until just blended and do not overmix.
- Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and refrigerate to rest the batter for 3 hours, or if you have the time, overnight (highly recommended). If you don‘t bake it soon, put the batter in an airtight bag and store it in the freezer for up to 2 weeks.
- Center a rack in the oven and preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C). For a convection oven, reduce cooking temperature by 25ºF (15ºC).
- Melt 1 Tbsp butter in the microwave. Using a pastry brush, brush the butter in the molds of two full-sized madeleine pans (12 wells per pan). Then, using a fine-mesh strainer, lightly dust 1 Tbsp flour over the molds.
- Remove the batter from the refrigerator and fill each mold in the madeleine pan with 1 Tbsp of the batter. I scoop the batter with a 1 tablespoon measuring spoon and transfer the batter into each mold with a mini rubber spatula. No need to smooth out the batter in the mold as it’ll melt in the oven.
- Bake at 375°F (190°C) for 11–13 minutes, or until their edges looks done and the tops spring back when touched.
- Remove the pan from the oven and let cool for 3 minutes. Using a fork, gently release the madeleines from the molds and transfer them onto a cooling rack.
To Serve
- The madeleines are ready to serve when they are slightly warm or at room temperature. Dust the tops with 1 Tbsp confectioners’ sugar, if desired. If you are storing/freezing the madeleines, do not dust with sugar until you are ready to serve.
To Store
- Madeleines get dry rather fast and are best eaten within a few hours after they came out of the oven. To store them longer, let the madeleines cool COMPLETELY. Then you can freeze them (they‘ll keep for 2 months) or place them in a resealable plastic bag (and enjoy within 48 hours). Defrost the madeleines at room temperature first before dusting with confectioner’s sugar. The nice crunch they have right after being baked will slowly fade away and the madeleines will become soft.
Notes
2. Using the spoon, sprinkle the flour into your dry-cup measure (the one that measures exactly a cup at the top).
3. Scrape off the excess with a knife. Recipe adapted from Julia Child’s “From Julia Child’s Kitchen”. All images and content on this site are copyright protected. Please do not use my images without my permission. If you’d like to share this recipe on your site, please re-write the recipe in your own words and link to this post as the original source. Thank you.
I mixed the recipe in double because I wanna share to all my friends at work, I bought the best powder matcha same as yours, I will bake it tomorrow morning and I don’t have a metal mold so I’m baking it with my silpat madeleines mode
Hi Elanore! I’m sorry for my late response. How did it go? I don’t own silpat madeleine mold. Did the madeleines come out well? Hope you and your coworkers enjoyed this recipe!
Nami’s Recipes never disappoint!!! This is another great recipe that I’d keep! One question for Nami, if I left out the matcha powder, will the madeleines still come out good? Thanks again for another great recipe!
Hi Fiona! Aww thank you so much for trying this recipe and I’m so happy to hear yours came out well. 🙂 Do you mean non-matcha recipe? You can try this:
I make with lemon zest and lemon juice. 🙂
1 Tbsp. lemon juice (instead of milk)
1 Tbsp. lemon zest (instead of matcha)
1 tsp. vanilla
Hope you enjoy!
Just attempted to make this whatever came out tasted great but not presentation-wise …was wondering why my battery was sticky even resting it overnight…thanks for awesome recipes…such an inspiration
Hi Michelle! I googled and found that it helps if you add baking powder or add corn starch. It also helps if you can let them cool down quickly, instead of leaving on the counter for a long time. I had never tried it before, but hope this will help!
Hi Nami, just wondering can I substitute the AP flour with almond flour? Thank you 🙂
Hi Liz! Hmmm I usually see some portion being almond flour but not 100% almond flour. If you are gluten free, maybe that’s the only way (except for using GF all purpose flour). I am not sure as I have never tried, but if you try, let me know how it works!
Thank you Nami, it’s my friend who asked me if i can make it with Almond Flour. I’ll try it next time, if it works I’ll let you know 🙂
Hi!
I tried this recipe today and the madeleines turned out not like the nice shape that you have. Mine are not spreading all the way around the mold and the center part is bulged like a ‘pregnant’ madeleine! I also yielded exactly 24 madeleines using the 1 tbsp technique for each mold. I was using a nonstick pan, and I noticed that you have a tinned pan. I baked them right away after taken them out from refrigeration.
Here are my guess for what could be the cause of the problem: –
The mixture was still too cold when it’s inserting into the oven (it’s winter time and my house is on the colder side) .
Have you or your other reader experienced this problem? Could you please share them if there are? Thank you!!
P/S: I am going to return my non-stick pan and buy a tinned pan just like yours and try again!
Hi Vivienne! If you look at my video around 1:50, you see my batter is pretty hard when I take out from the fridge. I “scraped” the batter to place on the madeleine pan. Due to filming set ups between each scene, I didn’t immediately put the pan into the oven. However, it didn’t “fill up” the mold yet when I put the pan in (2:12 in video).
I haven’t heard any feedback regarding the batter didn’t fill up/spread out to mold before. The center should have a nice bump and it’s the key for success for madeleine. I wish I know what went wrong… I’ve received positive feedback on this recipe so far, so it should really work, and I wish I know the answer…
I read the review about the pan and I recommend my madeleine pan. Oh, did you flour and grease with batter even non stick?
I followed this recipe to a tee and it turned out great! Thank you for meticulously writing the steps down, Nami. Nice balance of sweet and the pleasantly ever-so-slight bitterness of the matcha. I am in Italy and I used farina tipo 00 ‘per dolci’, lievito vanigliata (I could not find ordinary baking soda so settled for the commonly-sold one scented with vanilla), and cane demerara sugar as I am trying to get away from processed white sugar. Local sea salt – hey, why not make it special! 🙂 All worked well together, and it was my first time baking with Italian ingredients so was holding my breath!
Hi Theresa! I’m super excited and happy to hear you enjoyed this recipe and thank you for your kind feedback! I love that you used local Italian ingredients. Making it all special. 🙂 I often wonder if my long instructions discourage my readers… 😀 So thank you for your kind words!
I’ve used this recipe multiple times and it is soooo delicious! My only complaint would be that these madelines only taste best right out of the oven. The next day they have a thicker consistency and do not taste as good as the first day. Other than that, they are really yummy! Thank you for this recipe!
Hi Janice! I’m so happy to hear you like this recipe! Maybe the madeleine gets too much moisture? How about toasting/baking before you eat? It’ll be nice and crispy. 🙂
Great idea! I’ll try that next time I make them! 🙂 Thank you!
Hi nami,i have tried this recipe yesterday evening & i really love it. However, my madeleines tasted a bit dense & not fluffy enough.. Which area should i improve?
Hi Sandra! Thank you for trying this recipe! Since you mentioned “dense”, my first question is if you used a kitchen scale to measure flour. I think you might have more flour compared to wet ingredients. Please see Note 1 in the recipe about how you measure accurately with cups. If you use a kitchen scale, then maybe sifting wasn’t enough, or was the oven temp was too high for your oven? It could be other reasons but I’m not sure with limited information. 🙂
Hi Nami, I’ve been admiring your recipes/blog for a while, but didn’t dare to try any of the recipes so far in case I stuffed them up.
I tried this madeleine recipe recently and can’t believe how easy it is and how well they turned out! It was my first time ever making madeleines. I’m so excited to make another batch of these again. Everyone who tasted them said they’re really yummy. Thanks for posting 🙂 🙂 I will start attempting more of your other recipes!
(P.S. Also love that you included a video tutorial – very helpful!)
Hi Kath! Aw I’m so glad you tired this recipe! It’s pretty easy to make (only problem is you need the special baking pans!). My daughter brought these to the class (for her birthday) and they were well received. Yes, try more recipes! I’m in a process of creating “Beginner” category… I just started and stopped. I hope you start from these recipes (once I create it). 🙂
https://www.justonecookbook.com/tags/easy/
(see? I only put a few so far…)
I LOVE this recipe! It was simple, and they turned out perfectly. I love the detail you put into your blog, with step by step, and the video; it made it impossible for me to mess up! 😉
used Tealyra (www.tealyra.com) “Everyday Matcha”, and it had just the right amount of matcha flavor.
This recipe is a keeper! Thank you!
Hi Christine! Thank you!!! I’m so glad to hear yours came out well too! Thank you for your kind words about my recipe/video. 🙂 I like to keep it as detailed as possible (although I may forget some stuff once in a while…). 🙂 I’ve never heard of that tea company before. Thank you for sharing!
Hi Nami, I discovered the reason why my madeleines didn’t rise. I mistook my tub of icing sugar for all purpose flour…silly me! Gonna try your recipe again 🙂
Hi Chloe! Thanks so much for letting me know! Good luck next time! 🙂
Just made matcha madeleine today :), super moist and delicious! kids loved it too . Thank you Nami!
Hi Liz! Yay!! I’m so happy you liked it! Thanks so much for your kind feedback. 🙂
Just wondering Nami, can I substitute the green tea with chocolate powder?
Thank you.
Hi Liz! Yes, you can do that. 🙂
Hi Nami,
How long does this madeleine last ?
Hi Elizabeth! I wrote in Step 13) Store COMPLETELY cooled madeleines in an airtight container for a few days (best enjoyed within 24 hours) or wrap individual madeleine in plastic wrap and put in a freezer bag for 2 months. Defrost the madeleines at room temperature first before dusting with confectioner’s sugar. Hope this helps!
Thank you Nami!
Hi Nami, do you have lemon Madeleine recipe? Can I substitute green tea with lemon?
Thank you,
Liz
I make with lemon zest and lemon juice. 🙂
Add/swap:
1 Tbsp. lemon juice (instead of milk)
1 Tbsp. lemon zest (instead of matcha)
1 tsp. vanilla
Hi Nami,
I’ve baked using your recipe several times and they taste delicious. However, every time, the hump on my madeleine is much bigger than yours. Is there a reason for that?
Thanks.
Hi Rachel! So happy to hear you enjoyed this recipe! I have read a few articles/recipes that say the longer you keep in the fridge, the higher the hump is, and recommend to keep the batter overnight in the fridge. For the video (I try to remember…) I think I only store for several hours. Is yours overnight? If so, I guess we know the reason… If not, I’m not too sure why… 🙂
Ohhh, yes I left it in the fridge overnight. Thanks for the info ^_^
Hi Nami,
Hope this email finds you well. I made your green tea chiffon cake for the first time and it was oishii! I love the green tea glamour and the fluffiness if the cake. Thank you for sharing the wonderful recipe. 🙂
For the Madeleines, can I use soy milk instead?
Please advise. Thank you.
Thank you Cindy! So happy to hear you liked the chiffon cake! I have never used soymilk for Madeleine before. I’m sure you can use the milk but I don’t know how they come out – taste, moisture, etc. Let us know if you try! 🙂
Hi Nami, I have tried this twice, but every time the dough turned out hard after I put into the fridge. Also the cookie became ball-shape looking than a perfect shell if you know what I mean. I notice the milk you used in the video looks more like one table spoon, or could be some other reason that I don’t know.. Please help! They still taste heavenly btw.
Hi Song! Oh my gosh, I’m sorry I didn’t respond to your comment… your comment notification had become “read” in my Inbox by accident, and I didn’t read your comment till now!
I truly apologize for my delayed response.
The dough does become hard. It’s not liquid when you place on the madeleine pans (see my video?). I understand what you mean, so basically the ball shape stayed that way till after you bake and it doesn’t deform into madeleine shape…
And yes, I use 1 Tbsp. milk. Did you see anywhere that I wrote other measurement than 1 Tbsp.??? If so, let me know!
Hope I can help you make nicer shape Madeleine!!
Thanks for your reply Nami:) No worries, I haven’t got time to experiment again since I post the question. No, you did’t write anywhere other measurements, I was just guessing the milk would be the reason. I also skipped using flour to coat the pan but only used olive oil. Maybe that’s why. Well, thanks again and next time I will follow exactly and hope they will turn out looking better:)
Hi Song! He hee, that’s it! You have to use flour (and butter). 😀 It is eventually becoming a part of cookies (flour + butter). Yours will be great next time! 😉
Thank you for sharing another matcha recipe! I just know I’ll love these. Now to find a madeline pan! 🙂
Hi Donna! Yes, you’ll love these. It’s REALLY easy to make (and dangerous)! 😉