Madeleine (cake) explained

Madeleines
Image Alt:The genuine petite Madeleines de Commercy
Alternate Name:Petite madeleine
Place Of Origin:France
Region:Commercy and Liverdun, Lorraine
Type:Cake
Main Ingredient:Flour, sugar, eggs, almonds or other nuts

The madeleine (in French pronounced as /mad.lɛn/, or [1]) or petite madeleine (in French pronounced as /pə.tit mad.lɛn/) is a traditional small cake from Commercy and Liverdun, two communes of the Lorraine region in northeastern France.

Madeleines are very small sponge cakes with a distinctive shell-like shape acquired from being baked in pans with shell-shaped depressions. Madeleine-style cookies are popular in a number of culinary traditions.

A génoise sponge cake batter is used. The flavour is similar to, but somewhat lighter than, sponge cake. Traditional recipes include very finely ground nuts, usually almonds. A variation uses lemon zest for a pronounced lemony taste.

British madeleines also use a génoise sponge cake batter but they are baked in dariole moulds. After cooking, these are coated in jam and desiccated coconut, and are usually topped with a glacé cherry.

Invention

Legend

Several legends are attached to the "invention" of the madeleines.[2] They have tended to center on a female character named Madeleine who is said to have been in the service of an important character in the history of Lorraine – although there is no consensus over the last name of the cook nor the identity of the famous character. Some consider that the illustrious patron was 17th-century cardinal and rebel Paul de Gondi, who owned a castle in Commercy.[3] Others consider that the inventor was named Madeleine Paulmier, who is said to have been a cook in the 18th century for Stanislaus I, duke of Lorraine and exiled King of Poland. The story goes that, in 1755, Louis XV, son-in-law of the duke, charmed by the little cakes prepared by Madeleine Paulmier, named them after her, while his wife, Maria Leszczyńska, introduced them soon afterward to the court in Versailles.[4] Much beloved by the royal family, they quickly conquered the rest of France.[5] Yet other stories have linked the cake with the pilgrimage to Compostela, in Spain: a pilgrim named Madeleine is said to have brought the recipe from France to Compostela,[6] or a cook named Madeleine is said to have offered little cakes in the shape of a shell to the pilgrims passing through Lorraine.

Other stories do not give the cake a Lorraine origin and lay its invention at the feet of pastry chef Jean Avice, who worked in the kitchens of Prince Talleyrand. Avice is said to have invented the Madeleine in the 19th century by baking little cakes in moulds normally reserved for aspic.[7]

First recipes

The term madeleine, used to describe a small cake, seems to appear for the first time in France in the middle of the 18th century. In 1758, a French retainer of an Irish Jacobite refugee in France, Lord Southwell, was said to prepare "cakes à la Madeleine and other small desserts".[8]

The appearance of the madeleine is indicative of the increasing use of metal molds in European baking in the 18th century (see also Canelés), but the commercial success of the madeleine dates back to the early years of the 19th century. Several mentions of the madeleine are made by culinary writers during the Napoleonic era, in particular in the recipe books of Antonin Carême and by famous gastronomer Grimod de la Reynière.

In Commercy, the production at a large scale of madeleines is said to have begun in the 1760s.[9] In addition to being sold at the rail station, thus accelerating their spread through the country,[4] it is likely that the cakes were exported to Paris along with the marmalade from Bar-le-duc and the croquantes from Rheims. By the end of the 19th century, the madeleine is considered a staple of the diet of the French bourgeoisie.

Literary reference

In In Search of Lost Time (also known as Remembrance of Things Past), author Marcel Proust uses madeleines to contrast involuntary memory with voluntary memory. The latter designates memories retrieved by "intelligence", that is, memories produced by putting conscious effort into remembering events, people, and places. Proust's narrator laments that such memories are inevitably partial, and do not bear the "essence" of the past. The most famous instance of involuntary memory by Proust is known as the "episode of the madeleine", yet there are at least half a dozen other examples in In Search of Lost Time.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Madeleine | Define Madeleine at Dictionary.com . Dictionary.reference.com . 20 March 2016.
  2. Book: Alan Davidson . The Oxford Companion to Food . 21 August 2014 . OUP Oxford . 978-0-19-104072-6 . 484–.
  3. Book: Sender . S.-G. . Derrien . Marcel . La grande histoire de la patisserie-confiserie française . 2003 . Minerva . 96, 272 . 9782830707250 .
  4. Book: Lonely Planet Food . From the Source - France: Authentic Recipes From the People That Know Them the Best . 1 August 2017 . Lonely Planet Publications . 978-1-78701-090-1 . 116–.
  5. Web site: La Citta Viola (Feb. 2007) . 7 March 2007 . 20 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160402172452/http://www.isfitaly.org/Data/Files/HtmlEditor_Files/file/documents/la_citta_viola-february_2007.pdf . 2 April 2016 . dead.
  6. Book: Larousse Gastronomique: The World's Greatest Culinary Encyclopedia . 2001 . Clarkson Potter . en.
  7. Web site: Food News, Recipes, and More . The Food Section . 18 April 2004 . 20 March 2016.
  8. Merrett . Robert James . Eating à l'Anglaise in Provincial France, 1750–1789 . Eighteenth-Century Life . 1999 . 23 . 2 . 84–96 .
  9. Book: Perrier-Robert . Annie . Dictionnaire de la gourmandise. Pâtisserie, confiserie et autres douceurs . 2012 . Robert Laffont . Paris . 9782221134030 . 1638 .