French Canelés Recipe | Chocolate & Zucchini (2024)

I tasted my first canelé some seven years ago, at Eric Kayser’s boulangerie on rue Monge. Maxence had a friend who lived nearby, they often worked on school projects together, and whenever they felt like a break and a snack, this is where they would go. Maxence adored their canelés, ordered them often, and made me try them.

Delicious. Simply delicious.

Canelés (alternate spelling: cannelés) are made from a batter that resembles a crepe batter. It is poured into copper molds of a special cylinder shape (sort of like a short section of a Roman tower) and baked at a high temperature until a darkly caramelized crust develops, hiding and protecting a moist, tender and slightly chewy heart. The batter also calls for vanilla and rum, so canelés are intensely flavored but not too sweet, and they have a freshness, a cleanness of taste that makes you want to eat half a dozen in one sitting. But of course, um, you don’t. You do, however, eat them for breakfast, dessert or just a snack in the afternoon.

Canelés are a specialty from Bordeaux that dates back (most likely) from the 18th century. It remained pretty obscure for centuries until a brotherhood of the canelé was created to promote it in the 80’s. Their efforts were very successful and the canelé came back in style over the following years — it can now be found in almost every boulangerie in Paris. (A cynical and/or well-informed friend told me once that pastry stores loved canelés because they keep really well and you can just keep selling the same stale ones for days before you have to throw them out.)

The traditional canelé is baked in copper molds, but those are pricy and rather tedious to use (you have to butter or beeswax them like your life depends on it), so nowadays home bakers use silicone molds — not exactly the same results, but good enough.

Maxence bought ours at a market stand on vacation a few years ago, and I’ve been using my aunt’s recipe to make frequent batches of canelés.

The batter is so easy to put together it’s really laughable, and then it’s just a matter of waiting — for the batter to rest, and for the canelés to bake and cool down. They keep very well for a few days in a metal box: the crust will soften (some people like that) but you can just put them back into the warm oven (say 200° C, or 400 °F) for five minutes and then let them cool again before eating: they will regain some of their original crustiness.

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Canelés Recipe

Prep Time: 20 minutes

Cook Time: 1 hour, 10 minutes

Total Time: 24 hours

Makes about 20 medium canelés.

French Canelés Recipe | Chocolate & Zucchini (4)

Ingredients

  • 500 ml (2 cups) milk
  • 30 g (2 tablespoons) semi-salted butter, diced
  • 1 vanilla pod, split, or 1 teaspoon vanilla extract or paste
  • 100 g (3/4 cup) all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon fine sea salt
  • 180 g (1 cup minus 2 tablespoons) sugar
  • 3 eggs
  • 80 ml (1/3 cup) good-quality rum

Instructions

  1. Combine the milk, butter and vanilla in a medium saucepan, and bring to a simmer.
  2. In the meantime, combine the flour, salt, and sugar in a medium mixing-bowl.
  3. Break the eggs in another, smaller bowl, and beat gently without incorporating air.
  4. When the milk mixture starts to simmer, remove from heat, fish out the vanilla pod if using, and set aside to cool for 15 minutes.
  5. Pour the eggs all at once into the flour mixture (don't stir yet), add in the milk mixture, and stir until well combined (do not whisk).
  6. Scrape the seeds from the vanilla pod with the dull side of a knife blade, and return the seeds and pod to the mixture. Add the rum and stir.
  7. Let cool to room temperature on the counter, then cover and refrigerate for at least 24 hours and up to 3 days.
  8. The next day (or the day after that, or the day after that), preheat the oven to 250° C (480° F).
  9. Butter the canelé molds if they are made of copper (unnecessary if you're using silicone molds). Remove the batter from the fridge: it will have separated a bit, so stir until well blended again, without whisking or incorporating air.
  10. Pour into the prepared molds, filling them almost to the top.
  11. Put into the oven to bake for 20 minutes, then (without opening the oven door) lower the heat to 200° C (400° F) and bake for another 30 to 40 minutes, depending on your oven and how you like your canelés.
  12. The canelés are ready when the bottoms are a very dark brown, but not burnt. If you feel they are darkening too fast, cover the molds with a piece of parchment paper.
  13. Unmold onto a cooling rack (wait for about 10 minutes first if you're using silicon molds or they will collapse a little) and let cool completely before eating.

https://cnz.to/recipes/cookies-small-cakes/caneles-recipe/

Unless otherwise noted, all recipes are copyright Clotilde Dusoulier.

This post was first published in October 2005 and updated in March 2016.

French Canelés Recipe | Chocolate & Zucchini (2024)

FAQs

How do you serve Caneles? ›

They taste so good that they are traditionally served plain. In fact, some purists might even say they are not REAL Canelés unless they are served plain, without a sauce.

How do you season copper canele mold? ›

You can also season with organic beeswax. Pour the melted beeswax into each mould, pour out the excess back onto the pan and then turn upside down on a metal rack with a pan underneath to remove excess wax. Then place in your oven right way up on a baking sheet and bake 300 °F or 150 °C for 10 minutes.

What is the origin of the Canele? ›

The name canelé comes from the French word for “fluted.” According to cookbooks, the cannele Bordelaise could date back to anywhere between the 15th and 18th centuries, and most of the history books concur that the pastry originated in various convents around the winemaking regions of Bordeaux in Southern France.

Why are canelé so expensive? ›

Traditional cannelé molds are made from tin-lined copper that's relatively thick for the size of the mold, to promote even heating and good caramelization. But the copper molds are expensive, and bakers now have the option of cheaper silicone ones.

Should you warm up a canelé? ›

Cannelé are believed to be best 1 to 5 hours after baking. To refresh, heat cannelé in 450 degree oven for five minutes. Baked cannelé can be frozen (individually wrapped in plastic wrap) for up to one month. Remove from freezer and while still frozen, bake unwrapped at 500 degrees Fahrenheit for 5 minutes.

What is the best mould for canelé? ›

Using traditional copper canelé moulds is the assurance of best baking results. This material allows for perfect heat distribution and ensures optimal and regular caramelization of the canelé.

What is the best mold for caneles? ›

The authentic tinned copper mold is ideal to bake cannelés. Because it absorbs and conducts heat better, the cannelés are crusty and caramelized on the outside, and soft on the inside.

Why is canelé not crispy? ›

You MUST let the batter rest for at least 24 hours; if you don't, you'll end up with tough caneles. You SHOULD let the caneles rest for an hour before consuming, to allow the exterior to crisp up.

What is a fun fact about Caneles? ›

The dessert comes from Bordeaux, a top wine producing region, where they used egg whites to seal the wine barrels. Finding themselves with too many egg yolks, this dessert was created! And since it was a port town, rum and vanilla were later added to the mix.

Why are Caneles so good? ›

Perhaps the most important thing that goes into the treat's production isn't an ingredient. Instead, what about the classically copper mold that gives it its distinctive shape? Copper is a fantastic conductor of heat, thus giving the Canelés their perfect texture.

Why use beeswax in canelé? ›

Beeswax, according to Paula Wolfert's cannelé recipe in her cookbook 'The Slow Mediterranean Kitchen' is one of the secrets to creating that glossy, dark crust. Melted, combined with safflower oil and brushed in a very fine film onto metal cannelé molds, the 'white oil' helps in the caramelization process.

How do you heat up canelé? ›

FOR CANELE. On the day of receiving your canelé, you can keep at room temperature. If it can't be consumed finish over night please keep cool in refrigerator. You may heat up using air fryer, oven or microwave for 5~10 minutes at 180 degrees.

When should I eat canelé? ›

A canelé is best enjoyed on the day it is made. That is when you get the best contrast between the crisp, caramalised crust and soft middle. However, some people find this texture too crispy and prefer to wait a day until the canelé is more soft. They will last for 5 days in the fridge.

What does a canelé taste like? ›

Rich, moist, custardy interior is sealed into a thin, crispy, caramelized shell. As you bite into them, there is a distinct crackling sound; then your teeth sink into soft, sweet, and custardy goodness.

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