This is the late October recipe, when the cold truly sets in and maple stops being a seasonal flavor and becomes a real craving. Round, plump cookies, soft as cake, topped with a glossy icing that smells like caramel and warm syrup. A North American classic that deserves a place in any kitchen, well beyond the holidays.

Ingredients :
- Pure maple extract — Not the artificial flavor sold in small vials in the baking aisle — that tastes like sweet medicine and doesn’t hold up during baking. Pure extract has a warm, woody depth that remains even after 12 minutes in the oven.
- Amber or dark maple syrup — The darker, the more flavorful. Light syrup is fine for morning pancakes, not for an icing that needs character. Amber or dark grade brings a pronounced caramelized note.
- Buttermilk — It reacts with the baking soda and powder to leaven the dough and give it that cake-like softness. In a pinch: one cup of whole milk with a teaspoon of white vinegar, let sit 5 minutes — works perfectly.
- Soft butter, definitely not melted — The final texture depends entirely on this. Melted, the cookies spread on the sheet and brown too quickly. Soft — taken out of the fridge an hour before — they keep their round shape and rise properly.


