Gwajabang Yeonnam: Best Madeleine Cafe in Seoul Review

⚡ THE QUICK TAKE
  1. Gwajabang (과자방) — Yeonnam-dong’s most obsessive madeleine cafe, on the Gyeongui Line Forest Park walking trail.
  2. Dense glaze-coated madeleines · lemon glacé, organic Jeju matcha, hazelnut, chocolate, mascarpone · ₩4,000 ($3) each · house milk tea.
  3. The kind of bite you keep thinking about that night. Visited April and May 2026 — now my default Yeonnam takeout.

Forget every madeleine you’ve had. 과자방 (Gwajabang) in Yeonnam-dong does them denser, glazed all the way around, almost custard-firm inside — and once you’ve had one, you will think about it again at midnight. I went in April and May 2026, and the second visit was already a 25-minute line on a Tuesday afternoon.

Gwajabang lemon glacé madeleine - whole golden glazed shell-shaped madeleine on parchment paper
📍 WhereYeonnam-dong, Mapo-gu, Seoul (off Gyeongui Line Forest Park, near Hongdae)
🗺️ MapGoogle Maps · Naver Map
🚇 SubwayHongik Univ Stn (Line 2 / AREX / Gyeongui-Jungang) Exit 3 — 7-min walk along the park trail
🕒 HoursMon–Sat 12:00–21:00 · Closed Sundays · check IG @gwajabang_seoul
💰 Price~₩4,000 ($3 USD) per madeleine · milk tea ~₩6,500 ($4.5) · 3-piece takeout box ~₩12,000 ($8)
📖 English menuPartial — flavor names in Korean. Staff understand “lemon,” “matcha,” “chocolate”
💳 CardsVisa / Mastercard accepted
📞 ReservationWalk-in only · expect 20–30 min line on weekends · weekday afternoon is calmest
👔 NoteSmall interior (~10 seats) · takeout is the move · no parking

Cultural context: Korea is in a deep madeleine moment. Where French bakeries use the madeleine as a small after-meal cookie — light, airy, eat-in-one-bite — Korean patisseries have re-engineered it. Denser crumb, full glaze coating, multi-flavor variants (matcha, Earl Grey, hazelnut, mascarpone, chocolate). Gwajabang is one of the spots that started this wave — and despite a dozen copycats now in Yeonnam alone, it’s still the one Koreans line up for.

The Spot — Gyeongui Line Forest Park, Yeonnam-dong

Gwajabang is on a quiet side street off the Gyeongui Line Forest Park (경의선숲길) — the 6km abandoned-railway-turned-walking-trail that runs through Yeonnam-dong and Hongdae. Walk the park from Hongik University Station, watch for the orange “과자방” sign over a glass storefront.

Gwajabang shopfront - orange '과자방' signage over glass entrance with wooden door

Outside on the pavement, a small wooden sandwich board signals the door: “과자방 · 구운과자 · 케이크 · 커피” (“Gwajabang · baked sweets · cake · coffee”).

Wooden A-frame sandwich-board sign for Gwajabang on Yeonnam side street, with menu hand-painted in Korean

Inside, it’s small — maybe 10 seats — with sage-green walls, a brass chandelier, a tile floor, and a gallery wall of framed prints. A grandmother’s parlor crossed with a Paris patisserie. Most visitors take out; a few sit at the marble counter with a milk tea while they pick.

Gwajabang interior - sage-green walls, brass chandelier, framed photos on wall, seated customer at counter
Gallery wall of small framed prints, photos and silver-spoon shadow-boxes on sage-green wall

The Menu — Madeleines, in Many Flavors

The menu is on a small card on each table. Six core madeleine flavors rotate, with seasonal specials added. Pricing is uniform at ~₩4,000 ($3) each.

Madeleine flavor menu card with descriptions and small icons - lemon glacé, matcha, mascarpone, hazelnut, chocolate

From left to right behind the glass: lemon glacé (the signature, white-icing-glazed and tart), chocolate-coated, hazelnut-crumble, cocoa-shell, organic Jeju matcha (vivid green from Jeju tea-leaf powder), plain butter. Trays restock through the afternoon — there’s a real chance the flavor you want will already be sold out if you arrive after 4pm on a weekend.

Display rack of Gwajabang madeleines - rows of lemon glacé, plain, chocolate-coated, hazelnut, matcha, cocoa flavors in shell shape

The pastry case beyond the madeleines also has small fruit tarts, cheesecake squares, financier-style butter cakes, and seasonal cream slices — all from the same kitchen.

Two angles of the patisserie display case - small dessert squares and chestnut/strawberry-topped pastries

Lemon Glacé Madeleine — The Signature

This is the dish. The signature 레몬글라세 마들렌 (lemon glacé madeleine) is the one to start with. The classic shell shape, but coated all the way around in a thick white lemon-glaze shell that cracks just slightly when you bite. Inside, the crumb is denser than a French madeleine — custard-tight, butter-rich, almost set-cake in texture, with bright lemon zest threaded through. The glaze adds salt-and-sour-and-sweet in a single bite that gets all three notes in balance.

Half-eaten Gwajabang madeleine showing dense golden-yellow crumb and glaze coating, held in hand

Pair it with the 유기농 제주말차 마들렌 (organic Jeju matcha) — same dense crumb, vivid grass-green from real Jeju matcha powder, with a clean herbal bitterness that cuts the sweetness. The lemon-then-matcha order is the right one: start with the bright, end with the grounded.

Milk Tea + Iced Americano — Eat-In Order

If you’re sitting in, get the milk tea (밀크티, ₩6,500 / $4.5). It arrives in a small heavy black mug, the tea-leaves still infusing the surface — strong assam base, full-milk creamy, no sweetener by default. This is the right thing next to the lemon madeleine.

Gwajabang milk tea in dark black mug - creamy foamed surface, on white marble table

If you’re heat-acclimated, the iced Americano comes in a faceted ribbed glass, the kind every Korean cafe is using now. It’s a clean medium-roast, no acidity sharpness. A good palate-clear between the heavier flavor madeleines.

Iced Americano in faceted ribbed glass cup on white marble table - dark coffee with ice cubes
Full Gwajabang order - iced Americano in glass, milk tea in dark mug, two takeout paper bags with logo on white marble table

Takeout — The Move for Weekends

Because the interior is tiny and the line moves slowly, takeout is the move for weekends. You order at the counter, point at the madeleines you want, the staff packs them in a clean white kraft paper bag with the Gwajabang logo sticker, and you can walk straight back into the Gyeongui park trail to eat them on a bench. The boxed 3-piece (~₩12,000 / $8) makes a great gift takeout if you’re visiting Seoul-based friends or family.

Gwajabang takeout paper bag - white kraft paper with Korean logo sticker, on dark surface

Practical Notes for Visitors

  • Lines: 20–30 min standard on weekend afternoons. Tuesday–Thursday 14:00–16:00 is the quiet window.
  • Closed Sundays. Don’t plan a Sunday Hongdae walk around it.
  • Best 3 flavors to start: lemon glacé (the signature), Jeju matcha, hazelnut-crumble — these three cover the spectrum and travel well in a takeout box.
  • Where to eat them: grab the box, walk one block back to the Gyeongui Line Forest Park, find a bench under the cherry trees, eat with the milk tea.
  • No parking — take the subway. Hongik Univ Stn (Line 2/AREX) is the shortest walk.
  • Pair with a Hongdae cafe-hop: walk the Gyeongui park, hit Gwajabang for the madeleine, end at Matkkalson in Haebangchon for a Korean dinner, or Dongnip Millbang for Italian if you’re heading toward Seoul Station.

The Verdict

Gwajabang re-engineered the madeleine for the Korean palate — denser, glazed all the way around, in flavors a French baker would side-eye — and made it the standard that everyone else in Yeonnam now copies. The lemon glacé is the signature. The Jeju matcha is the sleeper. The milk tea is the right drink. The takeout is the smart move on weekends. Closed Sundays, so plan accordingly. Get the 3-piece box. Walk into the park. Eat them on a bench. Strong recommendation.

— THE FOODIESEOUL VERDICT —
★★★★½
4.5 / 5
“Seoul’s most obsession-worthy madeleine — dense, glaze-coated, the kind you keep thinking about at midnight. ₩4,000 ($3) each is fair for the quality.”

🍽️ Food
5.0
💰 Value
4.0
🌏 Foreigner-friendly
4.0
📍 Access
4.0

Best forHongdae/Yeonnam walking-day dessert · gift takeout box · post-park-trail sweet
Order thislemon glacé madeleine · organic Jeju matcha madeleine · milk tea (eat-in) or 3-piece takeout box