New recipes and updates

Get new recipes
in your inbox

Cuisine Fiend https://www.cuisinefiend.com

Find a recipe by ingredient

Fig confit

Thu, 28 September, 2017

⯆ JUMP TO RECIPE
Forget chutneys and pickles - fig confit is the nicest possible condiment to have with cheese, cold beef, charcuterie, sausages, meatloaf, ploughman's sandwich, cheese...

Fig confit cuisinefiend.com

Something with figs but not jam was the objective. Why not jam? Because I’d be the sole consumer and however much I love jam, I only have it very occasionally.

Cook for yourself

Which is a wrong line of thinking and a wrong attitude. How many cooks with an uncharming audience of picky eaters never bother to make something they completely adore, only because ‘it’s not worth making it just for me’? Wrong – it’s worth it. You’ll appreciate it. You’ll be the worthiest consumer and the most objective critic.

Fig preserve cuisinefiend.com

Cooks are never fussy

You see, we the cooks are usually the adventurous lot. Fussy eaters are never good cooks. I strongly suspect that a lot of food phobias could be cured by the phobic preparing the dish, the product, the hateful foodstuff themselves.

I’m the least fussy person on earth but I wasn’t that keen on grilled fresh mackerel until I cooked it, understood that it needs to be salted like a herring and herbed like a medieval tincture before exposure to violent fire, best of all on a barbecue.

Cooking figs cuisinefiend.com

My favourite reconstructed fusspot, The Weather Man, has produced dishes he’d not have looked twice at before he started cooking seriously. You want to encourage versatility in your home eaters? Get them to help you cook. I know, I know, easier said.

Fresh fig confiture cuisinefiend.com

So taking the two points above, I know what I’ll do: I’ll get TWM to make fig jam. And then he’ll have to eat it too. For the time being though I give you fig confit, which is certainly worth making too.


Fig confit

Servings: makes 1 small jarTime: 30 minutes

INGREDIENTS

  • 200ml (scant cup) port, madeira or any sweet fortified wine
  • 100ml (½ cup) water
  • 100g (½ cup) caster sugar
  • 300g (10 oz.) fresh ripe figs
  • a sprig of rosemary
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 1 lemon, sliced thinly


METHOD

1. Heat the wine with sugar and water until the sugar dissolves. Stem the figs and cut them lengthwise into quarters. Add the figs to the pan, add the lemon slices, bay leaves and rosemary and simmer over low heat for 10-15 minutes until figs are soft but still hold their shape.

2. While the figs are cooking, wash a jam-sized jar and sterilise it for 15 minutes in an oven at 120C. When the figs are soft, scoop them out of the pan with a slotted spoon and transfer into the jar.

Drained figs cuisinefiend.com

3. Turn up the heat and bring the juice to the boil. Cook it for 5 minutes until it reduces, thickens and becomes syrupy. Fish out the herb and lemon or pour the syrup over the figs through a sieve.

4. Seal the jar, let it cool down and store in the fridge. It will keep for a couple of weeks.


NEW recipe finder

Ingredients lying around and no idea what to cook with them? Then use my NEW Recipe Finder for inspiration!

Recipe Finder


Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published

Characters left 800
Comment*
Recipe rating
Name*
Email address*
Web site name
Be notified by email when a comment is posted

* required

Cuisine Fiend's

most recent

About me

Hello! I'm Anna Gaze, the Cuisine Fiend. Welcome to my recipe collection.

I have lots of recipes for you to choose from: healthy or indulgent, easy or more challenging, quick or involved - but always tasty.


Newsletter

Sign up to receive the weekly recipes updates


Follow Fiend