Homegrown, homemade and other good stuff for the soul
Wednesday, October 14, 2015
Roasting Figs in Fig Leaves
If you like figs, you will really enjoy this post. I found the pic below of roasted figs wrapped in fig leaves that chef Alex Guarnaschelli posted on her Facebook page recently. She described them this way - "These are baked figs from Italy.They are
wonderfully chewy and seedy and sweet and taste like candy and dirt and earth
and diamonds and emeralds and cake." Besides the taste description, what a cool look they have wrapped up in fig leaves! I knew immediately that I had to try to duplicate them at home. We love figs, and in fact, have three fig trees in our backyard. Fig season is winding down but there were enough ripe ones to pick to make this experiment do-able.
There is not much information available on the exact process but basically fresh figs are baked in a warm oven (170 - 200 degrees) for 12 hours where their flavor is concentrated and they become very sticky. Then they are pressed together into a ball and wrapped in fresh fig leaves to be baked again for several hours in a warm oven. I figured the fig leaves would add to the unique taste but was unsure if any herbs, spices, flavorings were added. And maybe wine or a liqueur of some kind? Since there is no information available on these kinds of details, I decided to add a few that made sense - a pinch of ground fennel seeds, a drizzle of honey, orange zest and a splash of red wine. I also found this interesting video that shows a commercially made fig ball being opened -
Here are our figs after being roasted overnight in a covered ceramic crock with the fennel, honey, orange zest and wine. They shrunk quite a bit but they did not dry out and become hard. The kitchen smelled great by the way -
I picked and washed 9 good looking fig leaves, fanned them out in a circle and piled the figs in the middle with their juices.
Wrapped the leaves around the figs and tied with some cotton yarn (thanks Lisa). And placed the "ball" back into the crock for the second low and slow roast.
Here is the fig ball back out of the oven after a 5 hour bake.
Here is the fig ball being opened. The figs were plump,moist and chewy. The taste was everything I had hoped for - earthy, sweet, figgy with hints of orange and anise, maybe not the "diamonds, emeralds and cake" that chef Alex described but that's OK, because I'm glad they didn't taste like cake. Really very nice and will definitely make more next year.
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