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  • Fig Preserve with Port

Fig Preserve with Port

Posted on Feb 2nd, 2012
by Brooke
Categories:
  • Jam

My Dad asked if I was adding sherry to my fig jam. I hadn’t thought of it, but then again, I poached the pears that way last year and believe it would be delicious. I adopted this Fig Preserve from Hunter-Angler-Gardner-Cook that had been made with ouzo. I had port on hand, incase you’re wondering why I used neither suggestion.

The authors notes are particularly interesting, although I did choose to leave out the citric acid. I didn’t have fresh, so I started with dry figs that were soaked over night in apple-pectin water:

I add a little salt and bay leaves to this recipe to make it a little more complex. It is still sweet enough for a breakfast spread, but the herbal note from the bay lets this jam come into the dinner menu, too. The citric acid adds a little zing to the jam, and it helps preserve it, too. You can find it online or through beer brewing shops. Makes 3 pints. It should last at least a year.

This makes a loose jam. The skins of the figs tend to stay the same size no matter how long you cook them, so be mindful when you are chopping — you don’t want big hunks of fig skin in the jam when you’re trying to spread it on toast, do you?

  • 4 pounds figs
  • Zest and juice of two lemons, washed in warm-soapy water to remove any wax
  • 1 tsp. citric acid (optional – I omitted)
  • 1 tsp sea salt
  • 4 cups sugar (I used organic cane sugar)
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 1 cup port or sherry
  1. Zest and juice the lemons and set aside. Chop the figs roughly into small pieces. Add the bay leaves, salt, sugar, citric acid, lemon juice and zest,  plus half a cup of port to the figs and mix well. Let stand at room temperature, covered, for one to two hours (I started this in the morning before I had breakfast and then prepared my jars).
  2. Bring the mixture to a simmer over medium heat and let this cook down for 45 minutes to an hour, stirring often.
  3. When the jam is done, turn off the heat, wait for it to stop simmering and then stir in the rest of the port. Remove the bay leaves.
  4. Pour the fig jam into sterilized pint jars and seal. Post process in boiling water for 10 minutes (as per Benardin’s fig jam recipe).

A few additional points about cooking with figs from About.com:

  • Figs produce protein-digesting enzymes that break down muscle and connective tissue in meat, making them an excellent tenderizer as well as flavor-enhancer.
  • Dried figs can be used interchangably with prunes, dried apricots, and dates in most recipes.
  • When chopping dried figs by hand with knife or scissors, dip cutting implement into warm water occasionally to prevent sticking.
  • When chopping in a food processor, add some of the sugar called for in the recipe to prevent fruit from sticking.

For future reference, I bought 1lb of figs and I had enough to count out 36 figs (approx equivalent to 4 lb fresh figs that are required for most long boil recipes) and the remaining 500g of dried figs was for the Benardin pectin-jam. These are the conversions I used as a guide:

1 pound fresh figs = 9 medium or 12 small = 2-2/3 cups chopped
1 pound dried figs = 44 whole figs = 3 cups chopped

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Brooke

My name is Brooke and I love to cook, hence the nickname. I am passionate about eating for pleasure and nutrition, making jam, and Pilates.

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