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(Hardcover)
They come fresh or dry, in yellow or purple, from California and Mediterranean and Middle Eastern countries. They are in restaurants, supermarkets, fruit stands, backyards, and inside some very famous cookies. What are they? They're figs one of America's favorite fruits.
From Mission and Kadota figs to Adriatic and Calimyrna varieties, award-winning cookbook author Marie Simmons leaves no fig or fig leaf unturned in this extraordinary book about this most extraordinary fruit: Fig Heaven.
Figs are harvested in late summer and early fall, but, fortunately for us, they are easily dried and packaged, so they're available all year long. Packed with vitamins and antioxidants, plump, fragrant figs are guilt-free indulgences that can be enjoyed in countless ways.
Fig Heaven is an inviting, comprehensive cookbook offering 70 recipes for both fresh and dried figs. They range from appetizers, salads, and sandwiches to entrées and desserts.
On the savory side, you'll find Open-Faced Dried Fig and Melted Blue Cheese Sandwiches; Fettuccine with Fresh Figs, Lemon, and Rosemary; and Lamb Pilaf with Artichokes and Dried Figs. If your sweet tooth needs some real satisfaction, there's a Fresh Fig and Peach Crumble, Dried Fig and Walnut Biscotti, and Molten Chocolate Roasted Figs with Vanilla Custard Sauce.
In her previous cookbooks (The Good Egg; Rice, The Amazing Grain; etc.), Simmons proved she could make an art out of a single ingredient. Now she takes on the historically significant, sensual and delectable fig. As in her earlier works, Simmons discloses the fabled history and resplendent diversity of a little-scrutinized food. When it comes to recipes, the author does not shun proven favorites, such as Classic Fig Drizzle (a honey, balsamic vinegar and rosemary dressing for figs), or Fresh Fig Tart, a summer choice. If the sugared decadence of ripe figs has a natural partner, it's the salty richness of cured pork, and Simmons makes a point of including several recipes that play up the combination to the hilt: Bacon-Wrapped Wine-Poached Dried Figs, Dried Fig and Apple-Stuffed Pork Loin with Cider Sauce, and Fresh Fig Risotto with Prosciutto di Parma. Equally alluring-if less expected-are Pan-Braised Duck Legs with Marsala and Fresh Fig Jam, and Dried Fig Cinnamon Scones. Part of a fig's considerable charm is its ability to seem equally comfortable in both sweet and savory settings, or in any part of the menu from soup to nuts. Unfortunately, figs have a short season, finicky growing conditions and are highly perishable. These factors make fresh figs pricey and narrowly available, unless, like Simmons, readers live in southern California and can grow a fig tree in their backyard. However, Simmons does offer plenty of recipes that call for easily obtainable dried figs. 8-page color insert. Agent, Judith Weber. (May) Forecast: Although Morrow plans a national broadcast and print media campaign, Simmons's cookbook is likely to resonate primarily with cooks on the West Coast, as that's where Simmons lives and writes, and it's where figs are most abundant. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsMarie Simmons is an award-winning cookbook author, Bon Appétit magazine columnist, and contributor to many magazines and newspapers. She lives in Richmond, California, with her husband, John, and a two-year-old Brown Turkey fig tree.