Fig

27 Fig Recipes Because They're *Finally* in Season

For breakfast, dinner, and dessert. Get 'em while you can.

June 26, 2020
Photo by Jenny Huang

This is probably a good time to mention that the best fresh figs are not usually the perfect, good-looking firm ones. Oh no! You want 'em soft, squishy, even oozing a bit of syrupy juice. Some of the best are the ones that have started to wrinkle a bit after sitting for a couple of days on your counter. If you are someone who just "doesn’t get" what the fuss about figs is all about, you haven’t tasted a good and properly ripe fig.

Photo by James Ransom

Figs can go sweet or savory. They love honey, or caramel, or cinnamon and sugar. They appreciate a little salt and/or pepper, and positively shine in the company of cultured dairy like sour cream, crème fraîche, yogurt, labneh, or quark—and all kinds of soft fresh or hard aged cheeses. They are crazy good with savory meats like prosciutto or bacon, so go ahead and stuff a sandwich or garnish a pizza. They also play nice with dark chocolate, and they’re nuts about nuts. And when it comes to cooking, figs are brilliant at the extremes: cooked either hot and fast—just to caramelize their cut sides—or long enough to stew in their own juices.

Figs, if they could talk, would insist that you make a composed plate with almost any assortment of the good things that I just mentioned. Here are 27 ways (ideas, recipes, and everything in between!) to make figs your jam:


Our 27 Best Fig Recipes

1. Fresh Figs with Greek Yogurt & Chestnut Honey

Arrange quartered of halved figs next to or atop a scoop of plain Greek yogurt. Drizzle with chestnut honey (or whatever delicious good honey you have). Need some crunch? Scatter almond, walnut, or pistachios pieces around the plate, or serve with cookies or toast.

Photo by Linda Xiao

2. Sliced Fig Halves, sprinkled with salt, & dolloped with any tangy cheese

That's it! That's the whole recipe. Thank us later. (We especially love this with black mission figs.)

3. Quartered Fresh Figs, in a Salad

Add fresh figs to any salad. Just rinse in water and pat with a soft kitchen cloth until dry. The skin of figs is totally edible and can be left on. Bonus points if it's a warm salad. (And psst: If raw figs aren't your thing, they can be baked or cooked under the broiler until caramelized.)

4. Honey Caramelized Figs with Goat Cheese (or Labneh)

Halve 3 or 4 figs per person. Heat a wide skillet over high heat and add enough honey to melt into a thin coating on the pan. Sprinkle the honey with a tiny pinch or two of salt and add the figs cut side-down, close together but in one layer. Cook until the honey bubbles and starts to caramelize, shaking the pan to slide the figs around. When the cut sides of the figs look brown and caramelized, remove the pan from the heat and flip the figs to coat them with glaze.

Join The Conversation

Top Comment:
“Warm figs and their syrup (with a sprinkling of green peppercorns) over vanilla ice cream is a pleaser. One of my faves though is quartered figs tossed into a caccio e pepe style pasta ... render some prosciutto before making your sauce, caccio e pepe style. Add in some fresh herbs and seasonings (I used rosemary from the garden). Toss your cooked pasta into the sauce and add some pasta water as needed. Melt in a small amount of soft gorgonzola, then finally toss in the quartered figs. Heat for another minute and you've got figgy heaven.”
— Pete
Comment

Divide the figs among serving plates and return the pan to the stove. Deglaze the pan with enough sherry, Madeira, or red wine to make a syrupy but not too thick sauce. Taste and add a squeeze of lemon to taste. Drizzle the sauce over the figs. Add a slice of fresh goat cheese or some labneh to each plate and grind a little pepper on top. Nothing more is needed, but you could serve with grilled sourdough or toasted walnut bread.

5. Fig & Olive Tapenade

Who said dried figs couldn't come to the party, too? This tapenade calls in Kalamata olives, stuffed green olives, balsamic vinegar, and yes, sweet dried figs for the ultimate crostini topper.

6. Figgy Toast with Feta & Honey

When figs are ripe to the point of being squishy and shriveled, mash with a fork on a piece of crunchy buttered toast. You can add a few crumbles of feta, or not—then drizzle with extra virgin olive oil, or honey, or honey and tahini, or date syrup, or a few drops of aged balsamic vinegar. Pass a little flaky sea salt and the pepper grinder.

7. Cheese-Stuffed Figs Dipped in Chocolate

Stuff figs with 1/2 teaspoon of fresh ricotta, mascarpone, or cream cheese. Chill until the figs are cold to the touch. Dip each in warm melted dark chocolate, setting them immediately on a parchment-lined tray. Chill immediately in order to set the chocolate evenly, and keep them refrigerated until shortly before serving. Sharing is fully optional.

8. Baked Figs with Vanilla Ice Cream or Crème Fraîche

Cut figs in half and arrange them (either side up) in a baking dish just big enough to hold them in one layer. Drizzle with two parts honey to one part balsamic vinegar (the inexpensive stuff works fine here) or lemon juice, and sprinkle with a pinch of salt. Cover tightly with foil and bake in a 375°F oven, until the figs are very tender and squishy and the juices are syrupy, 30 to 45 minutes.

Check in 10 to 15 minutes before the end of the baking time: If juices are thin and copious, finish baking uncovered. If the juices are too thick and syrupy before the figs are soft, add a little water. When the figs are nearly done, taste the syrup and adjust the flavor with honey, vinegar, a pinch of salt, or squeeze of lemon juice as necessary. Serve warm, hot, or cold with a scoop of vanilla ice cream or a dollop of crème fraîche. Figs keep in the fridge for at least a week.

9. Vanilla Fig Scones

Dried figs and vanilla bean come together in these hulking, craggy scones—perfect for a lazy Sunday breakfast in bed.

10. Drunken Honeyed Figs with Lemon Mascarpone Whipped Cream

A make-ahead dessert that celebrates the flavors of figs, complemented by citrusy, tangy mascarpone whipped cream.

11. Ricotta-Rosemary Cake With Fresh Figs

If you serve this effortlessly cool (and great-looking) single layer cake—topped with fresh figs, whipped cream, and crunchy rosemary sugar—good luck getting rid of your guests.

12. Caramelized Figs With Balsamic Glaze

Quarter fresh figs and toss with a little brown sugar, then caramelize in a skillet over a medium-high flame. Add a few drizzles of balsamic before removing from the heat, and toss. Serve over toast with ricotta, or on a bed of dressed arugula.

13. Fall Fig & Chicken Sandwich

What's the point of eating any other sandwich besides this one, stuffed with balsamic grilled chicken, blue cheese, caramelized onions, and sautéed figs? And did we mention it's served on chewy ciabatta bread?

14. Fresh Fig & Mint Salad

Fresh figs, meet perky mint. This Genius stunner is "dinner party-fancy and attention-grabbing, but requires little of your time," according to Kristen Miglore. Sign us way up.

15. Baked Figs With Balsamic & Feta

Take those overripe, crumply looking figs and park them right here in this recipe by Phyllis Grant, which calls in a balsamic reduction and the creamiest feta you can find.

16. Ricotta Crostini with Figs, Prosciutto & Honey

Ricotta, toasty bread, figs, proscuitto, and honey walk into a bar. (Except, it's not a bar, it's your mouth, and the only punchline is you'll go in for a second one almost instantaneously.)

17. Fig Upside-Down Cake

What better way to top a chestnut sponge cake than with sweet, fresh figs, gooey with brown sugar? No one would complain about a big dollop of whipped cream either.

18. Goat Cheese Ice Cream with Honey & Fig Jam

This honeyed French goat cheese ice cream is laced with stripes of fig jam, and we want 18 bowls of it.

19. Sheet Pan Chicken with Figs & Bread Salad

Dinner tonight: this simple sheet pan meal of crisp-skinned roasted chicken, macerated figs, arugula, and bread to sop up all the dressing and drippings.

20. Fig & Blue Cheese Tart with Honey, Balsamic & Rosemary

This classic puff pastry tart's flexible, like a weekend lunch should be: Use any kind of figs, skip or swap the cheese, add nuts—whatever you like.

21. Fig & Cardamom Spiced Tiramisu

Tiramisu gets a new twist, thanks to cardamom and dried figs. Top with shavings of a high-quality dark chocolate for balance.

22. Fall Fig & Chicken Sandwich

Make the most of the end of fig season with this sweet-meets-savory chicken sandwich, which gets finished off with a cheesy-herby spread and topped with caramelized onions, sautéed figs, fresh pears, and greens.

23. Fig & Blue Cheese Savouries

These crumbly thumbprint cookies are the perfect balance of tangy and sweet, not to mention, a cinch to make (you need just five ingredients and about 30 minutes!).

24. Fig Jam With Cardamom

Peak-season figs star in this spiced jam you'll want to slather on everything throughout the summer and fall season, from crispy buttered toast to juicy cheeseburgers.

25. Grilled Figs with Homemade Lavender Crème Fraîche

Fresh figs become even more luscious after a quick stint on the grill. A homemade crème fraîche lightly scented with lavender makes the perfect finishing touch.

26. Chocolate Ganache Tart with Fresh Figs

This chocolatey tart is simple and decadent all at once—it calls for just a buttery graham cracker crust and silky ganache filling. Oh, and a few fresh-sliced figs on top.

27. Fresh Fig Cornbread

For the most satisfying results, serve this fig-studded cornbread fresh from the oven with a dollop of creamy ricotta.


Say you've got a punnet of gorgeous figs. How do you put them to good use? Tell us in the comments.
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My career was sparked by a single bite of a chocolate truffle, made by my Paris landlady in 1972. I returned home to open this country’s first chocolate bakery and dessert shop, Cocolat, and I am often “blamed” for introducing chocolate truffles to America. Today I am the James Beard Foundation and IACP award-winning author of ten cookbooks, teach a chocolate dessert class on Craftsy.com, and work with some of the world’s best chocolate companies. In 2018, I won the IACP Award for Best Food-Focused Column (this one!).

10 Comments

Sarah L. July 26, 2020
Fit as many sweet, ripe figs as you can into a jar. Add bourbon to the top and then screw the lid on tight. Occasionally invert the jar to ensure distribution of flavors. After a month or so, the liquor will be heavenly sweet and a gorgeous purple hue.. so good over ice with sparkling water, a squeeze of lemon, and a rosemary or thyme sprig. Still try it to figure out how to use up the bourbon-soaked figs; will probably heat and reduce to a bourbon-fig jam.
 
Wendy A. September 4, 2019
I do halved black mission figs, a little bit of goat cheese on each one, then light drizzle with pomegranate molasses. All I need for lunch.
 
robin L. October 3, 2016
I love all these ideas. Another great one is by NYT's Melissa Clark: http://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/12663-tomato-fresh-fig-and-blue-cheese-salad
 
Frances Q. September 12, 2016
I had my very first fresh fig from my very own tree this past week. I am totally in love with them. It was soft, almost smushy, and wrinkled. I shared with my daughter, it was fabulous and I can't wait for the others to ripen up.
 
Smaug August 30, 2016
This may be true of brown figs- the green ones are much at their best right off the tree.
 
Smaug June 26, 2020
Also, they have a double season (at least the ones I used to grow)- the second crop, which matures in August, is generally of much higher quality than the early crop. Unfortunately, the gophers managed to kill off my tree (which had been there for about 50 years).
 
Sean R. August 29, 2016
When baking or pan cooking the figs, should they be as squidgy syrupy as when they're good to eat raw?

I'm always plagued by the few stragglers who decompose instead of ripening. It'd be great to use them instead of hopefully popping them in my mouth, realizing the error of my ways, and scooting to the garbage.

Pete, you lucky duck. I need to live in a different climate.
 
Pete August 29, 2016
Ah, figs! I'm lucky enough to have a bountiful fig tree in my yard. When I'm not fighting the squirrels and chipmunks for the latest crop, I'm putting the pickings to good use. The standard jams, preserves (try it with some habanero!), and glazes go into jars. Warm figs and their syrup (with a sprinkling of green peppercorns) over vanilla ice cream is a pleaser. One of my faves though is quartered figs tossed into a caccio e pepe style pasta ... render some prosciutto before making your sauce, caccio e pepe style. Add in some fresh herbs and seasonings (I used rosemary from the garden). Toss your cooked pasta into the sauce and add some pasta water as needed. Melt in a small amount of soft gorgonzola, then finally toss in the quartered figs. Heat for another minute and you've got figgy heaven.
 
BocaCindi August 29, 2016
I love figs too. Great post. Making fig, Gorgonzola, and bacon pizza tonight.
 
PHIL August 30, 2016
I make the figs on pizza too. I use them with prosciutto and smoked mozzarella.