Piggy Newtons Part 1- My Perfect French Fig Jam
When visiting Flower Power Lisa and her two kids t’other day, Miles- the wee one with the duck down hair, offered me a ‘Piggy Roll’ with my tea. He cracks me up with his 2 1/2 year old hospitality, dead serious and smiling at the same time. Yes, I’d love a “Figgy” Roll, I corrected.
Figs. Pigs. What’s the diff? A figgy newton-like cookie is always good with Earl Grey.
This week, I gathered the first harvest from the GIANT fig tree at Camont and I knew just where I was going. No recipe needed to make a batch of dark, delicious figgy/piggy jam. But I will tell you what I did with what was at hand. Next post, I’ll make a homemade a cookie dough with lard and butter (like my Grandmother’s biscotti) and cook the ‘Pig Newton Rolls’ for Smilin’ Miles- my new beau.
Kate’s French Figgy Jam- notes on a cooking riff.
The most important ingredient is my pot. For years, I used a too-deep 20-liter stainless steel stock pot or a too-wide braising pan with lid that was big enough to hold 2 chickens. One was not wide enough for the volume of fruit, the other too wide. So just like Golden Locks, I now have refined my perfect small batch confiture bassin- a not too big, not too small, JUST RIGHT, second hand, acid-green le Creuset acquired last year at a brocante for a few paltry euros. Measuring about 24 cm and holding 4 liters, it is the PERFECT size for fast cooking a 2 kilo or 4.5 pounds of fruit plus sugar, etc. Now, I know by sight that when the casserole is half full (about 2 liters of cut up fruit), it is time to stop picking, pitting or peeling.
Next.
2 kilos or 4-5 pounds of figs with the stems trimmed off and cut or pulled into quarters. When the figs are as ripe as these, its easier just to pull them apart.
500 grams or one pound of rapadura sugar (the SECRET ingredient) The caramel/molasses flavor immediately darkens the fruit mixture into a deep jammy color.
500 grams other sugar- white, brown, raw, etc. This is where we start to get creative with what’s at hand.
One whole organic lemon: zest, juice and pulp- zest it, squeeze it, then scraped the pulp out with a spoon. Add it all.
I also added:
- a handful of wild blackberries
- 2 cinnamon sticks
- 1 vanilla bean- split and scraped
- a large glug (that’s a metric measure) of orange juice
COOK. I put the flame on high under the fig-filled le creuset; dumped the sugar on top of the figs. Added the rest of ingredients and then waited. Just waited. As soon as I heard the juice from the orange, lemon and figs start to burble, I stirred. A quick stir to mix everything together and placed the lid on until it was boiling away nicely.
THEN. Take off the lid, adjust the heat so it won’t boil over and let cook about 15-20 minutes.
BLEND. I use the immersion/stick/magicwand blender and gave the mixture a half stir. Some chunks, some puree. Taste and adjust lemon if needed.
That’s it. It was sweet, dark and thick. Perfect. How did I know? It said so on the jar.













Hi Kate,
I love figs! Do you happen to know what type of figs they are? I’m wanting to get a fig tree. Thanks!
Not sure of the name of these, garden variety greenish/rosey colored figs that grows like a weed. I ahve plenty otheres but this is the queen of production. I could give you one of the suckers that come off the roots every year!
I especially love green figs, I’ll have to visit you some year around this time. Not sure though if I could take the plant back to the States with me.
I’ve been wanting to make jam for weeks, and you make it sound so easy. Now, if I can just find a lime-green Le Creuset pot…I’ll be in business!