Fig Cake and Fresh Fig Preserves by Monica Kass Rogers

Fig Cake and Fresh Fig Preserves

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Monica Kass Rogers is a mom, writer, photographer, and home cook, who also explores abstract photography as a member of Perspective Fine Art Photography Gallery in Evanston, IL. She started her food blog, Lost Recipes Found, first as a column for the Chicago Tribune, one of the many publications she has written for over the past 20 years. “At one point I was writing stories and columns for six different sections of the Chicago Tribune, addressing sustainability, women’s issues, gardening, business, architecture and food, plus writing for Crain’s Chicago Business, and many lifestyle magazines,” she says. “My research into the provenance of recipes for a Chicago Tribune column was so compelling that it became my blog, lostrecipesfound.com. In turn, the process of researching, preparing, propping, food-styling and photographing the recipes for each story launched my professional photography business.”

“For you, the food memory trigger might be sight, or taste, or sound, or some sensual mixture of all of it,” says Rogers. “The point is, we all have recipes we’ve loved and lost over the course of our lives. How serendipitous to rediscover and enjoy them again. At my Lost Recipes Found food blog, readers discover those recipes, some history when I can find it, visuals, and hopefully, some connection to the food memories that matter the most to you. Some of these recipes are my own. Some are adapted from old and vintage cookbooks. Others are chef creations based on vintage recipes that people love. Before publishing to the site, I test, prepare, and photograph each dish using natural light. I have dozens of recipes, photos and stories that I’ve collected over the years, and will be posting them as often as I can,” she adds.

“My mother,” Rogers says, “grew up eating the fresh fruit from a large, spreading fig tree that grew next to her childhood home in southern Texas. She spoke wistfully of that tree, the scent and the flavor of its fruit, the cool of its shade and passed her fondness for figs right down to me.”

“Rogers adds that reading cookbook author Belinda Hulin’s ode to the fig tree that grew 30 feet high and more than 30 feet wide in her own mother’s Louisiana backyard, struck a chord. Hulin’s story, featured in her 2010-released Roux Memories, is a beautiful tale of growth, loss and rebirth.”

Hulin writes, “My mother planted the tree more than thirty years ago…without fertilizing or pruning, dependent on rain for watering, it grew. And grew. And grew.” And as she grew, the fig tree gave back. “Sometimes,” Hulin adds, “like after my father died, or when my first marriage crumbled, I’d wander into the backyard just to visit the fig tree, eat from its branches, and stare into its mystical depths.”

Rogers says, “I adore fresh figs — the shape and flavor of the fruit, and all of the delicious things you can make with it. Here are two favorites. The preserves make the perfect filling for homemade fig bars or goes well over yogurt or pudding. And this fig cake is so moist as to be almost pudding like. I’ve also reworked the recipe as a layer cake, with caramel frosting.”

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For fig preserves:

Ingredients:

6 cups fresh, whole figs

2 tablespoons baking soda

3 cups water

Topics: Cakes, Figs

3 cups sugar

1 sliced fresh lemon, seeds removed (NOTE: If you don’t like the flavor of marmalade, remove and discard the skin of the lemon. Otherwise, leave it on.)

For the cake:

Ingredients:

3/4 cup softened butter

1 cup sugar

3 eggs

1/2 cup milk

2 cups flour

1 teaspoon baking soda dissolved in 1 teaspoon vinegar

1/2 teaspoon vanilla

2 cups fig preserves (recipe above)

Serves 8

Preparation:

Make preserves: Snip stem ends from figs and discard. Rinse trimmed figs in colander. Mix baking soda into 1/2 gallon cold water in a large pot. Place figs in the pot and swirl around to rinse well.

Drain figs in colander and rinse with fresh water. Combine figs, sugar, water and lemon slices (or, just the lemon flesh if you don’t like the flavor of marmalade) in tall soup pot. Cook, stirring often, over medium-low heat. Cook until fig mixture reaches desired thickness—about 2 1/2 to 3 hours. NOTE: Rogers uses a hand-held immersion blender to blend most of the figs for a less-chunky preserve.

Sanitize six, clean, pint canning jars by boiling in water along with canning seals and lids. Ladle hot fig preserves into the jars, leaving about 1/2 inch of headspace at the top. Place seals on the jars and process in a boiling water bath 10 to 15 minutes. Remove from bath, let stand until cooled, and store. NOTE: This recipe can be halved and refrigerated or frozen, if you don’t want to can the preserves. For this option, let preserves cool, then spoon into storage tubs. The preserves will keep for one month to 6 weeks in the refrigerator; 6 months in the freezer.

Make the cake: Cream butter and sugar together. Add eggs, one at a time, beating after each addition. Add milk. With mixer on low, slowly add flour followed by dissolved baking soda. Beat in vanilla. Add fig preserves and beat until just blended. If using a stand mixer, be sure to scrape sides and bottom of bowl to ensure even mixing. Pour batter into a greased 12 x 9-inch baking dish.

Bake at 350ºF for 50 minutes to one hour. Cake will flatten and pull away from sides of baking dish as it cools. Serve warm or at room temperature with fresh whipped cream.

Monica Kass Rogers

Original recipe by: Belinda Hulin

For this recipe, go to: http://lostrecipesfound.com/fig-preserves-fig-cake/

For Belinda’s cookbook, go to: https://www.amazon.com/Roux-Memories-Cajun-Creole-Story-Recipes/dp/0762759054

For Roger’s Fresh Fig Layer Cake with Caramel Icing recipe, go to: http://lostrecipesfound.com/fresh-fig-layer-cake-with-caramel-icing/

Risotto and Beyond: 100 Authentic Italian Rice Recipes for Antipasti, Soups, Salads, Risotti, One-Dish Meals, and Desserts. Written by John Coletta, Nancy Ross Ryan and Monica Kass Rogers. Fresh off winning 1st place in the Italian category and 2nd place in the rice category at the 2019 Gourmand International Cookbook Awards, this book is a definitive guide to the Italian rice-cookery repertoire. To order, go to: https://www.rizzoliusa.com/book/9780847862368

Rogers launched Lost Recipes Found as a column in the Chicago Tribune to tell the stories behind great vintage recipes, update them for today’s kitchens and take beautiful contemporary photos of them. Roger’s food imagery has appeared in Bon Appetit and Food & Wine, as well as a book by Rizzoli. Recent portraiture assignments included photographing Chicago’s Top 50 Chefs and Top 50 Literary Figures, and her photography illustrates all of the publications from JWCMedia (Sheridan Road, Country, Forest & Bluff, Hinsdale Living, and the Northshore Daily newspaper.)  For information, go to: http://monicakassrogers.com/

Connect at:

https://www.facebook.com/lostrecipesfound/

https://twitter.com/lostrecipes

https://www.instagram.com/monicakassrogers/

https://www.pinterest.com/mrkrogers/

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