We have had a great fig harvest his year. Other han enjoying the figs straight off the tree, I have been using them in various desserts. I made a fig crostata (recipe on the blog), fig icecream, fig danish braid. Then I thought an upside down cake would be delightful. The result of the experiment was delicious!!
Ingredients
10 ripe fresh figs, cut into eighths or small pieces
1 tbsp butter
1 tbsp sugar
1 and 1/4 cups all purpose flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/8 tsp salt
1/2 cup butter
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
1 tsp vanilla essence
1/2 cup milk
Butter a baking pan and cover the base with parchment paper.
Preheat the often to 350F.
In a saucepan, heat the butter. Once it melts, add the figs and sugar and give it a stir. Cover with a lid and let it cook for a couple of mins and then stir again. Cook covered for 5-10 mins, stirring frequently, till the figs release their juices and soften and start to caramelize.
Pour this into the baking pan and spread in a layer on the parchment paper.
Sift or whisk the flour, salt and baking powder so they are mixed well and the baking powder is evenly distributed.
Whisk together the butter and sugar. Once the mixture stars looking fluffy like icing, add one egg at a time and mix these in. Then, add the vanilla essence. Next fold one third of the flour into the batter, followed by half the milk. Alternate between the flour and milk incorporated into the batter using the folding motion.
This is a thick batter. Now pour or scoop this over the fig layer. Use a flat spatula to spread it out. Then bang the pan on the counter a couple of times to remove any large air bubbles.
Bake for about 30 mins (check at 20 mins). Use a toothpick or knife to check for doneness. Pierce the cake in the center. If the knife/toothpick is clean, the cake is done.
Let the cake cool for a few mins in the pan and then invert it onto cooling rack. Peel off the parchment paper. The cake doesn't need to be inverted again as the fig layer comes on top of the cake. Cut after the cake cools.
Let the figs caramelize. When you start cooking them it may seem that there isn't much moisture of they are not getting sweet, so cook with the lid on and let them stew in their juices. Figs become very sweet once they release their sugar which converts into a delicious syrup. Do not add more sugar unless you are using figs which are under ripe.If you do not have fresh figs, you can use dried figs too. Soak them for a few hours to rehydrate. Once they are plump cut them into small pieces and follow the recipe.
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