Chèvre With Candied Figs
- 3/4 pound chevre or other goat cheese
- 4 fresh figs or 1/2 cup dried
- 1/4 cup of balsamic vinegar
- 3 tbsp of brown muscovado sugar, or brown sugar
- 1. Slice the chevre log, and place on an oven pan. Cut the figs into rounds.
- 2. Pour the balsamic vinegar and sugar into a small pot, and bring it to a boil. Lower the heat and let it simmer until the mixture is reduced and sticks to the back of a spoon.
- 3. If you are using dried figs, place them in the vinegar mixture and let them absorb some of the fluid while the mixture cools.
- 4. Heat the chevre cheese slices quickly by using your oven's broiler function for about 3 minutes, or until the cheese has slightly started to melt. Place the cheese on a serving plate, and top it with the candied figs and vinegar mixture. Serve warm.
- You can replace muscavado sugar with brown sugar, honey, or regular sugar. Always taste the mixture since the different sugars have different sweetness, and you might have to add more.
- With their peppery honey flavor, Black Mission figs are the best money can buy. Fresh Black Mission figs are only available a few weeks out of the year, so if you happen to come across some, make compotes and freeze for later use.
- The sugar is available in light and dark flavors, and is a raw sugar made from sugar canes. Compared with regular refined sugar, it is less processed and high in mineral content. The darker sugar has a liquorish flavor, and the lighter version has a toffee flavor.
chuevre, fresh figs, balsamic vinegar, muscovado sugar
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/chevre-with-candied-figs-242385 (may not work)