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For the frangipane

For the orange glaze

Nutrition: (10)

  • kcal517
  • fat27g
  • saturates12g
  • carbs57g
  • sugars35g
  • fibre4g
  • protein9g
  • salt0.5g
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Method

  • step 1

    Tip the flour, butter and a pinch of salt into a food processor, and pulse the mixture a few times until it resembles breadcrumbs. Add the sugar and orange zest and pulse again. Add the vanilla, egg yolk and 1 tbsp cold water, then pulse until the mixture just comes together into a dough. Press the dough into a ball with your hands, then roll it out on a lightly floured surface until it’s large enough to line a 22cm loose-bottomed tart tin. Use it to line the tin, pressing it into the sides, then prick the base all over with a fork and chill for 30 mins.

  • step 2

    Meanwhile, prepare the frangipane. Put the butter in a medium bowl and beat with an electric whisk until creamy, then add the sugar and continue beating until light and fluffy. Gradually add the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Fold in the almonds and flour.

  • step 3

    Heat the oven to 180C/160C fan/gas 4 and put a baking tray in the oven to heat up. Spoon the frangipane into the chilled pastry case and smooth the top using the back of a spoon. Arrange the figs, cut-side up, in a circle pattern, pushing them down gently into the frangipane.

  • step 4

    Carefully transfer the tart to the hot baking tray in the oven, and bake for 1 hr-1 hr 10 mins (cover with foil after 40 mins if it’s browning too quickly), or until the figs are tender and a skewer inserted into the frangipane comes out clean. Leave to cool in the tin.

  • step 5

    While the tart cools, make the glaze. Mix the orange zest and juice, the sugar and 1 tbsp water together in a small pan, bring to the boil, reduce the heat and simmer for 5-10 mins until syrupy. Remove the tart from the case, transfer to a plate, and brush with the glaze.

Recipe from Good Food Vegetarian Christmas, December 2020

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Comments, questions and tips (6)

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Overall rating

A star rating of 4.5 out of 5.6 ratings

Evelinka

question

Ingredients would be helpful if were shown in quantity? Unless I can’t see the proper page with ingredients?

sarah bond 5 avatar

sarah bond 5

question

Lovely recipe, came out well and even made a couple of mini ones too! I do agree it maybe needs a little conserve under the frangipane for more flavour but we loved it as is :) I just wonder whether it could be frozen then rewarmed to serve?

goodfoodteam avatar
goodfoodteam

Hello, we don't particularly recommend freezing this recipe as the texture of the figs will change with freezing. To get ahead you could freeze the unbaked pastry case well wrapped in its tin for up to 1 month. Take the case out of the freezer and keep at room temperature while you prepare the…

bigiknits

Beautiful and great taste. I added some orange liquor to the glaze, dusted the baked figs with a little cinnamon and dropped 1/2 teaspoon of orange liquor over each fig half.

corbett.harriet3yuFUnRu

Baked in a slightly wider tin, so only took 30min. Thought I'd split the butter, suger and egg mixture but actually was ok in the end! I wonder if the baking time in the instructions is a bit long ever though, based on others experiences. Shop bought short chrust pastry, so not quite as sweet. Would…

maggie77

Found this delicious but will spread a light layer of fig conserve to pastry before adding frangipani next time.

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