I was recently asked by the lovely people at Magnify Musings to create a blog post just for them. Below you can see the blog post itself and you can click the link below to take you to their wonderful blog.
Over the last 3 years I have had to learn a lot. Moving out of home and living in a new country with people you don’t know and a language you don’t speak makes you grow up pretty fast. It also teaches you what’s important.
Those things that you miss and crave that you always took for granted. Yeah, sometimes they seem trivial. I missed having a hot water bottle, iPlayer, Crunchy Nut Clusters, pick&mix, Topshop and instant coffee. Things I never thought I even took a second glance at in England. Then there’s the other things you miss – the people you want to wrap your arms around and never let go ever again. Family, friends, (and seriously I love my dog more than I love most people and when he greeted me after thinking I was dead for three months I tell you, I’ve never cried to hard or been so happy to be back in my home.)
Having people around me now I’ve realised is what’s important. Fellowship. Community. Love. And how better to get all these three things at once than to learn to cook some kick-ass food and serve it to them with wine and the biggest smile on your face. I have genuinely become my Grandma 50 years too early. I don’t even eat anymore I just hover, listening to stories, getting more wine, serving up seconds and rummaging up dessert whilst they laugh at the table. I’ve honestly never been happier than in those moments.
This recipe is a table-filler. It’s more of a starter than a main but it’s so easy to make in bulk and serve at a dinner party. It’s also SO full of flavour that little portions are better AND it’s good for the waistline. And the star in this recipe? Just one of my favourite fruits on earth. Figs.
FIGS. So delicate and sweet and yet tastes SO DARN GOOD with all things salty. Bacon (one of my favourite foods – so good it actually deserves a capital letter) is an important ingredient here, but you can just as easily make it with parma-ham, or even without if you’ve got some veggies coming over.
This general recipe is also brilliant a variety of different ways. If you’re like all my friends in London, you’ll want this on a bed of salad. It’s missing nothing and it’s light, airy and full of flavour with minimal carbs. If you’re like my friends back home in the country you’ll probably want to make your own pastry and place the same ingredients on top – voila – mouthwatering fig, goats-cheese & bacon tart. If you’re like my new friends over in Italy and you entertain almost every day, you can make these into little show-stopping canapés. Adaptability is key – and I’ve got it covered.
Take your pick, invite your friends over and take it all in.
Enjoy.
Ingredients Needed:
Serves 4
Method
Salad
Pastry