Dark Chocolate, Orange, and Fig Blondies
/Itβs been a baking week and itβs been great. I honestly havenβt baked in forever and it is truly my therapy. Iβve been feeling pretty creative with flavors and combinations and Iβm leaning in. The Blueberry Cardamom Pop-Tarts from this week are delicious, these blondies are delicious. Itβs been a tasty week yβall. I decided to make these blondies in an effort to update this ancient TAB recipe for Salted Caramel Fig Blondies. I love figs, but the caramel wasnβt necessarily a flavor I wanted to pair, so in comes this brand new recipe.
If you follow me on social media, you may have seen the quest to get these blondies just right. I sought out to make them with fresh figs and not a lot of knowledge on blondies, and it was a fail. The fresh figs led to too much water content and I didnβt beat the sugar and eggs enough, so they came out a goopy mess on the inside. After researching blondies better and swapping from fresh to dried figs, these blondies found their truth!
Letβs talk variations, because while Iβm here for this combo these blondies are also very versatile. Chocolate and orange can be jarring for some. Iβve always been a fan of the combo and I think the orange is just the touch something this sweet needs, but if itβs not for you, ditch it. Fresh figs have a short 2-3 month season, but dried figs can be found year round. However, dried cranberries or dried cherries would be so delicious here. If youβre feeling nutty, throw in some walnuts.
Dark Chocolate, Orange, and Fig Blondies
yields 12 blondies
Ingredients:
Β½ cup brown sugar
Β½ cup granulated sugar
Β½ cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, melted
1 egg
zest from Β½ an orange
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1 cup flour
Β½ tsp. baking powder
ΒΌ tsp. kosher salt
6 dried figs, chopped
Β½ cup chopped dark chocolate (I used chips that I roughly chop)
Flaky Maldon salt
Directions:
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Line an 8x8 square pan with parchment paper or grease with baking spray.
In an electric mixer, mix the sugars, and melted butter until combined. Add the egg and beat on medium-high until light in color and fluffy. About 3-5 minutes. See the photo below for an example of what you are going for. This step is crucial to aerate the dough, which is what you want. Once light in color, add the vanilla extract and orange zest and mix to combine. On low, stir in the dry ingredients. Using a spatula, stir in the dark chocolate and chopped dried figs. Spread into your prepared pan and sprinkle with flaky salt. Bake for 25-30 minutes, until a toothpick comes out clean.
If you like things gooier, lend closer to 25-27 minutes, and if you want them more baked through, opt for closer to 30 minutes.
Let cool completely, remove from the pan, and slice into bars.
photo by Stella Parks
Annie