Nigel Slater’s recipes for goat’s cheese and figs, and black-eyed bean burgers (2024)

This time last year, the little stone terrace outside the kitchen was littered with ripe figs, the fruits squashed – the result of their long fall from the tree. Too brittle to climb – unless you happen to be a squirrel – the tree produced more fruit than I have ever known, a balm for the frustration of being unable to travel south. A year on and the terrace is spotless, the figs still green and clinging tight to their branches. There will be no scarlet glut this year.

Few of my own figs will ripen now, but no autumn is going to pass without a plate of the fruit – soft, decadent and luscious – on my table. Purple, green and somewhere in between, Turkish, Italian or locally grown, they will find their way on to plain white plates with folds of San Daniele, Bavarian speck or Iberico the colour of dried blood; they will be tucked into salads with walnuts and red chicory or simply wolfed as they are. I sometimes make a few stretch a little further by slicing and overlapping them on hot focaccia then melting a small, ripe cheese and a trickle of honey over them.

A more substantial plate this week came about when I made a batch of beanburgers, patting the paste of black-eyed beans, basil and chilli into little cakes with flour-dusted hands and frying them until their outsides crisped. We ate them for lunch with a tomato salad and some of the whole beans and basil we had set aside earlier.

Focaccia with goat’s cheese and figs

A sandwich of goat’s cheese and figs is a thoroughly good thing, but you will take it to an altogether different level if you toast it. The honey – scented with thyme and spiked with grain mustard – soaks through the hot, crisp toast. The cheese melts over the ripe figs and the whole thing becomes a gorgeous mixture of textures, sweet and savoury. Enough for 2

rosemary 2 or 3 sprigs
honey 4 tbsp
grain mustard 1 tbsp
focaccia 100g
small figs 6-8
goat’s cheese 130g

First, heat an overhead (oven) grill. Then remove the rosemary needles from their stems – you need 2 tsp of them. Chop them very finely. Put the rosemary in a small saucepan with the honey and grain mustard and place over a moderate heat, warming the honey gently, until it is liquid, then set aside.

Slice the focaccia in half horizontally to give 2 flat pieces, then place them on a grill pan or baking sheet, cut side up. Toast under the hot grill until lightly coloured and just starting to turn gold.

Brush the toasted side of the focaccia with two-thirds of the honey and mustard dressing. Slice each fig into 4 from stem to base then lay them on top of the focaccia. Thickly slice the goat’s cheese – you need about 3 slices per toast – then lay the slices on top of the figs.

Trickle the reserved honey and mustard dressing over the cheese, add a few spare thyme sprigs if you wish, and return to the grill until the cheese starts to bubble. Eat immediately.

Black-eyed bean and herb burgers

Nigel Slater’s recipes for goat’s cheese and figs, and black-eyed bean burgers (1)

There is a somewhat worthy undertone to the word “beanburger”. To extinguish this, I find myself seasoning my little bean cakes with extreme generosity. Those I made this week were flecked with fresh herbs – basil and chives – and with the lingering heat from a spoonful of sriracha. Crisp outside and soft within, they work in a soft bun or a wrap, but also as a stand-alone dish, with a tomato salad.

Serves 3 (makes 6)

black-eyed beans 1 x 400g can
butter beans 1 x 400g can
chives 12
parsley 15g (weight with stalks)
basil leaves 25g
garlic 2 cloves
sriracha 1 tbsp
olive oil 2 tbsp, plus a little extra
cherry or other small tomatoes 8

Tip the beans into a colander or sieve and rinse them under running water. Shake the beans dry then tip them into a mixing bowl.

Finely chop the chives. Remove the parsley leaves from the stalks and finely chop them, then finely shred the basil leaves. (I find the easiest way to do this is to place the leaves on top of one another, roll them tightly then shred them finely with a knife.) Add the herbs to the beans.

Peel and finely crush the garlic cloves to a paste. (I like to use a pestle with a pinch of salt.) Scrape into the beans, then season the mixture with salt and black pepper. Reserve a quarter of the mixture in a small bowl, then mash the rest with a potato masher or briefly in a food processor. Take care not to overmix. Stir in the sriracha.

Shape the mixture into 6 small patties, about 8cm in diameter, then set them on a tray in the fridge to rest for half an hour.

Thickly slice the tomatoes, toss with a little olive oil and black pepper and set aside.

Warm 3 tbsp of olive oil in a shallow pan over a moderate heat, place the patties (or as many as will fit into your pan) in the hot oil and cook for 5 or 6 minutes until golden underneath. Turn the patties over carefully with a palette knife, then cook the other side for a further 3 or 4 minutes.

Divide the tomatoes between 4 plates, then scatter the reserved beans over them and divide the cakes among them.

Follow Nigel on Twitter @NigelSlater

Nigel Slater’s recipes for goat’s cheese and figs, and black-eyed bean burgers (2024)

FAQs

Is Nigel Slater a vegetarian? ›

Although not strictly vegetarian (the bottom line for me will always be that my dinner is delicious, not something that must adhere to a set of strict dietary rules) much of my weekday eating contains neither meat nor fish.

How do you make Nigel Slater green beans? ›

Bring a large pan of water to the boil. Trim 350g of green beans. When the water is boiling, add a little salt and the beans and let them cook for 3 or 4 minutes then drain. Toss the beans with the mushrooms and serve immediately.

How did Nigel Slater lose weight? ›

Around my middle was a thick layer of fat.” The technique to get rid of it was keeping a food diary, he revealed in a feature for the Guardian. “For the entire 12 months I kept a record of everything I put in my mouth,” he revealed. Despite losing fat, Nigel was not intending to lose weight through his regime.

Who is the strongest vegetarian person? ›

Patrik Baboumian (Armenian: Փատրիկ Բաբումեան, Persian: پاتریک بابومیان; born 1 July 1979) is an Iranian-born German-Armenian retired strongman and former bodybuilder. He promotes veganism.

Why do you soak green beans? ›

The correct way to cook green beans with soaking method is to soak them in water overnight or at least 3 to 4 hours before cooking. Long soaking time helps to soften the green beans and thus, reduces the cooking time and saves gas.

How do you make cannellini beans Nigel Slater? ›

Finely chop the dill and stir into the garlic. Tip the butter beans and cannellini together with their liquor into the pan and stir to coat them with the oil and garlic. Leave over a moderate heat, covered by a lid, for a few minutes until the beans are hot. Finely grate the lemon zest and squeeze the juice.

Why do you blanch green beans before cooking? ›

"Blanching involves cooking veggies for short periods of time in boiling water, then transferring them immediately to ice water to stop the cooking process," says Lizzie Streit, MS, RDN, LD, creator of It's a Veg World After All and author of "Vegetable Cookbook for Vegetarians." This softens green beans slightly while ...

Are any of the Avengers vegetarian? ›

From Benedict Cumberbatch (aka Doctor Strange) to Mark Ruffalo (aka The Hulk) a number of actors in the Avengers films are vegan.

Has there ever been a vegetarian on Hell's Kitchen? ›

Josie Clemens is the first vegan chef on Gordon Ramsay's Hell's Kitchen: Young Guns Edition, and a new culinary director at Jackfruit Land. Listen as Josie talks about what it's like to work in Hell's Kitchen with Gordon Ramsay, how she embraces her fiery side, and what she's currently working on with Jackfruit Land.

Is Beyond Meat CEO vegetarian? ›

Personal life. Brown is married to Tracy Brown, has two children, and lives in Southern California. He became a vegetarian in high school and is now vegan. Brown is also an environmentalist.

Has there ever been a vegetarian Masterchef? ›

Bri Kozior was a contestant on Masterchef Season 4 who made it in to the top 6. She is a vegetarian, but occasionally had to cook dishes with meat.

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