Recipe: Homemade Fig Newtons (2024)

Recipe: Homemade Fig Newtons

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If you are like me, you spend time analyzing your favorite store bought foods and try to figure out how to make them yourself. Today I will share a recipe for for one of my favorites: Fig Newtons.

Homemade Fig Newtons

Yield: Approx 20 cookies

Active Time: 1 hour

Total Time: 4 hours

Fig Newton Ingredients:

Dough:

  • 8 ounces all purpose flour
    4 ounces unsalted butter, room temperature
    3 1/2 ounces sugar
    1 ounce honey or corn syrup
    1/4 teaspoon baking soda
    1/4 teaspoon salt
    2 teaspoons vanilla extract
    1/8 teaspoon cinnamon
    1 teaspoon orange zest
    3 egg yolks
    1 ounce orange juice

Filling:

  • 12 ounces dried black Mission figs
    2 ounces unsweetened applesauce
    1 1/2 ounces honey or corn syrup
    1/4 teaspoon cinnamon

Directions:

Make the fig newtons Dough:

  • Sift flour and set aside. Using a mixer, cream the butter along with the sugar, honey or corn syrup, baking soda, vanilla, cinnamon, and orange zest on medium speed until the mixture is light and fluffy. Scrape bowl down with spatula, and continue mixing. Add the egg yolks one at a time, mixing thoroughly.
  • Mixer onlow and add the sifted flour all at once. Drizzle orange juice. Continue mixing until just hom*ogenous.
  • Shut off the mixer. The dough will be very soft and wet.
  • Prepare a large sheet of plastic wrap and use a rubber spatula to transfer the dough from the bowl to the center of the plastic. Fold the plastic over the dough and flatten into a disc. Wrap with remaining plastic and refrigerate for four hours or overnight.

Make the filling:

  • Combine the figs, applesauce, honey or corn syrup and cinnamon in the bowl of a food processor. Pulse until smooth. Scrape the bowl down with a rubber spatula and pulse again to ensure to chunks remain; if any sneak by, they will clog the pastry tip during piping.
  • Use a rubber spatula to transfer the fig paste to a pastry bag fitted with a large, plain basket weave tip. Alternately, use a heavy duty zip-top bag with a corner snipped off.
  • Set the filling aside until needed.

Making the cookies:

  • Preheat the oven to 325°F and have a parchment lined cookie sheet ready.
  • Even after chilling, the dough will be significantly softer than the typical rolled dough. Dust the rolling surface heavily with sifted flour to prevent sticking, and dust the surface of the dough as well. With a pin, roll the dough to 1/4″ thickness. Frequently lift and move the dough, redusting if needed, to ensure it does not stick. If any places do stick, slide an offset metal spatula between the dough and the counter to loosen and dust the affected area with more flour.
  • Use a ruler and a pizza cutter to cut the dough into several 3 1/4″ wide strips. It is easiest to handle the dough if these strips are no longer than 6″ so if you find your strips are particularly long, you may want to cut them into more manageable lengths. If the dough is heavily covered in flour, gently dust in clean with a dry pastry brush.
  • Pipe a strip of fig filling down the center of each dough strip; you want the filling to be 1″ wide and about 1/4″ thick, feel free to pipe a thicker or thinner filling to suit your own tastes. If you’re piping with a plastic bag without a tip, after you’ve distributed the filling, use a dampened finger to pat the filling down into a flat, rectangular strip.
  • To make the Newton bars, lift one of the long, exposed dough strips up and over filling. If you have trouble lifting the dough with your fingers, you can use an offset spatula. Take a hold of the folded side of the cookie-bar and roll it over the remaining flap of dough. Repeat with remaining cookie bars. The dough will be doubled where the two strips overlap on the bottom; this gives the Newtons their characteristically bowed shape. You can use your hands to pat the bars down on their long sides to emphasize this shape if you like.
  • Use a dry pastry brush to dust off any excess flour from the cookies. Transfer the bars to the prepared cookie sheet. Bake for approximately 12 minutes or until the cookies have puffed and lightly browned. They will be just slightly firm to the touch; if they feel puffy or moist, continue baking a few more minutes.

Cutting and aging your fig newtons:

As soon as the cookies are removed from the oven, use a sharp knife to trim each bar into several 1″ long cookies. While the cookies are still warm, transfer them to a plastic container with a lid or large zip-top bag. If you need to stack the cookies, place a piece of parchment between the layers. Seal the container or bag tightly.

This step will slightly steam the cookies, ensuring they will remain soft and cake-like from end to end. Skipping this step will result in Newtons with a slightly drier texture, more like a cookie and less like cake.

The fig newtons will keep, at room temperature, for about two weeks.

Let us know what you think of this fig newton recipe in the comment section below or on social media Facebook

By Richard Myrick|2017-03-31T08:40:43-04:00Jun 10, 2015|Recipes|

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About the Author: Richard Myrick

Recipe: Homemade Fig Newtons (2)

Richard Myrick is an architect by degree (Lawrence Technological University, Southfield, Michigan) who began his career in real estate development and architectural planning. In September of 2010 he created Mobile Cuisine Magazine to fill an information void he found when he began researching how to start a mobile hotdog cart in Chicago. Richard found that there was no central repository of mobile street food information anywhere on the internet, and with that, the idea for MCM was born. Richard also wrote the "Running a Food Truck for Dummies" available in bookstores everywhere and Amazon. You can reach out to Richard by email at: [emailprotected].

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FAQs

What are the ingredients in Fig Newtons? ›

INGREDIENTS: FIGS, WHOLE GRAIN WHEAT FLOUR, SUGAR, UNBLEACHED ENRICHED FLOUR (WHEAT FLOUR, NIACIN, REDUCED IRON, THIAMINE MONONITRATE {VITAMIN B1}, RIBOFLAVIN {VITAMIN B2}, FOLIC ACID), CORN SYRUP, INVERT SUGAR, SOYBEAN AND/OR CANOLA OIL, PALM OIL, SALT, BAKING SODA, CALCIUM LACTATE, MALIC ACID, SOY LECITHIN, SODIUM ...

What is in the middle of a Fig Newton? ›

Newtons are a Nabisco-trademarked version of a cookie filled with sweet fruit paste. "Fig Newtons" are the most popular variety (fig rolls filled with fig paste). They are produced by an extrusion process.

Will eating Fig Newtons help with constipation? ›

Try high fiber snack foods such as sesame bread sticks, date-nut or prune bread, oatmeal cookies, fig newtons, date or raisin bars, granola and corn chips. Try natural “laxative-type” foods- bran, whole grain cereals, and prune juice.

What are the original Fig Newtons? ›

A Nabisco's trademarked version of the fig roll, Newtons are a pastry filled with fig paste. Fig Newtons have an unusual and characteristic shape that has been adopted by many competitors, including generic fig bars.

Are Fig Newtons actually healthy? ›

Fig Newton Cookies

They are also fairly healthy. Figs are well known for having fiber, which helps with digestion, as well as protein and several vitamins and minerals. This means there are quite a few health benefits of fig bars like fig Newtons.

Are there actual figs in fig newtons? ›

The label lists flour, figs, sugar, corn syrup, vegetable oil, salt, corn fiber, oat fiber, baking soda, calcium lactate, malic acid, soy lecithin, sodium Benzoate, and sulfur dioxide. There is no dairy in there or any animal based products, so, yes, Fig Newtons are vegan. However, Fig Newtons are not gluten-free.

What type of figs are used in fig newtons? ›

Mission figs, as opposed to any other variety of dried fig, will deliver the most accurate flavor to resemble the store-bought variety of Fig Newtons. You can use another type of dried fig, but know that you might have to add more or less water to the filling to make it smooth, and that the flavor may vary.

Are there bugs in my fig newtons? ›

Some figs are pollinated by wasps, and those wasps do die inside the figs, but they're fully enzymatically digested by the figs (BBC Science Focus)

How many bugs are allowed in fig newtons? ›

Here you would learn that fig paste is allowed to have up to 13 insect heads per 100 grams.

What is the number 1 fruit for constipation? ›

Prunes are often hailed as the number one food to help you go number two — and for good reason. Prunes, which are just dehydrated plums, are packed with fiber, which helps keep food moving through the digestive system. They also contain the sugar alcohol sorbitol, which has a laxative effect, Chey explains.

What is the laxative in figs? ›

Figs are often recommended to nourish and tone the intestines, they act as a natural laxative because of their high fibre content. The fibre they provide also has prebiotic properties, feeding the gut bacteria and promoting a healthy gut environment which, as a result, improves digestive wellness.

Can too many fig Newtons cause diarrhea? ›

Since figs have a high fiber content, eating too many figs — especially dried figs — can cause diarrhea.

What are some fun facts about Fig Newtons? ›

Fig Newtons were almost Massachusetts' state cookie

Knowing that Newtons got the name from a Massachusetts town makes it unsurprising that the famed cookies were almost named the official state cookie after where they were first made as well.

Why did Fig Newtons change their name? ›

Modern Changes to the Fig Newton

In 2012, they once again dropped the "Fig" from the name because, as the Kraft specialist Gary Osifchin told The New York Times, they wanted to change the core of the brand to fruit. "It was going to be hard for us to advance the Newtons brand with the baggage of the fig."

Why do Fig Newtons have so much sugar? ›

The dehydration process of drying this fruit results in a higher concentration of sugar relative to weight, so dried figs have a higher concentration of carbohydrates—mostly in the form of sugar—than fresh figs.

Do Fig Newtons have nuts in them? ›

While nut-free granola bars are tough to find, Fig Newtons are another nut-free treat that's similar. It's quick and easy to toss a few in your child's lunchbox to enjoy for an afternoon snack.

What are the ingredients in fat free Fig Newtons? ›

Figs, Whole Grain Wheat Flour, Sugar, Unbleached Enriched Flour (Wheat Flour, Niacin, Reduced Iron, Thiamine Mononitrate {Vitamin B1}, Riboflavin {Vitamin B2}, Folic Acid), Invert Sugar, Corn Syrup, Glycerin, Salt, Soy Lecithin*, Leavening (Baking Soda, Calcium Phosphate), Calcium Lactate, Sodium Benzoate and Sulfur ...

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