2. Fig Pudding: Touching history

2 thoughts on “2. Fig Pudding: Touching history”

  1. Sounds great. I wonder if they might have used fresh figs? The trees grow well in a protected spot in this climate. Where I grew up in Sheffield they grew alongside the warm water of the canals and rivers close to the outlets for cooling water from factories and power stations, or so I remember reading in Flora Brittanica.

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    1. I think it’s entirely plausible that where fresh figs grew, they might have been eaten. You get a good micro-climate inside walled gardens that also made such things possible. Dried fruit was also a major import, so no matter what, figs could be had.

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