🌍 Join the Sweet Revolution!
Happy Village Organic Turkish Dried Figs are a 40 oz resealable pack of naturally sweet, sun-dried figs with no added sugar or preservatives. Certified organic, non-GMO, gluten-free, kosher, and vegan, these figs support sustainable farming practices and empower local communities through the Happy Village Project.
F**S
best organic figs you can buy
quality on these bad boys is amazing, thats why the price point! they taste really good always fresh, no bad figs as i saw on reviews from other brands,
P**M
Great flavor and natural sweetness
These are wonderful apricots. They are large and sweet with no added sugar. You can’t just eat one. A good dessert replacement.
P**E
Dig these dried figs.
These dried figs are a fabulous size - almost like freshly bought ones from a Rome fresh market dried to perfection. They soak and taste wonderful too. Good for your overall energy, and health regimens.
K**.
Very sweet due to apple juice concentrate.
We use the 32 oz. containers of unsweetened Greek yogurt to make large (famly-size/week's worth) batches of various flavors and flavor combinations of yogurt for a light lunch. In my case, it's usually plain Greek yogurt with peeled and sliced bananas, still a bit green at the stem and without freckling, and dried tart cherries (which I pre-soak in a container in the 'fridge for several days using ordinary apple cider and a touch of concentrated cold-processed tart cherry juice) with about 1/4 C. Anthony's organic cocoa powder, plus a total of no more than 30 ml. of NuNaturals stevia syrup. I use a combination of liquid vanilla syrup (roughly 20 ml.) and chocolate stevia syrup (10 ml.) for a little sweetness and flavor enhancement. In my husband's case, I use a combination of one scoop each Naturelo's Raw Greens powder in both the plain unsweetened and mixed berries flavor (NOTE: the latter is sweetened with monk fruit, etc.). I add fresh blueberries to the yogurt, and recently added Happy Village dried strawberries as well. I use less of the liquid stevia (about 25 ml) combining simple syrup and vanilla syrup, due to the sweetness of the mixed berry flavored powder. Recently I tried adding Happy Vilage dried strawberries to dried blueberries instead. Due to a miscommunication, I thought my spouse had forgotten to buy fresh blueberries (acttually, he had forgotten to put them away). I added roughly 8 oz. (volume) dried blueberries to 8 oz. (volume) dried strawberries. I had already added vanilla stevia to the yogurt, so it was too late to adjust for the extra sweetness. It took a couple of days for the fruit to partly re-hydrate in the yogurt, and I discovered that it made the yogurt very thick, which is good, but made the whole thing very, very sweet. I had no idea the newly purchased wild dried blueberries, which are naturally sweet, wouldn't have any tartness at all. The strawberries from "Happy Village" had been infused with concentrated apple juice, so the taste I associate with natural strawberries wasn't there, either. My husband like the results anyway, but as he points out, he is a gourmand, not a gourmet. We both liked the continued "chewiness" of the dried strawberries in the yogurt. Next time, I pre-soaked the strawberries with a little lemon-infused filtered water and just a bit of apple cider to bring back some of the true strawberry flavor and help balance the sweetness. Please note that unless one really likes a super-sweet (dessert?) yogurt, it is best to use fresh blueberries with the dried strawberries and the other ingredients I mentioned, and adjust the stevia liquid accordingly. The batch I made a few days after the overly sweet version had 16 oz. of fresh blueberries plus Happy Village dried strawberries that I had soaked as described above, but also had the powders and stevia added. I may skip the cider for soaking the strawberries and stick to the lemon-infused filtered water, but I keep apple cider on hand for soaking dried tart cherries anyway. All of the products other than the yogurt were purchased through Amazon. True confession time: That excludes the "RealLemon" brand lemon juice concentrate I sometimes dilute for use in making lemonade or as part of my recipe for tuna salad, and now as part of the pre-soak for dried strawberries. I get the juice from the local grocery store, having reached an age where life is too short for slicing and/or squeezing lemons unless a recipe really requires it.
R**Z
Good product
Clean and good product. Tastes good. Ordering more.
B**.
I love them, great evening snack!
These taste great, stay soft even after the bag has been opened since you can’t eat an entire bag of them at once!
L**Y
Always good!
Always good!
B**N
Great treat!
Super tasty but a little spendy
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