Preheat the oven to 200°C/fan180°C/gas 6. Spread the almonds or walnuts onto a baking tray and roast them in the oven until lightly browned: walnuts will take around 5 minutes; almonds about 7-8 minutes. Remove and leave to cool.
Remove and discard the hard stalks from the figs, then cut them into quarters and put into the bowl of a food processor with the icing sugar or honey. Coarsely chop using the pulse button until the mixture starts to stick together in a ball, but don’t reduce to a smooth paste.
Set aside 100g of the nuts and chop the remainder into small chunky pieces. Put the aniseed or fennel seeds into a spice grinder (I use a coffee bean grinder, reserved just for spices) with the other spices and grind them into a fine powder.
Tip the fig mixture into a bowl and add the chopped nuts, spices and lemon zest. Mix together well with your hands, adding enough brandy to bind everything together. (At this point, you could make logs instead of cakes).
Using the bottom half of a Camembert box as a template, cut out 4 discs of rice paper. Line each box base with cling film, leaving the edges overhanging, then put in a disc of rice paper. Divide the fig mixture into 4 equal amounts, then press firmly into each box and flatten the top. Press the reserved whole nuts into the top of each cake. Remove the cakes from their boxes, discard the cling film and dry on a rack for 24 hours before wrapping.
250g blanched almonds or walnut halves
1kg good-quality dried figs
2 tablespoons icing sugar or clear honey
1 teaspoon aniseed or fennel seeds
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
¼ teaspoon coarsely ground black pepper
¼ teaspoon ground cloves
¼ teaspoon ground ginger
Finely grated zest of 1 small lemon
1-2 tablespoons brandy
2 rice paper sheets (28cm x 18cm),