White Bean
Tuscan Beans in Summery Tomato Ragù
Tuscans are commonly known as mangiafagioli, or bean eaters, and when you simmer cannellini beans on top of the stove and then finish them in the oven with a fresh tomato ragù, you'll understand why. The dish is saucy and comforting—have plenty of good bread on hand—with welcome bursts of acidity from the extra tomatoes scattered on top of the casserole. Grape tomatoes tend to have a sweeter, more concentrated flavor than cherry tomatoes.
By Kay Chun
White Beans with Tasso
By Gabe Soria and Amanda Zug-Moore
Spring Greens and Lima Bean Soup
This light and satisfying soup highlights the earthy flavor of the greens.
By Clifford A. Wright
Giant Beans Baked with Roasted Red Peppers and Pastourma
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are excerpted from Diane Kochilas's book Meze: Small Plates to Savor and Share from the Mediterranean Table. Kochilas also shared some helpful cooking tips exclusively with Epicurious, which we've added at the bottom of the page.
To read more about Kochilas and Greek cuisine, click here.
Giant beans in some form or another are never absent from Greek meze menus. The key to making this dish taste as good as possible is to use high-quality roasted sweet peppers preserved in extra virgin olive oil. I usually make my own oil, and have them on hand. All you need to do is roast the peppers whole under the broiler, let them cool, peel them, and store them in a container in the fridge covered with good olive oil. You can pour a few tablespoons of the pepper-infused oil into the baking dish for added flavor. As for the beans themselves, the trick is to get the texture right. Giant beans need first to be soaked, then boiled, and finally baked. Once done, they should be soft, almost buttery, without being baked to the point that they fall apart.
By Diane Kochilas
Pasta e Fagioli con Salsicce (Pasta and Beans with Sausage)
If you're pressed for time, you can sub 1 1/2 cups canned beans for the dried. There's no need to precook the canned beans—just drain and rinse them before adding them to the onions.
By Joseph W. DiPerri
Flatbread with Shrimp and White Bean Hummus
At his restaurant, Ford's Filling Station, in Culver City, California, Ben Ford says he strives to serve "things that you don't necessarily identify with traditional comfort food but that give all the [same] nourishment." This signature recipe for flatbread—a very thin "pizza" with sweet shrimp, white bean hummus, melted leeks, caramelized onions, and a scattering of sharp cheese—is comforting and satisfying yet anything but bland or conventional.
By Ben Ford
Chicken and White Bean Soup with Herb Swirl
By Maria Helm Sinskey
Kale and White Bean Stew
Adding Sherry wine vinegar and herbs at the end of cooking this vegetable stew makes the pure flavors shine even brighter.
By Dan Barber
Octopus and Potatoes with Olives and Chile
In this rustic marriage of land and sea, red-pepper flakes add just the right amount of heat to hearty potatoes and wonderfully tender octopus (from a can!)
By Melissa Roberts
Winter Minestrone
Patience is the key to this soul-satisfying soup chock-full of winter greens. Its depth of flavor comes from cooking the soffritto—a mixture of pancetta, onion, celery, carrots, and the ribs from the chard—for a good 45 minutes and from browning the tomato paste. The result is so savory that there's no need for broth; water, canned tomatoes, and a parmesan rind work beautifully. And because this soup must cook slowly, don't worry about prepping all your vegetables before you begin—you can simply chop as you go.
By Melissa Roberts and Maggie Ruggiero
Orecchiette with Pulled-Pork Sugo
Incorporating tender slow-roasted pork into a sugo (sauce) brings out its fullest potential.
Fagioli-on-Toast
The resulting dish is brothy but thick; it can be thinned with stock for a more traditional soup.
By Victoria Granof
Maple Baked Beans
Dried beans dont always need to soak overnight. Just prepare them as instructed below.
By Victoria Granof
Cannellini with Pork and Rosemary
Few can resist this soup-stew of tender cannellini beans, silken pork shoulder, tomatoes, and herbs. We give the cherry tomatoes a little extra love in the oven to boost their flavor before we stir them into the beans. Rosemary is a natural in this dish, but its the generous amount of parsley added at the end thats the real revelation. The herb adds a zesty top note to the beans. Simple side dishes—garlic bread, a green salad—complete the picture.
By Maggie Ruggiero
Blade Steaks with Rosemary White-Bean Purée
Mashed potatoes are a tried-and-true side dish with steak, but for something new, try an Italian purée of white beans—it's just as creamy and much faster.
By Andrea Albin
White Bean, Sun-dried Tomato, and Feta Bites
The white bean, sun-dried tomato, and Feta mixture can be prepared up to six hours in advance, but it's best to toast the bread at the last minute.
By Katie Brown
White Bean Soup with Duck Confit
Evocative of cassoulet but so much easier, this bean soup manages to be both rugged and elegant. No part of the confit duck legs goes to waste: The bones add savor to the beans, the meat goes into the soup, and the crisped skin makes a delectable garnish. Flambéing the Armagnac before adding it to the pot takes the edge off the alcohol while leaving behind the deep flavor of the barrel.
By Paul Grimes
Fresh Artichoke and White Bean Crostini
A Sicilian combination—artichokes and beans—becomes another creative variation on crostini at Cinghiale.
By Julian Marucci