apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


Recipe: Italian Marrow Beans with Tuna

2009_01_22-Tuna.jpgWe promised you three recipes from Steve Sando's great new cookbook: Heirloom Beans. We love this bright book and all the delicious and practical recipes inside. This recipe is a great example of those. It's easy, fast, and uses pantry staples. In fact, if the beans are already cooked (maybe in your slow cooker?), you don't have to do any cooking at all!

 
 

Italian and Spanish cooks make variations of this dish, which at its base consists of beans, tuna, and oil. This is a dish where you can’t skimp on any of the ingredients. Look for Italian, Spanish, or Portuguese tuna packed in olive oil.

Add a small baguette and you have a great portable lunch. You could serve a green salad as well.

Italian Marrow Beans with Tuna
Serves 4

One 5-ounce can best-quality, olive oil–packed tuna, drained slightly
1/2 medium sweet onion, very thinly sliced
1 celery stalk, cut in half lengthwise and then on the diagonal into 1/4-inch-thick slices
1/3 cup chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley
2 1/2 cups well-drained, cooked marrow beans, warmed slightly
3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
2 teaspoons red wine vinegar
Salt and freshly ground pepper

Place the tuna in a salad bowl and break it up slightly with a fork. Add the onion, celery, parsley, and beans. Drizzle with the olive oil and vinegar. Season with salt and pepper and toss well. Taste and adjust the seasonings. Serve at room temperature within 2 hours.

Substitution Note: Runner cannellini or any other mild white bean will work here. Another option is flageolet.

Related: Recipe: Borlotti Beans in Tomato Sauce with Creamy Polenta

(Image and recipe, including headnotes, reprinted from Heirloom Beans with permission of Chronicle Books)

Tags

Winter, Healthy, Main Dish, One-dish Meal, Rancho Gordo, beans, Heirloom Beans

Share

Comments (3)

I just got this book and already have dozens of recipes I want to try! (It also spurred another big Rancho Gordo purchase...) Thanks for highlighting it; they are such a great company.

posted by mel.d on January 23rd 2009 at 8:41am
view mel.d's profile

I'm trying to eat less tuna, both because of mercury concerns and overfishing.

Is there a "greener" canned seafood I could substitute? Would anchovies or sardines work?

posted by lasomnambule on January 23rd 2009 at 10:15am
view lasomnambule's profile

Lasomnambule, it won't help with the mercury but in 'green' terms, you can start by avoiding the reccommended Italian, Spanish, or Portuguese tuna, as they're still going for bluefin tuna like madmen. Try to get Pacific albacore.

posted by Spliffe on June 4th 2009 at 6:35am
view Spliffe's profile